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Deafening silence from the Democrats

So, this happened on TV:

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Sunday defended investigations (or lack thereof) into Donald Trump by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

During an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash, McCarthy repeatedly dodged questions about lies Trump attorney Jay Sekulow told in an attempt to clear the president of wrongdoing with regard to a meeting with Russians at Trump Tower.

“Take the name Donald Trump out of this, put the name Hillary Clinton in,” the CNN host suggested. “If a Democratic president started pardoning his political allies, you’d go bonkers. And we’re hearing crickets from Republicans now. What happened to checks and balances?”

Dana Bash makes a good, if obvious, point. Here’s another good and obvious point that no one ever seems to make: While we can be sure that we’d hear no end of Republican complaints if Hillary had done such a thing (and they’d be right in that one instance!) where are the Democratic complaints? Why aren’t we hearing a chorus of denunciations from the Democrats? It’s true that they are almost never invited on the Sunday shows, but that’s because they haven’t accused the networks of bias as the Republicans did, which has left the networks free to practice actual bias against them. But even given their relative lack of access, there’s no excuse for the Democrats’ failure to engage in coordinated condemnation of the very idea of a self pardon, or, for that matter, the clear indications coming from Trump that he’ll pardon his criminal associates if they stand firm and don’t talk.

And I’m not saying they should be running solely on Trump’s criminality. They should be running on bread and butter Democratic issues, something they are also not doing. That doesn’t mean they should be ignoring the crimes.

Credit where due: I guess this guy didn’t get the message.

Friday Night Music

Not the usual this Friday night. Nothing from the 60’s.

Quite a few years ago my son and I went to see *Me and My Girl* at the Weston Theater in Vermont. We enjoyed it immensely. In my humble opinion the showstopper song is The Lambeth Walk.

I listened to the Broadway soundtrack a few days ago and it occured to me that this song is far more timely, inasmuch as it seems to make the same point as that perennial favorite of all right thinking individuals, Monty Python’s Always Look on the Bright Side of Life. At times like this, when our Republic seems doomed to go the way of that of the Romans, without even the benefit of a guy of Caesar’s stature to do the wrecking, it is helpful to keep things in perspective. We should all continue to look on the bright side, because, as, the little lady sings, “after all is done and said, pretty soon we’ll all be dead”. If that doesn’t put things in perspective, what could?

There are a lot of versions of this song on you tube, not including, unfortunately, a live version from the Broadway show starring Robert Linsday. This is the best one I could find. There’s one by a 10 year old girl; not too bad, but even I have qualms about a 10 year old singing those lines.

As a bonus, here’s The Lambeth Walk, and it is the Broadway version. A bit of the backstory. Lindsay plays a Cockney guy from London who is plucked from obscurity and made a Lord because he’s the rightful heir to a title. It takes a bit for him to adjust to his new role, and in this scene he’s giving the upper crust a lesson in how things are on the other side of the river.

Happy Birthday to a neologism

Little notice. Today is the first birthday of “covfefe”; still awaiting a definition.

A quick rant

In typical fashion, the genius responded to the Roseannecontroversy by complainingabout how horribly he is treated by the media. You know, what with some of them actually reporting the truth about him, even though they still can’t bring themselves to use the word “lie” when talking about his lies.

One thing the media is not doing, is pointing out something that is so obvious and so telling about the present moment, and is pretty compelling evidence of a sort of right wing bias that infects the entire media.

Imagine if you will, that Obama had, just once, said something similar to what Trump tweeted today. Trump’s tweet will go pretty much unremarked; had Obama done it, it would have been news fodder for weeks. 

I know this is not a new observation, but it’s important that we not lose sight of the fact that Trump is getting a pass that no president before him, even including Republicans, has gotten. It’s an unfortunate fact that the institutional Democrats make no effort to come up with a coordinated message to make this and other points in a way that will get them out in the national conversation. The Republicans are adept at injecting all kinds of bullshit into that conversation; the Democrats remain quiescent.

Book Report

I just finished Stephen Greenblatt’s latest book, Tyrant, Shakespeare on Politics. I’ve read a number of his books, but this one was by far the most enjoyable. Greenblatt never mentions the very stable genius, even in the Acknowledgments, where he recalls the book’s genesis when “not so very long ago…I sat in a verdant garden in Sardinia and expressed my growing apprehensions about the possible outcome of an upcoming election.” Like so much else in the book the reference to the genius is clear but unspoken.

The book is an examination of Shakespeare’s treatment of tyrants, the main example being everyone’s favorite, Richard III, as well as runners up Macbeth, King Lear, Julius Caeser, Leontes (from A Winter’s Tale, one of the more obscure plays) and Coriolanus. He draws implicit parallels between all of them and the genius. Sometimes, they’re a bit strained, but often on the mark, and sometimes pretty funny, like this remark about Coriolanus’s decision to turn traitor against Rome by leading an enemy army against it:

The plot twist is worth dwelling upon. It is as if the leader of a political party long identified with hatred of Russia — forever saber-rattling and accusing the rival politicians of treason — should secretly make his way to Moscow and offer his services to the Kremlin.

In these uncertain times, it’s nice to have reason to hope, and Greenblatt’s ultimate conclusion is hopeful:

But Shakespeare believed that the tyrants and their minions would ultimately fail, brought down by their own viciousness and by a popular spirit of humanity that cold be suppressed but never completely extinguished. The best chance for the recovery of collective decency lay, he thought, in the political action of ordinary citizens.

The professor doth project too much, methinks, but that’s okay, the book is a fun read and I highly recommend it. Here’s hoping we ordinary citizens pull it off this time.

The Gilded Age, a coda

I said I’d written my last post on this subject, but that was yesterday, and I just came across this.

A week ago I subscribed to Foreign Affairs, since I got a deal for $20.00 a year. The most recent issue asks the question: Can Democracy be Saved? Here’s the opening paragraph from the first article, by Walter Russell Mead, entitled The Big Shift:

As Americans struggle to make sense of a series of uncomfortable economic changes and disturbing political developments, a worrying picture emerges: of ineffective politicians, frequent scandals, racial backsliding, polarized and irresponsible news media, populists spouting quack economic remedies, growing suspicion of elites and experts, frightening outbreaks of violence, major job losses, high-profile terrorist attacks, anti-immigrant agitation, declining social mobility, giant corporations dominating the economy, rising inequality, and the appearance of a new class of super-empowered billionaires in finance and technology-heavy industries.

That, of course, is a description of American life in the 35 years after the Civil War. The years between the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, in 1865, and that of President William McKinley, in 1901, were among the least inspiring in the history of U.S. politics. As Reconstruction proved unsuccessful and a series of devastating depressions and panics roiled the economy, Washington failed miserably to rise to the challenges of the day. 

He goes on to make the case that maybe we can survive this time around, as we ultimately somewhat overcame (after wrecking the lives of millions of people in the process) the disasters of the Gilded Age. Bear in mind that it took us a hundred years to even make a start on living up to the promise of equality embodied in the Reconstruction Amendments. Anyway, worth reading. We should learn from history, even though it seems almost a certainty that the best outcome we can hope for is that we are doomed to repeat it.

Defining our terms

Maggie Haberman is getting a bit of blowback in the twittersphere for her failure to call a lie a lie. You can pick up on the conversation here:

http://twitter.com/maggieNYT/status/1000755597283905537

Her point, if you can call it that, is that if Trump chooses to believe something he spews, it is not necessarily a lie. It seems to me that we can agree on a common sense definition: A lie is a statement of fact that is known to be untrue by the speaker or is uttered with reckless disregard for the truth. If I have no evidentiary foundation for a fact that I assert as true, then I am lying, even if I fervently believe that the fact asserted should be true, or so far as I am concerned it is true, because it is convenient for me to believe it.

If, for instance, I were to say that the crowd at my swearing in ceremony when I became a lawyer was the biggest such crowd in history, I would be lying, even though, having never seen any such crowds before or since, I could argue that, for all I knew, my statement was true. Nonetheless, by the above definition, it would be a lie, and rightly so. Haberman argues that Trump should get a pass if he utters a statement that he may believe, without a shred of evidence, to be true, or that he should get such a pass if he simply can’t tell truth from fiction. In other words, if you’re a pathological liar, you aren’t necessarily lying, you’re just being pathological.

It hardly needs saying that this sort of logic is of the sort that preserves the media tilt toward the right, for, as someone else pointed out, Haberman was not shy about calling Clinton a liar in circumstances far less compelling than those in which she gives Trump a pass.

A final lesson from the Gilded Age

One more lesson from the Gilded Age, and, since I’ve now finished Richard White’s The Republic for Which It Stands, this will be the last. 

This is not so much a parallel to our own age, but a warning of what we may have to come, assuming we survive the present state of affairs.

Toward the end of the Gilded Age, the previous “liberal consensus” (remember, back then a liberal was equivalent to today’s right winger) began to break down. The idea that each man (women didn’t count, remember) controlled his own destiny, and that his success or failure was practically a matter of choice on his part, could no longer be defended in an age of rapidly increasing inequality and unequal bargaining power resulting from increasing industrialization and monopolistic control of important sectors of the economy. Legislatures started passing laws to regulate the behavior of corporations. For instance, laws were passed mandating the number of hours a person could work in a day and outlawing child labor, just to name a few.

But while the legislatures were coming around, these laws ran into another branch of government, still dominated by those old fashioned liberals. The courts used the 14th Amendment, which had been designed to protect the rights of human beings, particularly freed slaves, to invalidate laws of this sort on the grounds that they deprived either the corporation or the individuals involved of property rights. It need hardly be said that at the same time they refused to use the Amendment for its intended purpose. There was little, if any, rational foundation for the court’s actions, which were often based on concepts of “natural law” and “substantive due process”, which had no basis in the constitution at all. It’s fair to say that while the national consensus turned progressive (i.e., today’s liberal) the courts frustrated that consensus until well into the nineteen thirties.

We can see the beginnings of the same thing now. The Supreme court’s decisions a few years ago overturning Second Amendment precedent and the Citizen’s Uniteddecision are two examples, as is the recent decision ruling that workers can be forced into individual arbitration, not to mention the upcoming decisionin the Januscase, that will effectively destroy public sector unions everywhere they have not already been destroyed. Should the Democrats regain control of the presidency and Congress, and should they finally come to their senses and realize that half measures designed to attract “moderate” Republican support gain them neither “moderate” Republican support nor public support, any efforts they make to enact progressive legislation will no doubt be frustrated by the courts using ever more intellectually dishonest rationales. The courts are political institutions, and they have now been well stocked with doctrinaire Randians who see it as their solemn duty to comfort the comfortable and afflict the afflicted. Bear in mind that the only remedy for judicial lawlessness is impeachment (not going to happen) and constitutional amendments (also not going to happen).

Of course, this is subject to a number of contingencies. Ruth Bader Ginsburg may live another couple of years, and she may be replaced by a progressive judge. That still leaves us with a 5-4 minority, but there is always the possibility that in one way or another, one of the horrible five will retire or be imprisoned, and the Democrats will be in a position to force a pick through (and will have the gumption to do so, in the face of hypocritical Republican claims that the filibuster is sacrosanct). That will still leave us with a judiciary somewhat progressive at the very top, but thoroughly rotten at all other levels. And that’s the best case scenario. All a modern court would have to do is revive some of the ridiculous legal precedents of the Gilded Age, and any attempt made by modern day progressives to end the plutocracy/kleptocracy under which we now live will be frustrated for years to come.

Friday Night Music

Carol King and James Taylor

Something fishy here

A few days ago I drafted a post, but I ultimately decided not to post it, due to the fact that the point I was trying to assert, that Elliot Broidy had been handsomely paid for taking the fall for Trump’s affair with yet another Playboy bunny, which affair had led to an abortion. Here’s what I wrote then:

Here’s one that may end up in the impeachable file. The AP has a storydocumenting that there is more than a whiff, let us say there’s a stench, suggesting something is amiss with the way the genius makes policy. It is, in a few words, up for sale.

In this particular case, a couple of fellows, Elliot Broidy and George Nader, were probably acting as unregistered foreign lobbyists as they tried to influence American policy toward various countries in the Middle East. In the most blatant case, they tried to push an anti-Qatar policy on behalf of Saudi Arabia, which involved money in the general direction of the genius.

Nader is now cooperating with Mueller, which can’t make Broidy happy. >

But there’s another thing about this that makes one wonder. As we already knew, and as the AP notes:

Broidy, it turned out, was also a Cohen client. He’d had an affair with Playboy Playmate Shera Bechard, who got pregnant and later had an abortion. Broidy agreed to pay her $1.6 million to help her out, so long as she never spoke about it.

“I acknowledge I had a consensual relationship with a Playboy Playmate,” Broidy said in a statement the day the news broke. He apologized to his wife and resigned from the RNC. There is no indication Broidy is under investigation by Mueller’s team.

There has been some speculation that Ms. Bechard really had the affair with the genius, and that Broidy agreed to take the fall. I’m not ready to sign on to that theory entirely, but this story makes it seem more probable. Broidy is making tons of money off of his relationship with Trump and a little thing like confessing to paying for an abortion wouldn’t stand in the way of keeping that money flowing.

Things move fast, and over the last couple of days, the evidence has mounted. (The internet has been down at my humble abode the last few days, so this follow up is somewhat delayed).

Consider these pieces of evidence: the bunny herself is sticking to her NDA, but she seems to be dropping hints and, as demonstrated here, the events related to this situation line up rather suspiciously. Bearing in mind that when it comes to the genius, he should be considered guilty until proven innocent (the truth of this maxim has been demonstrated too often to leave it open to question), I am more inclined than I was just a few days ago to buy into the theory that Broidy took the fall for Trump, and was so handsomely paid that even Broidy’s wife surely won’t complain, as she was probably in on the con from the start.