Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Susan Crawford Wins in Wisconsin

 


Elon Musk spent about $20 or 25million in Wisconsin on behalf of Brad Schimel, and while I won't go so far as to say his "assistance" was an absolute menace to his candidate, it surely did not help

I think it would be great if we could all point to the results here as basically a referendum on Musk and his influence with Trump itself, but I don't want to take away that message too cleanly. I think it's more like a referendum on whether Mr. Moneybags can just start throwing his weight around without people getting really suspicious as to why.

When some out-of-state clown with a cheese hat on wants to tell people a state Supreme Court seat is about the fate of civilization and pours millions out in a kind of ostentatiously scammy-looking sort of way, it kind of feels suspicious, doesn't it? 

Like, what makes it so important to HIM, anyway?

Anyway, that's just something everyone should keep in mind for next election. Maybe a whiff of Musk can be a problem for the GOP. 


Thursday, November 28, 2024

Pods Won't Save America, Probably

 


I'm really sympathetic to the idea that there might have been some quality of "screwed" baked into the Harris campaign when she took over in July, and I was optimistic that the actual policy record of the Biden Administration vs. the actual history of.... uh whatever TrumpWorld is, would dawn on people as being a no-brainer. 

The reason I believed that is because I'm a hardcore Democratic Party schmuck. I've had a party preference since I was 18. The party of Rush Limbaugh and Phyllis Schlafly vs. the party of ::waves hands in the direction of not entire shithead bigots::? 

You've got to be kidding me. 

But here's what I noticed--I truly think that everyone who was going to cross over from the GOP to vote on principle for Harris because Trump was a horrowshow--appeared in a digital ad online some time during the campaign and there wasn't a a goddamn other one. It was great to be appreciative to former Rep. Liz Cheney--but the reason her party did her the way they did is because they could

If someone was comfy in the party of Limbaugh and Schlafly, it would take a lot to embrace the actual mess that is the actual Democratic Party., our political figures (Not AOC! Not San Fransisco liberal Nancy Pelosi!), and find themselves on the same side as our base. (You know: welfare queens, flaming homos, childless cat ladies, the Black Panthers and dope-smoking commies--don't look at me like that--you know I love you. But some conservatives were raised to HATE YOUR ASS AND MINE.).

Monday, July 8, 2024

Rays of Hope for Democracy

 

Between yesterday's pushback against the far-right in France and the Labour Party win in the UK, I guess at least there are some things to feel good about, even while US politics is giving me the agita. Evil never rests though. Le Pen (and Salvini's La Lega) has some kind of Patriots for Europe thing cooking with Orban who had just gone sleazing off to visit Putin (not in a way that represents the EU).

Not sure how patriots of any stripe mooch up to Putin.

I have thoughts about that, and about how CPAC and Heritage seem to love, love, love Orban, too. But I think I will just be happy about the elections for a little while, first. 

Monday, June 3, 2024

TWGB: A Certain Persuasion

 

Consider what that sounds like--roll it around in your mind. It really sounds like he's moving past saying the trial was "rigged" because Soros funded Bragg or because Joe Biden ordered a lawfare hit on him, down to saying the jury was biased against him: from a "certain persuasion." 

Dog whistle?  Air raid siren?

TrumpWorld has being saying this disturbing thing out loud for a minute: Russia and China aren't the real danger, people who oppose Trump are. MTG has endorsed the execution of prominent Democrats, for example. But take a look at who else gets burned?

Republicans like former Governor and current US Senate candidate Larry Hogan, who made what once would have been viewed as a completely reasonable statement:

Friday, May 24, 2024

Zippy Wants Your Money

 

Now, you could find yourself saying "Bob!  Bobbaleh! Bobbabooey! Bobtollah! Didn't you pick a rich idiot as your running mate so you didn't have to reference the national debt to infer someway somewhere, bitches need to make up for a money crunch?"  What are you going to do for the debt, Bobbo? 

No one knows. Probably some shit to do with Bitcoin or the like. 

 What I do know is his advisor on criminal justice and Black outreach just stepped down.

I think it's pretty weird we have a political campaign where nobody has the same positions on things like reproductive care.  I think it's pretty weird that one of Kennedy's main backers is also a Trump backer--Tim Mellon

But the weirdest thing of all is--does Bob know where he lives? Because he seems to have been voting from a house that is in foreclosure in NY, and isn't his main residence at all

"Where do you live?" isn't supposed to be a trick question! 

Monday, January 1, 2024

Looking Forward to 2024

 


Another new year greets us. I'm no believer in destiny and as for me, I choose to look ahead, with the warning that when looking ahead, it helps to know what you are looking at. We have many choices ahead of us, and it's easy to be overwhelmed and slide into a kind of fatalism, an abandonment of choice because no option is "perfect". 

No options ever are. There is always, however, the specter of worse. The watchword is: "Vigilance."



Saturday, December 9, 2023

Casey DeSantis is Just Helping Her Man

 


Wait. Is that...is she calling for...I mean?  Is she saying the mamas and grandmamas should RIG the Iowa caucus? Because I think we know who would be very STRONGLY concerned if there was RIGGING and would have to LOOK INTO THAT very STRONGLY! 

 Casey DeSantis has not been swanning around dressed like a Disney princess in capes and opera gloves in godforsaken Florida to not be First Lady of the US, m'kay? She knows that despite the high-flying nature of her husband's campaign (donor flights, migrant flights, evacuee flights...), he needs help., with this 2024 thing. Sometimes he even seems a little desperate. And that when she steps in

This seems a little desperate, too. 



Saturday, December 2, 2023

Sandra Day O'Connor, 1930-1923

 

To the surprise of the conservative president who appointed her, the conservative first female Supreme Court Justice kept Roe v. Wade on the books. But on the other hand, try as I might to come up with something different regarding her being a trailblazer, I kept coming back to the Bush v. Gore decision. 

She wanted to retire and wanted a Republican to replace her. George W. Bush replaced her with Sam Alito. 

And Roe v. Wade was eventually undone. 

So?

I can't expect someone to have the foresight to realize that the dominoes lined up like that. On the other hand, it was still some kind of selfish decision on her part, and from the 2000 decision, a lot of nastiness flowed. 

So I'm still mad. And I'm not over it. 

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

The House GOP Found Their Johnson

 

You know, usually I like to make link-heavy blog posts that substantiate all the facts I drop in one of my screeds, but I will leave the research on this one to my readers because I had limited connectivity to the internet this week and have a whole carton of huevos to fry. But here's the funny thing to me: 

Look at the happy-ass motherfuckers in the picture above.  They think they just got their shit together and ended a long national nightmare. They just picked the most problematic of dudes to unify themselves around. He doesn't look like a whole lot, but whoo, this dude right here. 

This is a Christian nationalist of the kind it's been my whole life's business to want to take down. He's anti-science: a young earth creationist who doesn't believe in climate change. That right there is an air raid siren for me: he does not care about facts and doesn't care whether facts are even useful to the betterment of life for other people. He talks in terms of "belief" because empirical knowledge is inconvenient to his worldview. He is a 2020 election denier: that right there--he cares about power, and GOD DAMN the facts. 

He says he finds his proofs in Scripture: people write books all the time, but if you "believe in" God--who do you think put facts in the world? It feels very much to me like people who deny empirical knowledge are the ones really denying a revelation that can be understood and made accessible, and instead support a kind of false-witness bearing of twisting Scripture to one's own ends. 

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

We Don't Live in Bipartisan Times

Professor Warren explains the truth--cowards can hide behind the rationale that "We can't get to 60, so what does taking a stand matter." That's what infuriates me about Manchin and Sinema right now. They are pretending that they are standing up for a principle of bipartisanship and not making the divide between Republicans and Democrats worse, but what they are really doing is failing to make a stand. Absent the filibuster, the votes fall where they may. 

We all know we'd be hard-pressed to find a Republican right now putting their vote on limiting state legislatures' ability to suppress voting because they are going to talk about federal power grabs and states' rights, and if that doesn't sound familiar! I'd love to make the Republican party expound at length on that subject so we could tell exactly where they stood. 

Please, have them defend everything from restrictions to mail-in voting to DeSantis' possible vote cops (I imagine crackers with bullet heads and necks exceeding their jawlines carrying blackjacks and being prone to saying shit like "You don't look like you're from around here" and "Who all is your people?"). In lieu of that, though, just based on our current composition in the Senate, I'd like Sinema and Manchin to put their vote where their ideals are supposed to be, let VP Harris settle the matter, and go forward with voter rights better protected.

Where we are now is at a stupid state where Senator Romney pretends it is a darn shame President Biden didn't reach out to him. If Senator Romney was so moved to think voting rights needed to be protected, he could have reached out his damn self. Senator Murkowski might be persuaded--but is she not a grown woman who understands politics? Ditto all GOP senators. If they have an opinion, fuck it, put it on the damn table, like grown people. But also, explain voter purges, and defend poll places miles from where some voters live, and long lines, and how unequal access impacts outcomes. And if that wasn't even the intent of such voter suppression laws in the first place. They need to be put on notice that they can't bitch about being called racist for supporting those "states' rights" bills if they can't defend the obvious demographic choices that made them what they are.  Put the GOP on the spot for what they have come to stand for, after the Voter Rights bill had been so universally approved-of not so long before. 

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

The Content of Their Character Is Showing

Yesterday, a lot of politicians were "busted" quoted MLK, Jr.'s words while doing nothing to support the goals of equality, even some who actively work against them. In order to participate in the day, it would appear that a sanitized and color-blind version of King gives them comfort, but they misconstrue the body of his work. Were he alive today, their criticisms would be similar to those made of today's Black Lives Matter activists--and we know this because we can read the criticisms from that time and compare them.

(There are also people in this country who seem to think "sanitizing" bookshelves will somehow improve upon race relations--a version of "not seeing color" that means not seeing the work of or knowing about the lives of people of color.)

But to put it simply, it's very duplicitous to praise someone for articulating a dream and then working against what would make it a reality--such as equal access to the ballot. In actuality, I would consider it very revealing of the character of those that would do so.


Thursday, January 13, 2022

Read the Room, Senator

 

Look, this is really just a comment, because I understand some kind of negotiations with Sinema and Manchin are ongoing, and well! They haven't given me any reason to think either of them are budging on the filibuster but if Biden does, I'll wish him all the luck on that. But Sinema's speech today struck me as trying to box herself in against being negotiated on this. Like, it was totally planting a spear and looking to hold on for dear life. 

For what? The dear old filibuster and the specter of bipartisanship that she needs to know is gone. Gone. The House vote was very one-sided--did she not pick up on that? The Republicans giving her kudos on her speech are basically glad the pressure is off of them, because they were never going to do anything on voting in a bipartisan way--and if she had listened to their comments on this, she would know that. 

So who the hell is she listening to? Her donors? I think she has badly misread the room and standing for a principle that isn't worth the opportunity we'd be losing in protecting voting rights. I think privileging her notions of what the Senate should be and isn't right now over other people's voting rights is a bad moral equation, even if she thinks it's a safe political one, and I'd really prefer politicians who, when it came down to it, took the moral choice. 

But she wouldn't be listening to me, either. And I don't think she's has listened to any Arizonans on this, despite saying so in her speech because she doesn't hold townhalls. Doubtless, her staff are getting some calls from folks right now, and I doubt they are all pats on the back for bipartisanship. Yay! Doing nothing in the forlorn hope Republicans will do the right thing! Brilliant!

She should try to get a better read of the room.



Monday, December 27, 2021

The Big Lie and the Big Liars Telling It

 

Sen. Rand Paul linked to an interesting thing over at The American Conservative which is sort of an amazing read on how programs to educate voters about how to cast a vote in an election where there were some changes to the usual process due to COVID-19 accommodations and where efforts were made to recruit younger election workers for the same reason, are viewed in a sinister light. Paul, for some reason, chooses to characterize the following as how to steal an election: 
“Seeding an area heavy with potential Democratic votes with as many absentee ballots as possible, targeting and convincing potential voters to complete them in a legally valid way, and then harvesting and counting the results.”

The so-called "absentee ballots" are just mail-in ballots that some states just use as a matter-of-course. So that isn't sinister. GOTV is not out of the ordinary--people should be encouraged to participate in their civic duties and take notice of their civil rights! The ballots are being completed in a legally valid way. And then they get sent in and counted, and somehow, in Rand Paul's mind, this is a steal? 

But I know why-- "an area heavy with potential Democratic votes". The process is legitimate, but Rand Paul feels like the voters are not. Wow, Rand Paul thinks that, really? How not-shocked can I be?

But this thing about some voters having more rights than others is just GOP kay-fabe right now, and folks like the Schmeckle have to read statements of faith about it on Steve Bannon's podcast, for some reason. Bannon himself makes bizarre statements about "someone standing up to Marc Elias" , which is very WTF--of course there is, it's called the opposing attorneys. They just don't win if the law isn't on their side? Elias isn't winning because he has some weird advantage--he's just really good at reading the constitution and voter suppression is not good small-d democracy or very Constitutional. 

It's not new. But let's be clear--the supposedly sinister steal Rand Paul is talking about has its opposite and more contentious twin on the Republican side. The Liberty Center for God and Country went out of their way to promote the idea that the election was being stolen. They weren't alone. Maybe if instead of figuring out ways to promote the Big Lie ahead of the election, Trumpers tried to GOTV themselves, but oh, maybe they knew the polling would never make that work! Oops! Trump lost fair and square because he sucked. He was impeached and his COVID-19 response was sad. The end. It was simple. He blew it on his own merits. It really didn't require the Democrats acting in any concerted way, and thank goodness, because we barely do. 

And let's never forget, Trump spread the Big Lie early and often, before 2020. Where he went with it after losing the election shouldn't surprise a single soul, and the veracity of his claims should be as doubted as a very doubtable thing. Of course, it's a self-serving lie!  In the real world, we know, the claims the dead vote are lies. We know Trump's alternate electoral slates would have been forgeries. 

He lost. He lost fair and square. The mail-in advantage was only that legitimate voters for once weren't circumscribed by the scarcity of voting places and long lines created by state legislators trying to target voters based on their zip code, ethnicity, and social class. But the voters were still legitimate. 

Any politician claiming the Big Lie this hard, needs to go. I don't care where, they just don't need to be in office. That's who Rand Paul is. He needs to go. 


 

Saturday, December 11, 2021

The Devil is a Liar

 

After a month of harassment because of having been falsely accused, with her daughter, of having somehow manipulated the vote count in Georgia, Ruby Freedman received a weird visitation from, of all people, Kanye West's publicist, who purported to be working for someone important on behalf of the government, demanding she confess to a crime she did not do or things would get very bad for her. She left her home at the recommendation of the FBI, and within 48 hours, there were MAGAs protesting outside the door of her home.

For a lie. This was a lie that started in the bowels of right-wing media (Gateway Pundit, who is getting sued now and I hope that shitty bullshit factory is tilled under and the ground salted) . This was a lie that ended up getting repeated by Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump, himself (both of whom should be sued until so broke that federal prison seems like a luxury care home to them). This was a lie that could have resulted in the deaths of these women, who were only honestly being part of a great process called democracy and the damn valuable right to vote in this country. 

And for a lie, these women could have faced violence, and did face personal upheaval. Because Mr. Trump was a sore loser and because Kanye West was only trying to help a powerful man stay powerful. Kanye West is definitely, as a wise man once said, a jack-ass

Donald Trump lost his election, because, among other things, he is a liar, he was already impeached once, he fouled up the COVID-19 response with sheer ignorance, his for the most part not-bad jobs record was entirely wrecked in 2020, and he instigated constant drama. We've seen how Trump operates via intimidation: vide Alex Vindman, Marie Yovanivich, anyone who doesn't do his bidding. Look at how he treated Jeff Sessions or John Kelly once they crossed some sore nerve of his. 

The thing is, Ruby Freedman is a private person but represents so many election workers who have been threatened because of just this very big lie, that threatens these election workers immediately, but threatens our whole election integrity, ultimately. It's a widely and authoritatively debunked lie, but one right-wing idiots have been spreading for years without conscience. I mean: logic--how do you how many votes you need and where without knowing turnout in advance? The whole thing is too chaotic to rig effectively and you'd need an operation way larger than you could maintain opsec for. 

Facing an irrational and implausible confrontation with this absurd demand upon her character, Ruby Freedman insisted upon her integrity. The devil is a liar. And she did not lie. 

You know what? Mainstream media needs to make this the front page news-Trump is a liar, and he nearly got this woman and her daughter killed with his lies. They need to talk about Mark Meadows and the insurrection PowerPoint. The reality of the coup attempt is real, newsworthy, the only thing I want to talk about, the thing Fox News avoids when Laura Ingraham blank-facedly talks to Trump and he lies about gas prices and think the debt ceiling deal is going to be used on SCOTUS (when simple majorities put his justices on the bench--like, duh). 

(And I will never get over that we had an attempted coup--and it was for this fucking dullard. I've blown more intelligent things out of my nose than this windmill cancer, Greenland-curious, toilet-flushing, Sharpie brandishing, mother-trucking Space Force creating, ever-golfing, tax-evading, pussy-grabbing SOB and I would never endorse one of my boogies for ever-loving president.)

But it fits with the larger picture--get a confession of voter fraud, and stop the January 6 count. Discredit the results. 

They had a plan. This is part of it. And it stinks to high heaven. 


Friday, November 5, 2021

Speaking of A Hostile Work Environment....

 

Just recently, Sen. Manchin referred to his relationship with his colleagues on the Hill as a "hostile work environment" due to all of the partisanship. I seem to recall back in January there was a situation where the work environment was really hostile, and extremely partisan, and well, Manchin's reaction to that was "Why can't we all just get along?" or similar. 

So while I think he's completely wrong, I guess I'd give him points for consistency? As in "consistently wrong about what to do about all this". He's been complaining about how he really wants to see his party come down and do more negotiating (they have come down--they have negotiated!) and wants to see the impact of legislation on the debt and inflation and all this.... 

But when I see him and Sen. Sinema huddled with Mitch McConnell, the partisan motherfucker who denied President Obama a SCOTUS appointment and for a whole year and started ramming through Trump's pick in weeks, well....I think back to times when things were so much more bipartisan. (If there were such times, they were not ever in my lifetime, and I was born in Nixon's first term.) 

Anyway, I have been at times critical of the tactics of the Sunrise Movement because I think they might not be especially persuasive in their tactics and I sometimes question who and how they confront--because generally Democrats are trying to do something about the environment, but it's the GOP that really obstructs meaningful structural change. And as you can see in the above confrontation.... 

Joe Manchin has a really, really nice car.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Autumn of Our Discontent

 

Election Day 2021's warning sign, for me, was the peculiar gathering in Dealey Plaza, of all places, of Qanon faithful assembling for a grand announcement by either JFK Jr. or Sr. (both deceased, and to the best of all inquiries of public record to discern, Democrats at last breathing memory) with the expectation that it would lead to the revelation of the One True President Trump and usher in some kind of new era. What we are looking at here is a phenomenon where an off-shoot of a somewhat incidental and transparently bullshit conspiracy theory (Pizzagate) has transmogrified into a kind of syncretic conspiracy theory cult, looking for a singularity that finally unifies all the conspiracy theories into one big satisfying thing. 

(I kid you not, the allegation that the Kennedys--kinfolk of Brian Boru, represent the Sang Real or Holy Grail legend of human nobility possessed of the bloodline of Christ via the Merovingians combined with the notion of a kind of Elders of the Priory of Sion finagling of an eventual theocratic United States victorious over the bloodsucking Satanist human traffickers that otherwise have been in charge since whenever the cultists deem shit went haywire under the auspices of some kind of God-appointed figure really does seem both like entire nonsense, and kind of cohere if you have studied  US conspiracy theory. )

When JFK Jr. or Sr. did not appear at Dealey Plaza (a morbid location for a revelation, in any event) and it also began to rain, some believers shifted their attention to another location: well surely, at the Rolling Stones concert something might happen (an example of High Boomerism if I ever witnessed one). However, they literally got no satisfaction. 

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

They Can't Recall

So all this to-do established that the very Democratic state of California wanted to keep their governor, and that they did not want a Republican. Oh. Good. Glad that's settled (she snarked, cynically).

Of course bad actors and hard-core Republican partisans will still have some silliness to say about it. Silliness about voter fraud is frankly what they've got. (And the caviling started a little prematurely, didn't it?) But it wasn't even close. That's not a plausible steal, that's a beating. And I just have a funny old opinion about unsupported claims: if they're questionable, question them, and if they're ridiculous--ridicule them. 

The GOP could use this expensive exercise as a learning opportunity, but I'm afraid the takeaway is nothing they'll recall later.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Old TrumpWorld Grab-Bags Never Die

 

It's amazing to me that six whole months after Donald J. Trump, twice-impeached one-term president and current Florida Man, dramatically lost the 2020 election and then whined about it incessantly, I'm still writing TrumpWorld Grab-bag posts. Why can't I just treat him like any other private citizen newbie blogger trying to figure out his platform who really needs help?

Because this country either takes a long hard look at this guy right here, now, and the damage done, or nothing, not one thing, gets better. That's why. The Republican party needs to address how damaging and bad he was so they can improve, if that's ever going to be a thing. The Democratic party needs to address how damaging and bad he was so they can understand how you can not rely on Republicans' good intentions or judgment to save us. We all need to understand why crime-adjacent amoral reality show hosts aren't fucking responsible government leadership material. And we need to get to just how much he fucked up if we ever want to unfuck it.

Anyway, you might ask yourself, where is that unsealed Barr memo we were supposed to be getting? And then cursed Merrick Garland out for not wanting to release all of it. (Or, I don't know, maybe you're normal people, but if so, what are you doing here?)  So, I get the equity of the thing--the DOJ has ongoing matters and maybe not all their business needs to be out in the street, so this is protective--not of Barr, but just the agency in general. It's also a little political: 

Why, no! Nobody here is slavering for the heads and entrails of the previous administration's stalwart cover-up artists, that would be petty and beneath us and besides....

We have time.

The idea that DOJ doesn't go after a sitting president is one of those known but untested things--it's right up there with the extent of executive privilege. Mueller took it for granted in his report. I keep going back to the "murder on 5th Avenue" hypothesis though--what if you got him dead to rights? What if the president is engaging in unlawful activity for no discernible national interest at all, but only self-interest? That's an investigation in and of itself--what is the interest, which might not be readily discernible but still exists, for a president to ostensibly be covering up his own dirt like a cat in a litterbox? But you know--for the people? My gut feeling says --no Trump was covering up his own dirt for himself. 

Maybe Congress will have the Russian investigation obstruction elucidated for them a bit when former White House counsel Don McGahn testifies in a closed-door hearing as soon as next week (instead of like, a year and half or so ago when it should have been).  McGahn has always been a little fascinating to me as having been involved in a complicated maneuver (as I understand it) of being asked to fire Mueller, and then lie about whether he was asked to fire Mueller, and then be asked to lie about being asked to lie. (Trump loves to get people fired, even if it's stupid--getting Comey fired got him the Mueller investigation. If Mueller was fired, that would have been super Saturday Night massacre. And he also wanted to fire his own appointed FBI Director, Christopher Wray, because something something Russia, something something "election security".  Weird, right?

Anyhow, in more Mueller-era stuff, some of the redacted information from the Manafort trial has been unsealed, and whoo! Manafort and Gates were just all over the place contacting Konstantin Kilimnik with polling data and whatnot and discussion of a Ukraine plan that would have Russia in control of part of the region. (Yes, this mattered during 2016, and regarding the first impeachment. TrumpWorld using Ukraine to get/keep Trump in power. It still matters.)

If we're still getting stories relating to the 2016 election--here in 2021? How long will be be looking at the 2020 shenanigans--what with the ongoing rehashing of the election results and the attempted insurrection and all? (And what shenanigans they were! And in the case of the "fraudits" and voter suppression laws, still are!) I may very well be writing these things forever.

Thursday, May 6, 2021

The Republican War on History

 

I guess I want to open this one with Nikki Haley (who may or may not be thinking of running in 2024, keeping in mind she would definitely step aside if Trump wandered into the race), who is critical of critical race theory, as she told Dennis Prager. Because it makes white kids sad. Because you know, there isn't anything so depressing as being told people with your same skin color are basically criminal and capable of terrible violence, I guess? You know, the way people of color are sometimes depicted, too--because racism exists, and Nikki Haley sometimes knows it, and sometimes, when it is convenient, she would prefer not to. 

After so painfully informing us that tearing down statues of Confederates and colonizers was a form of "erasing history", Republicans are now preferring that some history not be specifically taught because it is too controversial.  From Tennessee to Arizona, state legislatures are trying to stop the teaching of critical race theory or the 1619 project, even though it isn't always clear that the people trying to ban these things know what they even are. 

I mean literally, they don't know thing zero. Just recently, a lawmaker in Tennessee somehow got the idea that the 3/5th compromise had something to do with representing Black people and trying to end slavery, instead of being a way for the white men of slave states to gain additional representation according to the number of Black bodies they held in bondage. This is more than mere ignorance of the facts, but a case of someone who, even with the facts laid out before them possessed an utter inability to place them into context. 

But this isn't rare. A Louisiana legislator alleged that there were fine points to slavery. More than one. Actually. But despite what we think about slavery, it isn't even really over in this country. For example, the carceral system, even enshrined in the Constitution, permits a degree of slave labor. Who today argues against raising the minimum wage, or even argues about whether one should exist? (After all, what is unpaid and low paid labor but a form of reducing choices, creating dependencies?) And we also deny full citizenship rights in this country, such as voting rights, to felons--but who in the US is more likely to run afoul of the law? Even explicitly due to racism? Even explicitly to disenfranchise them? Or even lose their lives in a conflict with the law? 

Critical race theory is basically just connecting dots that actually exist, in the way that the 1619 Project is just covering actual historical events like slavery, colonialization, segregation and so on, without the whitewash. As near as I can tell, some Republicans aren't even mad about critical race theory as such or whether it's Marxist (because come on--is that so wrong?) as they are with the teaching of any Black history when it isn't even February. (And don't get them started on leap years!) They want to be the party of Lincoln, but not acknowledge what happened next, and after that, and so on. What happened after 1964 Or 1965

I don't think I'm ok with the idea of ignoring the loud signaling on the right that we need to not call things what they are for the sake of "unity" or bipartisanship, because that's how massive steps backwards get made. Especially not when they are actively trying to disenfranchise people based on race, right out in front when we're looking right at them, and aligning themselves with avowed hate groups and have haters and conspiracy theorists run as Republicans

The question that has been recently posed: Is the US a racist country? is really inadequate to discuss where we are. We are definitely at a crossroads. We have a past that is racist. Racism exists in the present day. The question to me really seems to be--can we work to eliminate it? Racism can not be necessary to what it is to be American, and to live up to our democratic ideals and in the interests of justice under the Constitution, we should act to be anti-racist. But as Ibram Kendi explains, you have to chose--racist or anti-racist. To be neutral implies consent to the system of racism. And yes, it exists as a system. It has been enshrined in law, even in laws we forget the origination of, and is perpetuated in implicit bias--the kinds of things we think, but don't think about

Republicans also have a war against the word "woke"--a word that as a white person I know was not ever meant to be put in my mouth. The idea of wokeness has existed as a form of situational awareness for people about the means of their own survival existing in a hostile dominant culture. Conservatives have now landed on "Woke Island" in full combat gear, to fight against the reaction to their Plymouth Rock forebears. They have been made uncomfortable for being called "white" as a label. They should be uncomfortable if that label addresses what they stand for and what they do--whether they stand for white supremacy, or reject it.

My whiteness doesn't bother me (does your conscience bother you--tell the truth?) What bothers me is whether I do right. I think the problem is seeing morality as an identity and not a practice. You aren't good because of whiteness, blackness, wokeness, religion, or any other "ness" or "ism". You have to live your correct life. That means taking in what is and isn't so, and what did and didn't happen. Facts matter, and reasons why matter. Intent matters. Results matter. But in the end, it's what you do. Right now. History doesn't hurt you--it informs, even if it vicariously tears at your soul to know what others have lived through, even if it should tear at you to know what people live through right now. That is the human condition. 

But you can not address a wrong, or solve an injustice, by refusing to even confront or name it. To refuse to do so, and to reject naming, shaming, and blaming so decisively, is to share in the wrong by aiding and abetting it. It is a statement of intent to continue. 


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

More Than Satisfied


Biden/Harris clicks for me in a satisfying way as a balanced ticket, and all too many think pieces are going to run down the list of identities that show the contrast between these candidates. You know, he's the white male party elder and she's the younger woman of color, etc. But I want to talk about the energy, the synergy, the chemistry--these are two people who care about good government and show great empathy for others. 

I was pissed off in December 2019 when Kamala Harris dropped out of the Democratic 2020 primary. To me, she represented the energy we needed, but I never did gather my thoughts about my disappointment as they probably constituted not a blogpost, but a twenty-volume leather bound special print edition that goes on at length about matters such as "Yeah but the 1990s", "Why the hell Iowa, though?",  "Did the lady smile enough for you?" and "Do racists actually care where brown people are from before they do a racism?" I refrained because I do not have twenty-volume leather bound time and space. 

But damn I thought about all of it. I feel ready to have her back in a journey where she's going to get the kind of press Hillary Clinton got, because that machine never stops. And I know even the plusses of her record are going to be treated as possible strikes against her.

She has taken on the banks and worked for the environment. She has walked a line where she has tried to do justice to the victims of crimes and the accused. She has been a supporter of civil rights and LGBTQ rights. She is not perfect, and no one is. She walked with BLM and marched in Pride. She made Bill Barr uncomfortable during his confirmation hearing and she made Brett Kavanaugh uncomfortable during his. I welcome people who want to say anything about that being wrong--don't make me love her more, you bastards!

I am more than satisfied. I am energized. I see the mutual respect and admiration between Biden and Harris, that one moment aside. (Or maybe magnified, in how they mutually understood it for what it was.) I think they on the whole are complementary and can accomplish big things--like cleaning out the Augean Stables of the Trump government.  

And for what it's worth, Trump's talk about "nastiness" and the GOP talking points about being "fake" are weak. She's both considered one of the most progressive candidates, but is also a "cop"? She dares to be more complex than any talking points? Maybe the problem is they really don't know how to do talking points about her that don't address the bad things Trump isn't supposed to say, but says anyway.  Because that will obviously be a great look (/sarcasm). And maybe that's why he seems shook. Or sedated. But I guess mostly shook. 



TWGB: It's Raining Shoes!

  It certainly has been a minute, hasn't it? So, what brings me out of self-imposed blogging exile, if not something very relevant to my...