Wednesday, November 9, 2022
There's Got To Be A Morning After; and There Was.
Monday, November 7, 2022
Eve of Mid-term Elections
It's the eve of the mid-term election and I sit here believing the democrats are going to lose both house of congress. Such a prospect ordinarily wouldn't bother me too much as I know from experience that the cycle of elections swaps out parties quite consistently. But this election seems to forebode real troubles ahead. Among the Republicans seeking office are loyal Trumpists who stoutly defend his lies that the 2020 election was stolen from him. If elected, these men and women could undermine the integrity of the 2024 presidential election by refusing to certify the electoral vote count scheduled for November 5, 2025. As Bill Maher and others have repeated, whether Trump wins or loses the 2024 presidential election, he will not concede and he will most certainly call on those election deniers he helped elect to reject electors from battleground states he needs to claim victory. Who can say what will follow when/if the "nays" cascade through the halls of congress?
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In Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville wrote:
"On entering the House of Representatives of Washington one is struck by the vulgar demeanor of that great assembly. The eye frequently does not discover a man of celebrity with it walls. Its members are almost all obscure individuals whose names present no associations to the mind: they mostly village lawyers, men in trade, or even persons belonging to the lower classes of society. In a country in which education is very general, it is said that the representatives of the people do not always know how to write correctly."
How prescient Tocqueville was when one thinks of Marjorie Taylor Greene or Lauren Boebert. His view of the Senate was considerably more flattering:
"Scarcely an individual is to be perceived in it who does not recall the idea of an active and illustrious career: the Senate is composed of eloquent advocates, distinguished generals, wise magistrates, and statesmen of note, whose language would at all times do honor to the most remarkable parliamentary debated of Europe."
No doubt Tocqueville exaggerated the qualities of the Senate. What would he have thought of Senator Preston Brooks beating Senator Charles Sumner with his cane? While the current Senate races have remained peaceful, though hardly polite, the assaults perpetrated against the English Language by Hershel Walker seem hardly less violent than his collisions with those NFL linebackers. Like Tom Buchanan, Walker reached "an acute limited excellence" no where except on the football field. It would be best for the country if he rested on those accomplishments
Friday, May 3, 2019
Unfit For Just About Anything
Stephen Moore thinks it’s an honor that Donald Trump is considering him for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. But with that honor has come a cascade of reporting about Moore, which has demonstrated that he, like Trump, is as unqualified for the Federal Reserve as Trump is to be president. Moore’s positions regarding monetary policy have been consistently wrong over the years. KrugmanIt surprises no one that Trump has put forward another candidate who lacks the ability for the job he would be responsible to undertake. Nor is it surprising that this person exhibits similar sexist and racist attitudes that have been displayed in Trump’s words and behavior over the years. Fortunately, for opponents of his appointment, Moore has provided enough evidence in his written work to convince any decent senator to reject his nomination to the Federal Reserve Board.Moore has repeatedly made offensive and disturbing comments about women. Swirling through his remarks one detects a malevolent misogyny. In an essay responding to the news of sexual assaults on college campuses, Moore lamented the passing of the “good old days” when boys were encouraged to experience the new found freedom college frat life provided:“They [women] seem hell bent on draining all the fun out of college life. Colleges are places for rabble-rousing. For men to lose their boyhood innocence. To do stupid things. To stay out way too late drinking. To chase skirts...It’s all a time-tested rite of passage into adulthood. And the women seemed to survive just fine. If they were so oppressed and offended by drunken, lustful frat boys, why is it that on Friday nights they showed up in droves in tight skirts to keg parties?”Washington Times, Sept. 2000Besides espousing a puerile, bizarre and stupid point of view, there reverberates through Moore’s words a vicious contempt for women who have been victims of sexual assault. Interestingly, Moore’s view of women parallels Trump’s. Access Hollywood Tape The potential new FederalBoard Governor believes women are “commodities” for men to possess. And although Moore will deny holding such a materialist’s attitude one could encounter as standard thinking a century ago, Moore has flown his sexist colors unabashedly.Writing for National Review Online, Moore postulates the ill effects of women earning greater pay than men:“What are the implications of a society in which women earn more than men? We don’t really know, but it could be disruptive to family stability. If men aren’t the breadwinners, will women regard them as economically expendable? We saw what happened to family structure in low-income and black households when a welfare check took the place of a father’s paycheck. Divorce rates go up when men lose their jobs.” National ReviewIt’s difficult to unravel Moore’s scrambled thought process here. Let’s see, when women earn more than men, divorce rates among the white, middle class rise in a pattern similar to divorce rates among those in poverty? Of course, logical reasoning is the furthest thing from Moore’s mind. His true objective is to malign women and African Americans, to portray them as somehow responsible for any economic troubles. His is the classic bate and switch: make the privileged victims and victims villains.Moore’s ridiculous, twisted formula in no way camouflages his sexsim and racism; he fools no one. And if Republican senators attempt to rationalize and defend Moore’s above words claiming that Moore is honestly observing what he sees in American society, democrats must counter with the other numerous displays of his sexism. For example, Moore has made clear that he would deny equal pay for women if he could:“The women tennis pros don’t really want equal pay for equal work. They want equal pay for inferior work. There’s a very practical reason why Pete Sampras, for example, makes a lot more money than Martina Hingis does. He’s much, much better than she is...If there is an injustice in tennis, it’s that women like Martina Hingis and Monica Seles make millions of dollars a year, even though there are hundreds of men at the collegiate level...who could beat them handily.” National ReviewMoore has complained about the media coverage he has received. He believes he is being unfairly attacked, the way Kavanagh was. He has whined about how “all it’s been since then is one personal assault after another, a kind of character assassination.” Poor Stephen Moore. Well, at least, Trump has continued to support him. Of course, That’s what one would expect from Trump. When Trump looks at Moore, he is peering into a mirror of himself. And in that way, these men are made for each other. A perfect symmetry of incompetence, ignorance misogyny and bigotry.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Legal, But Not Legitimate
As to the legitimate: fine word,--legitimate!
Well, my legitimate, if this letter speed,
And my invention thrive, Edmund the base
Shall top the legitimate. I grow; I prosper:
Now, gods, stand up for bastards!
KING LEAR
Act I, Scene 2
Legitimacy: a word that stalks Donald Trump. He feels it right behind him and it's why he incessantly scurries to his favorite phrase "no collusion." It has seeped into his skin and makes him rasp on and on about how "it was a clean campaign, I beat Hilary Clinton easily." It deflates his ego so he bellows, "We ran a brilliant campaign, and that's why I'm president."
But the legitimacy of his presidency is more in question now than ever after he groveled before Putin and said, "I don't see any reason why it would be" Russia that interfered in the 2016 election. Politically and legally Trump is president. But that fact carries little or no weight if the man in the Oval Office has forfeited his moral standing. And Trump forfeited his when he supported Putin over the American intelligence agencies that have documented the Russian cyber attacks on our democracy.
Fortunately, most Republican leaders in Congress have been honest enough to affirm publicly that they know the Russians under Putin's direction hacked the election. Unfortunately, they have lacked the courage to admit the possibility that Russian interference might have affected the outcome. Paul Ryan, for one, stated, "They did interfere in our election--it's really clear. There should be no doubt about that." But Ryan also claimed that the interference had no "effect" on the election. Clearly, Ryan wants to "legitimize" Trump's electoral victory. Nevertheless, his is a conclusion without basis in fact. With Trump's margin of victory so slim, it is impossible to ignore how many votes might have been delivered into his column with Russia's help.
Another Republican, Trey Gowdy, remarked that "it is possible to conclude Russia interfered in our election in 2016 without delegitimizing his electoral success." Even before the news conference with Putin, Trump's legitimacy as president has been corroded by the findings and indictments of the Mueller probe, the suspicious meeting at Trump tower between Don Jr., Paul Manafort and Russians, and the recent 12 indictments of Russians who hacked into the 2016 election.
Among the information reported from Mueller's indictment is that Russian hackers stole data from the Democratic Party National Committee used to target potential voters for their candidates. One Republican consultant has already admitted that he received some of this data and used it to help Republican Brian Mast during his 2016 campaign for congress. One has to suspect that information from these hackers was passed on to the Trump campaign during the 2016 election.
Perhaps we can balance the legitimacy of Trump's presidency on a single adverb--"not." On Tuesday, Trump stiffened his back, folded his arms and tried erase what he said Monday about believing Putin over America's intelligence agencies. He simply forgot to insert the word "not," in "I don't see any reason why it would be" Russia. Of course, he spoke more about there not being any "collusion" between his campaign and the Russians.
A child who insults a friend then claims that's "not" what he meant, might believe the lie he uses to squirm his way out of trouble. I don't know if Trump believes his own lie (and lies); most of America does not. The Republican party, if it is to salvage its own legitimacy, has to repudiate this "base" man who, though still has the legal authority to occupy the White House, has "not" any moral legitimacy to remain as president.
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Trump
Friday, July 13, 2018
Republican Values
Luckily for him, the President of the United States has come to his defense. Donald Trump believes Jim Jordan. He believes his claims that he was unaware of any sexual harassment or abuse during his time at Ohio State. And if Trump says it, then it must be true: "Jim Jordan is one of the most outstanding people I've met since I've been in Washington. I believe him 100 percent. No question in my mind."
But what of the men who say Jordan did know? They say everyone, including Jordan, knew about the sexual harassment by voyeurs lurking at the Ohio State University sport's facility and the sexual abuse of wrestlers by the university doctor, Richard Strauss. Are they all lying? Or are they, as Jordan purports, part of a "deep state" conspiracy determined to bring him down because of his "honest" search for the truth in questioning Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein?
This is the classic tale of sexual assaults and the astonishing moral torpidity of the grownups who know all about it yet pretend they don't. We saw this pattern with Joe Paterno and the vile monster Jerry Sandusky. Paterno's willingness to ignore the rape of young boys stretches beyond the bounds of human understanding and forgiveness. Like Paterno, Jordan claims that he knew nothing. Given the number of men who have said Jordan did know makes his assertion of "ignorance" less than credible.
Throughout his political career, Jim Jordan has styled himself as a conservative purist. Conservative on taxes, immigration, the military (which means spending taxpayer's money on unneeded tanks), on the environment (which means allowing corporations to poison the planet), and, of course, conservative on protecting Donald Trump. He is among those who have led the fight to discredit the Mueller investigation. Jordan is so loyal to Trump that when asked by Anderson Cooper if he had ever heard Trump lie, Jordan answered that he had not, despite the almost four thousand lies Trump has told since being in office.
One expects members of both political parties to be partisan; to frequently stretch facts to fit the narratives they wish to promote. However, as the tally of lies Trump has told continues to grow, it becomes ludicrous to deny that Trump has ever told a lie, and such a statement by Jordan makes one suspect he too possesses no regard for the truth. But I guess that's what makes them simpatico. And like Trump, Jordan continues to receive unwavering support from his Republican base. That support tells us a great deal about the character of those supporters. However, in the contest for truth between him and his former wrestlers, Jordan, I afraid, is pinned to the mat.
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While sordidness and sheer dishonesty cling to one of the foremost republican members, on the democratic side of the political aisle a fresh face has emerged to inspire hope for the November elections. In a New York primary, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez trounced Joe Crowley, the fourth ranking Democrat who was said to be in line for Nancy Pelosi's leadership position.
After upsetting the highly favored Crowley, Ocasio-Cortez encountered a less than warm reception from fellow Democrats and the expected disdain from Republicans. Nancy Pelosi dismissed that Ocasio-Cortez's victory as insignificant and limited to "just one district." Tammy Duckworth, commenting on the primary results said, "I think that you can't win the White House without the Midwest, and I think you can go too far to the left and still win the Midwest."
Of course, conservatives have expressed disdain and revulsion for Ocasio-Cortez because she is a Democratic Socialist. Conservative Bret Stephens of The New York Times presented a more balanced analysis of what he fears her candidacy will produce come November, which he has called "political hemlock for the Democratic Party." Even though Stephens is a conservative, he is afraid that Ocasio-Cortez's political positions will drive the Democrats too far left and thereby hand Trump congressional wins in the fall that could prevent his impeachment. But what are the policies that Ocasio-Cortez supports which these liberals and conservatives label as too far left to be political feasible?
Ocasio-Cortez believes in "health care as a human right." She believes that "every child no matter where you are born should have access to a college or trade school education if they so choose it." She believes that "no person should be homeless, if we can have public structures and public policies to allow for people to have homes and food and lead a dignified life in the United States."
Mainstream liberals such as Pelosi and Duckworth are frightened about being labeled too liberal; and the word "socialist" seems to terrify them. Conservative, on the other hand, cringed at the slightest notion that government can serve the American people with programs to lessen some of life's hardships. It's what makes them scorn Ocasio-Cortez's political views. Ocasio-Cortez's identifies herself as a Democratic Socialist. But as she herself explains, that label is not what matters most. What matters to her are the values she believes need to be essential in serving as a representative in Congress. She puts it succinctly: Being a Democratic Socialist is "part of what I am; it's not all of what I am...and I think that's a very important distinction...I'm not truing to impose an ideology on all several hundred members of Congress...It's not about selling an 'ism' or an ideology or a label or a color. This about selling values."
As Ocasio-Cortez says, she is not interested in imposing her beliefs on anyone else. Her aim is to present her views and try to persuade fellow Democrats and members of the other party that her values, and therefore policies, have merit. If they accept her ideas and support them, so be it. If not, she will continue her best to convince them of the merit of her beliefs and values without resorting to demagoguery.
And that's what it all comes down to: Which party has the values that will best serve the country and the planet? The Republicans, who value corporate profits and greed above all else, including the health of new born babies (See "U.S. Officials Opposition to Breast-Feeding Stuns World Health Officials")? Or Democrats such as Ocasio-Cortez, who know that profits and wealth don't measure the real health and prosperity of a country and a world. When Ocasio-Cortez wins her seat in the fall, the differences between the Democrats and the Republicans will become even more conspicuous and important. Let's hope her victory becomes a watershed election in the history of American politics.
Thursday, July 5, 2018
Independence Day
Kennedy's retirement and the prospect of an even more conservative justice sitting on the Supreme Court certainly adds to the oppression the current heat wave is spreading across the northeast. Yet, even when Kennedy was on the Court, workers in America suffered setbacks to their rights.
Earlier in the Court's term, the conservative justices, including Kennedy, decided in favor of businesses when they sided with Epic Systems Corp. against Lewis, ruling that businesses can require employees to use a company's arbitration process rather than having to litigate disputes in individual or class action lawsuits. Now corporations can avoid the legal system and conceal any abuse against workers, limiting the public scrutiny lawsuits would have exposed them to.
This case parallels earlier ones that upheld corporations' right to force consumers into resolving their claims against businesses through an individual arbitration process set up by a given corporation. These clauses effectually disable workers and consumers from challenging corporations through class action lawsuits, which is their only genuine means of fighting the daunting power of corporations. Being funneled into an arbitration process that blatantly serves the interests of the employer or the company abolishes what should be every American's inalienable right to seek redress for grievances in a fair legal venue. When workers have wages stolen or consumers suffer from fraudulent business practices they are limited to an arbitration hearing that is the same as having chickens guarded by foxes.
Another setback for workers is the Janus Decision. Once again, Kennedy joined his fellow conservatives and ruled in favor of the employer. Yes, there are those who will argue that Mark Janus had his right to free speech violated when he was compelled to pay the agency fee to the union whose politics he found unpalatable. The public union to whom he submitted that "fee" should have released him from any financial obligation and let him negotiate his employment contract individually. It would have been interesting to see if he continued to accrue the equivalent salary and benefits had he been on his own.
In any case, the real substance of this Supreme Court decision reflects the intended consequence those conservative justices envision. Like their fellow conservatives in congress and like Trump, these men believe that rights and privileges naturally belong to those in positions of power. Workers and consumers are of little consequence when measured against the magnates of American business. They are necessary to churn the engine of the economy, but they need to remain relegated to their appropriate station in the American scheme. Or is that American dream? Happy Independence Day.