Skip to content

Month: September 2017

Dear David Brooks by tristero

Dear David Brooks 

by tristero

In your latest column, you compare Donald Trump to…. oh, I can’t repeat it, it’s too ridiculous and contrived. Here it is in your own words:

After World War II the Protestant establishment dominated the high ground of American culture and politics. That establishment eventually failed. It tolerated segregation and sexism, led the nation into war in Vietnam and became stultifying. 

So in the late 1960s along came a group of provocateurs like Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin and the rest of the counterculture to upend the Protestant establishment. People like Hoffman were buffoons, but also masters of political theater… 

[The Hillary Clinton “cohort” – Brooks’ word]… created an economy that benefits itself and leaves everybody else out. It led America into war in Iraq and sent the working class off to fight it. It has developed its own brand of cultural snobbery. Its media, film and music industries make members of the working class feel invisible and disrespected. 

So in 2016, members of the outraged working class elected their own Abbie Hoffman as president. Trump is not good at much, but he is wickedly good at sticking his thumb in the eye of the educated elites.

I don’t where to begin but let’s start with the obvious: they pay you for this bullshit? You’re the second luckiest man in the world, my friend!*

There are so many obvious differences. Trump’s, at best, a sympathizer of white supremacists. Trump is humorless. Trump is illiterate. Trump is so ostentatiously rich he poops on a gold toilet.

Abbie was none of those things. But their greatest difference:

Abbie Hoffman could never have been elected president of the United States. Ever. And why is that? Because of difference #1 – Trump hearts only the whites and there are a lot more whites that respond to racist dog whistles than there ever were people of any color who responded to Abbie’s radical political theater.

As for the idiotic social science equivalence you draw between 60’s yippies and Nazis, white supremacists, and their apologists in America today… gaaaah, do I have to state the obvious reason why it is entirely specious? “Members of the outraged working class” didn’t elect Donald Trump, white people elected Trump, across all classes. There are working class blacks who are outraged, too, y’know, and they didn’t vote for His White Orangenosity-ness.

Funny, David, but when it comes to America, it all comes back to race. And it is absurd to compare the conscious political theater of Abbie Hoffman – even at his most manic – with the inchoate raging race-baiting of Donald Trump.  Unless you’re getting paid well, and I hope you are.

But honestly, David, there’s no amount of money that would cause me to write such obviously dishonest trash as you did in this column.

Love,

tristero

*Andrew Lloyd Webber’s the luckiest man in the world (it’s an old musician’s joke).

A firing offense?

A firing offense?

by digby


We know that the president of the United States thinks NFL players should be fired for kneeling during the National Anthem. His treasury secretary says that people don’t have free speech on the job.
Should this man be fired”

A fire chief from Pennsylvania has apologized for calling Steelers coach Mike Tomlin a “no-good n*gger” after his team did not come out onto the field for the national anthem during this Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears.

CBS Pittsburgh reports that Paul Smith, the chief of the volunteer fire department in Cecil Township, Pennsylvania, posted on Facebook that Tomlin “just added himself to the list of no-good n*ggers” for his decision to note take the field during the anthem.

“Yes, I said it,” Smith added afterward.

Many people in the town reacted angrily to Smith’s post, and said it was inappropriate for a town official to spout racism.

“I’m completely upset, especially for a town like this, coming from the fire chief, that’s disrespectful in my eyes,” said Cecil Township resident Dylan Pareso. “I don’t agree with it one bit.”

Smith apparently realized that he’d made a big mistake, as he quickly sent a message to CBS Pittsburgh apologizing for his racist rant.

“I am embarrassed at this,” he said. “I want to apologize. I was frustrated and angry at the Steelers not standing the anthem. This had nothing to do with my Fire Department. I regret what I said.”

Is that ok? Or should people worry about a government employee charged with keeping the whole community safe who publicly uses the “n” word when he gets angry?

He’s just one guy. But there are millions like him and Trump is activating their racism for his own gain. Dividing this country is what he does. After all, this is a guy who’s preparation for the presidency was birtherism.

.

The new Brownie

The new Brownie

by digby

Trump held a press conference today and patted himself on the back for his tremendous, exceptional, fabulously wonderful response to the hellscape that is currently the island of Puerto Rico after hurricane Maria.

He is proudly wearing the mantle of the famous Heckuva Job Brownie.

Here’s the reality:

Sometimes the most patriotic thing you can do is refuse to stand and salute

Sometimes the most patriotic thing you can do is refuse to stand and salute

by digby

This patriot didn’t stand

I wrote about Trump’s race-baiting for Salon this morning:

As the catastrophe in Puerto Rico looks more and more like it’s going to end up even worse than hurricane Katrina, five days later the president finally tweeted last night:

Texas and Florida are doing great but Puerto Rico, which was already suffering from broken infrastructure & massive debt, is in deep trouble. It’s old electrical grid, which was in terrible shape, was devastated. Much of the Island was destroyed, with billions of dollars owed to Wall Street and the banks which, sadly, must be dealt with. Food, water and medical are top priorities – and doing well. #FEMA

It’s stunning that anyone, much less a president, could possibly be this obtuse. He actually seemed to be saying that the people of Puerto Rico brought this on themselves. And for a man whose business went belly up four times costing Wall Street and banks many millions in losses to bring up Puerto Rico’s debt at a time like this takes real chutzpah. It almost sounded as if he was saying they (“sadly”) had to pay back Wall Street before they could expect any assistance.

And no, food,water and medical are not “doing well.” All of those things are in extreme short supply along with fuel, phones and back up generators so that people can access money. The airport is in complete chaos.

The president is very, very busy right now so it stands to reason that he doesn’t have time to deal with a humanitarian crisis. As Politico reported on Monday, Trump has been worried that his base was feeling neglected so he decided to do a little race baiting to get them all excited:

“He knows it’ll get people stirred up and talking about it,” a senior administration official said. 

The official added the Trump fears his supporters may be feeling neglected after he decided to not immediately cut off protections for undocumented young immigrants known as Dreamers and after he cut a deal with Democrats on the debt ceiling and government funding.

His base was upset that he didn’t thrill them by deporting 800,000 young Latinos immediately so he figured if he called some famous African Americans sons-o-bitches and insist they be fired and blackballed it would make them happy.  According to Wall Street Journal’s Rebecca Ballhaus, on Tuesday night at a White House dinner he said that the issue has “really taken off,” per source. “He was happy—he feels like he’s clearly winning that exchange.”

Trump thinks he’s being very clever by pretending the issue is about patriotism and the flag rather than race. He even twisted the meaning of the protest itself with some fatuous nonsense about players locking arms being supportive of the anthem while kneeling was unpatriotic:

That’s ridiculous, of course. The locked arms were done as a gesture of solidarity with the men who took a knee, an affirmation of their right to protest. And an interesting thing happened at Monday Night football. Before the anthem played, the Dallas Cowboys, including the arch conservative owner Jerry Johnson, locked arms, marched to the center of the field where they all took a knee. And they were booed by many in the crowd, proving once and for all that the problem people have with the protest has absolutely nothing to do with National Anthem or the flag and everything to do with the protest itself.

Trump had tweeted all day Monday about the flag and the anthem while his press secretary robotically repeated the same words over and over again at the White House press briefing:

This isn’t about the president being against anyone, but this is about the president and millions of Americans being for something, being for honoring our flag, honoring our national anthem and honoring the men and women who fought to defend it.

She even went so far as to say that the president using profanity was a defense of America and said if players want to protest police brutality they should protest the police officers who are protecting them on the field instead of the flag. It was a very, very bizarre performance.

This brouhaha, of course, all about race. It was conceived as a protest against police violence against unarmed African Americans. But it is also true that Trump has a real problem with the first amendment. We know how he feels about freedom of the press and religion. He’s no more in favor of free speech, even tweeting during the transition period that “nobody should be allowed to burn the American flag. If they do, there must be consequences — perhaps loss of citizenship or year in jail!”

He apparently didn’t realize that the man he lionized during the campaign as the perfect Supreme Court Justice, Antonin Scalia, had joined the majority opinion in two cases in which the Court held that burning the flag was an exercise of free speech.

Scalia told CNN that he didn’t personally approve of it but explained that “it is fundamentally protected by the Constitution and the Founding Fathers’ efforts to create a government not ruled by tyranny.” He added, “we have a First Amendment, which says that the right of free speech shall not be abridged — and it is addressed in particular to speech critical of the government. That was the main kind of speech that tyrants would seek to suppress.”

There are many reasons that Americans have refused to stand for the national anthem or have knelt down to protest oppression. It’s often been done to demonstrate opposition to racial discrimination as civil rights hero Congressman John Lewis tweeted:

And it was an explicit and intensely personal protest by the man who courageously broke the color barrier in professional sports at great cost to his pride and dignity, a military veteran and lifelong Republican by the name of Jackie Robinson whose 1972 autobiography ends with this:

Today as I look back on that opening game of my first world series, I must tell you that it was Mr Rickey’s drama and that I was only a principal actor. As I write this twenty years later, I cannot stand and sing the anthem, I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a black man in a white world. In 1972, in 1947, at my birth in 1919, I know that I never had it made. 

That’s what those athletes who are taking a knee are saying today, 45 years later. No matter how rich and successful they become, they are still black men in white America, facing potentially mortal danger every time a police officer pulls them over. Whatever Donald Trump and his deeply racist core of supporters believe, black men in America still do not have it made.

.

Hollywood, are you missing a supervillain? by @BloggersRUs

Hollywood, are you missing a supervillain?
by Tom Sullivan

Our real estate president last night finally mentioned the disaster in Puerto Rico. After hits by Hurricanes Irma and Maria, nearly three and a half million Americans are without power: the entire island. Sixty percent have no potable water.

Residents on the north shore haven’t heard anything of the outside world for four days, Vox reported last night:

“Hysteria is starting to spread,” Jose Sanchez Gonzalez, mayor of Manati, a town on the North shore, told the Associated Press. “The hospital is about to collapse. It’s at capacity. … We need someone to help us immediately.”

Hillary Clinton, in a fascinating interview last night on All In with Chris Hayes, could not fathom why the US Navy’s hospital ship Comfort has not already been dispatched.

So, just before the Clinton interview aired, our real estate president finally mentioned the devastation in Puerto Rico. Viewed through the lens of money, naturally.

Three and a half million Americans are without food, water, and power, but sadly we must deal with the money owed Wall Street and the banks?!

MSNBC’s Chris Hayes was as aghast as the rest of us:

Reportedly, more than 10,000 FEMA and federal staffers are on the ground in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. But residents of Puerto Rico are not feeling any relief as yet, NBC News found:

“It looks like a bomb went off,” said Monique Casablanca, 37, by phone from Ocean Park in the capital of San Juan.

“I’ve seen very little to no police presence, I’ve seen zero military presence. Nights are excruciating, there’s screaming, there’s gunshots. It’s hot, so it’s hard to sleep right now I haven’t slept in 48 hours,” said Casablanca, a rental property manager.

Thankfully, an airlift finally has begun. (Sorry, cannot embed.)

But what took the president so long? As Digby suggested, perhaps he has no idea the residents are American citizens: “I would bet money that if you asked the president if Puerto Ricans should be given a[n] amnesty and a path to citizenship he would say no.” Or maybe it just took two and a half weeks for a staffer to mention the Spanish-speaking island is American soil.

Since this is the alternative facts presidency, here’s an alternate theory for his tardiness.

Perhaps where others see devastation and human suffering, our real estate president sees opportunity.

Perhaps it took him a few days to work out how he might turn all that opportunistic destruction into billions for himself.

Costa del Don
Trumpville
Marina del Don
Otisburg

But with Sebastian Gorka gone, who is left in this reality show administration to play Otis? Sad!

* * * * * * * *

Request a copy of For The Win, my county-level election mechanics primer, at tom.bluecentury at gmail.

If you think he’s deplorable

If you think he’s deplorable

by digby

Then they are too:

Matt: We wanted somebody to go in and flip tables. We’re tired of the status quo, as some people wanted on the other side. We were tired of that. 

Oprah Winfrey: In your mind, what table got flipped? 

Matt: Every time he does a rally or a tweet, he’s speaking for people that are sitting at home in Iowa or Oklahoma or Montana, that just wanna say it that way. For years we asked for a president who would just say it the way we do. We got that.

He is their voice.

That’s from the 60 Minutes show last night with Oprah Winfrey. It’s interesting. But depressing. We are living in different worlds.

And new wounds were inflicted nearly every time we brought up a contentious issue, starting with the investigation into Russian collusion in the U.S. election, which we introduced by way of a presidential tweet.

Oprah Winfrey: “You are witnessing the single greatest witch hunt in American political history, led by some very bad and conflicted people.” He’s talking about the Russia investigation. Does that matter to you?

Paul: I don’t wanna hear one more word about Russia. That’s so over the hill for me. What good is it doing anyone?

Oprah Winfrey: Do you think the Russian investigation is valid?

Voices: No. Yes. No. Yes. No.

Oprah Winfrey: Who here thinks… Who here thinks it’s not even valid? Really? OK.

Tim: We had a foreign country attack our country. That is…

Jeff: –you know what, spare us the fake outrage. When you wanna go back–

Tim: It is! That’s the truth—

Jeff: We changed regimes in Egypt. We changed regimes in Libya!

Tim: In Libya. We’re talking about our shores influencing an election.

Jeff: So it’s perfectly acceptable for us…

Rose: He is considered guilty until proven innocent right now, in my opinion. Because where’s the crime? Where is the crime? Tell me. Where’s the crime?

Kailee: When he fires the FBI director for performing the Russia investigation. That is obstruction of justice. He invited the Russian ambassador into the Oval and said, “The pressure is off.” Are you kidding me?

The same people who think there’s nothing wrong with Russia interfering in the election are the ones who would be the first to scream “love it or leave it” in your face.

If you go over to the program and watch the discussion on Charlottesville, it will make you queasy…

This is pure tribalism. And one tribe thinks Donald fucking Trump can do no wrong.

Update:

“You don’t lurch into authoritarianism, you slide into it”

“You don’t lurch into authoritarianism, you slide into it”

by digby

That authoritarian quote was something Nicolle Wallace said on her show today quoting an unnamed friend of hers. She said it in response to this comment by conservative NY Times columnist Bret Stephens about the “take a knee” protest against police violence:

The great question is whether this is a political calculation with malice of forethought… With Trump the line between malice and idiocy is is always this sort of blurry one so it’s always sort of difficult to tell. But there a political cunning at work that Colin Kaepernick is a unsympathetic character especially to Trump’s voters and going after him in the midst of his own political difficulties is sure to be a winner, not least because in doing so he’s trolling the left.

That’s on the one hand. But the real issue here is the principle at stake. You don’t love the the flag, you don’t love the anthem because they’re totems. We’re not existing in some sort of pre-historic culture where you worship, I don’t know, a stone. You love them because they represent a series of constitutional liberties protections, a system of republican and small “l” liberal government which is what makes America special, that you can in fact engage in political protests in public events like this. This is not a deviation from what it means to be an American it’s the essence of what it means to be an American.

This is absolutely true. But remember, the only part of the constitution with which Trump is familiar is the second Amendment and that’s just because the NRA endorsed him and he thinks everyone should be armed so they can kill all the “bad dudes” in vigilante action if the cops don’t get there first. He literally does not understand or care about the principle Stephen talks about above. The principle he cares about is that every American must be forced to demonstrate their loyalty to the government by standing at attention when the anthem is played and the flag is flown. This principle is not about freedom, not in the least. It’s about suppressing one’s individuality to the state.

What’s interesting about all this in terms of Trump is that it was only a couple of years ago that his followers were carrying on about liberty and needing to arm themselves against government power. Now they’re cheering on a president who wants to force people to stand and salute on command.

.

Class acts

Class acts

by digby

This morning on a radio show Trump said McCain’s refusal to vote for the health care monstrosities is “a tremendous slap in the face to the Republican Party.”

And then there’s this despicable piece of work:

Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert believes Arizona Sen. John McCain should be recalled while he undergoes treatment for cancer so that Republicans can replace him with someone who will support the party’s latest effort to repeal and replace the 2010 health care law.

“He’s got cancer, it’s a tough battle,” the GOP congressman told “Fox & Friends” on Monday morning. “But stress is a real inhibitor to getting over cancer.”

“I think Arizona could help him, and us. Recall him, let him fight successfully this terrible cancer, and let’s get someone in here who will keep the word he gave last year,” Gohmert said.

McCain said last week he would not support a repeal bill sponsored by GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana.

Like most Republicans, the 2008 presidential candidate has campaigned for the better part of a decade on repealing and replacing the 2010 law. But twice in the past two months, he has effectively killed GOP efforts to do so. (In July, he voted “no” on the so-called skinny repeal bill Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell put to a floor vote.)

“If he had said last year what he was going to do, Kelli Ward would have beat him,” Gohmert said, referring to the former Arizona state senator who ran against McCain in the primary, losing by 11 points. Ward is challenging Arizona’s other GOP senator, Jeff Flake, next year.

Gohmert is not the first Republican lawmaker to connect McCain’s medical status to his opposition to his party’s efforts to repeal and replace the health care law.

In August, Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson suggested McCain’s cancer could have affected his decision to cast the decisive “no” vote the previous month.

“Again, I’m not going to speak for John McCain — he has a brain tumor right now — that vote occurred at 1:30 in the morning, some of that might have factored in,” Johnson told a Chicago talk radio show on Aug. 8.

The Wisconsin Republican later walked back his remarks, but not before he was criticized by McCain spokeswoman Julie Tarallo.

“It is bizarre and deeply unfortunate that Senator Johnson would question the judgment of a colleague and friend,” she said in a statement. “Senator McCain has been very open and clear about the reasons for his vote.”

McCain’s office could not be reached for comment on Gohmert’s remarks.

There are no limits with these people, no depths to which they will not go.

These are the people who are in charge of our government. This is what those Americans at Trump rallies voted for.

.

QOTD: Jackie Robinson

QOTD: Jackie Robinson

by digby

Today as I look back on that opening game of my first world series, I must tell you that it was Mr Rickey’s drama and that I was only a principal actor. As I write this twenty years later, I cannot stand and sing the anthem, I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a black man in a white world. In 1972, in 1947, at my birth in 1919, I know that I never had it made.



That is the last paragraph of the autobiography of Republican, military veteran, American hero and sports legend  — Jackie Robinson.

Donald Trump and his racist followers haven’t changed one tiny bit since that time. They don’t openly boo players just for being black anymore. But they’re always looking for any excuse to do it.

.