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Month: August 2020

There’s nothing to fear but Trump himself

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The party conventions are over and we can take a breather for a few days until the fall campaign begins in earnest. The next big events will be the debates between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, and I think we’ll all need to lay in a new supply of antacids and alcohol to get through those.

It’s pretty clear that Trump’s grand vision was to tape all the speeches of the Republican National Convention‘s first three nights in an empty auditorium to make his big night look bigger and better by comparison. I have no doubt he’ll be desperate to see how his night did in the ratings. If he didn’t beat Biden’s numbers he’ll be forced to call the TV ratings fake news and that will be very disappointing. He loves ratings.

Trump certainly put it all out there, staging a big partisan rally on the lawn of the White House, with all the flags in Washington as background, big screen TVs and a grand entrance from the balcony. (For a moment I thought he was planning to deliver it from there, as if he were Il Duce himself.)

The use of the people’s house for this sort of event is unprecedented but obviously Trump didn’t care about that. In fact, he seems to have taken pride in his defiance of the tradition, calling it more than a house but instead a “home,” pointing toward it and bragging at one point, “The fact is, I’m here, and they’re not.” It was as if the White House were just another of his many properties, to be used for commercial and personal gain.

Trump knows how to bring the pomp, and the spectacle made clear why it’s unethical to use the White House or national monuments for partisan purposes. The familiar grandeur of the White House and the grounds lent an imperial majesty to the event that was frankly un-American. Let’s just say it’s kind of gross to see the White House used like one of Saddam’s palaces.

The large crowd was seated close together for hours, unmasked, shouting and chanting “Four more years” with abandon. The president could only have modeled worst leadership behavior if he’d held it inside. It’s such a childish defiance of public health guidelines. But then, the chairman of the so-called coronavirus task force was glad-handing in the mask-free crowd after his speech the night before, so this seems to be administration policy.

Throughout the RNC, when anyone bothered to mention the pandemic, which wasn’t often, they spoke as if the whole thing were in the past and America has come out the other side better than ever. So I suppose wearing masks and practicing social distancing would seem a bit contradictory, since it’s all over now. Someone needs to tell the thousands of people who are still dying from COVID each week that they can stop doing that. It’s over.

Throughout the week the themes were pretty consistent. The first was that if you knew Donald Trump like the speakers know him you’d like him a lot more. The stories they told (some of which were, um … untrue) would have been considered simple tales of ordinary kindness or good manners in anyone else, but since it’s Trump they are presented as acts of great benevolence.

The second is that he’s accomplished more in three and a half years than any president has every accomplished in two full terms. This is a ridiculous lie. The fact-checkers are probably still working overtime to correct all the dishonest and misleading claims. This is patented Trump, however, and it’s unlikely that any of his devoted voters will care whether it’s true or not.

The third theme is the one they plan to run with all the way to November, and it’s clearly the one Trump himself relishes the most: No one will be safe in Joe Biden’s America. If he wins the election you will have to run for your lives, because bad people from “Democrat-run cities” will be coming to kill you in your beds.

When you stop and think about it, this is the same line he used in 2016 about Muslims and immigrants. He obsessed over ISIS beheadings and suggested that America had to fight fire with fire. He gave lurid speech after lurid speech describing immigrants crossing the border to rape and kill “real” Americans (which of course means white people).. And you’ll recall that before the 2018 election he conjured up “caravans” full of dark-skinned “invaders” heading for the U.S. border, who were also coming to kill you in your beds.

More than anything else, including Trump’s ludicrous bragging about being a “very stable genius,” is his basic pitch. He just retools it slightly to reflect whatever is happening at the moment.

He laid it on thick in his acceptance speech, naming Kenosha, Minneapolis, Portland, Chicago and New York as examples of current violent hellscapes that will destroy America if Joe Biden has his way. He doesn’t seem to understand that most people are scratching their heads in confusion since he’s the president who is presiding over these alleged dystopian nightmares right now.

If there’s any single individual in power who is inciting violence in the streets, it’s President Donald Trump. And he’s doing it for purely political reasons, as his almost-former presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway helpfully explained at this same convention: “The more chaos and anarchy and vandalism and violence reigns, the better it is for the very clear choice on who’s best on public safety and law and order,”

Conway is right. But she’s making the argument for Joe Biden. Trump is making everything worse.

Nonetheless, he and his campaign have decided that they can peel off some of those famous “suburban housewives” by pulling the old scare tactic one more time. As usual, some Democrats are getting nervous that it might work.

Anything’s possible. But Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight has pointed out that part of the reason the polling has shifted a bit on Black Lives Matter protests has more to do with Trump not stirring the pot as much during the last six weeks or so:

He’s back at it now. With the events in Kenosha, in which police shot another black man and then one of Trump’s fans shot three protesters, killing two of them, it’s not clear to me that Americans will see Joe Biden as the real threat.

Indeed, if there is a threat that people may be coming to kill us in our beds, that threat isn’t coming from Black Lives Matter protesters. It’s coming from right-wing extremists, whom Trump has refused to acknowledge or discuss, and who he has been inciting to violence for years now.

As this former DHS official who worked on domestic terrorism says, “We are less safe today because of his leadership. We will continue to be less safe as long as he is in control.”

On Thursday night, Americans heard more of the same old fear-mongering. But after watching him in action all summer long, it seems likely that most Americans understand that the only thing they have to fear is Trump himself.

An even smaller man on a larger balcony

“We can never allow mob rule,” said the man who styles himself after mob bosses, consorts with criminals, and sniffs at obeying the law. Donald Trump’s greatest incentive for running for a second term is to stay a few steps ahead of it. His Republican National Convention acceptance speech Thursday night avoided that topic.

As usual, the more the acting president’s lips move, the more lies he tells. His lips moved quite a lot during Thursday night’s convention address. He spoke for over an hour, and read mostly from the teleprompter in that familiar Trump drone.

The speech itself was a tedious pastiche. The usual white grievance and bragging, plus the worst misty-mist and dusky-dusk writing ever uttered by a president this side of a banana republic. A sample: “Our American ancestors sailed across the perilous ocean to build a new life on a new continent. They braved the freezing winters, crossed the raging rivers, scaled the rocky peaks, trekked the dangerous forests, and worked from dawn till dusk.”

There was plenty of self-congratulations and fear mongering, naturally. “No one will be safe in Biden’s America,” he said, ignoring the fact that under his mismanagement the COVID-19 virus has killed over 180,000 and sickened nearly 6 million. Also unmentioned: the hundreds of dead and wounded mowed down on his watch by mass shooters in Las Vegas and Pittsburgh.

Daniel Dale afterwards provided an abbreviated summary of the false and misleading statements:

Like the speech, musical selections were a pastiche of styles from Lee Greenwood to Puccini. Even Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah” (multiple times). “Fitting, since Trump’s election killed him (Cohen died the night he was elected),” a Twitter follower wrote.

Jimmy Breslin once described Rudy Giuliani as “a small man in search of a balcony.” (The former New York mayor delivered a speech last night taped in an empty auditorium.) Trump found himself a larger balcony, although he did not deliver his speech from it. Not yet.

What the acting president said was unimportant. The staging was the message: the White House, flanked by illuminated Trump-Pence displays and Hatch Act be damned. Over 1,500 packed onto the South Lawn with few precautions in sight:

The overwhelming majority of guests were not administered rapid coronavirus tests, Trump campaign and convention officials said, despite their relative proximity to the president and other White House officials. A White House official said it was logistically unfeasible to test such a large number of people.

Two attendees said in interviews that they were not offered tests and were not even put through a more basic screening, such as being questioned whether they had any symptoms, such as coughs, or taking their temperature. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk frankly.

https://twitter.com/waltshaub/status/1299162605345550336?s=20

Trump began riffing late in the speech, reprising lines he’d spoken earlier. It was if the teleprompter was running on a loop or Trump was performing in a bad musical review.

Only Robert Altman or Stanley Kubrick could top the dark satire of the Trump presidency. *

This election will determine where it ends or how far Trump will go.

A footnote to the speech. After not shutting down the economy, after not insisting people wear masks, and after hawking miracle cures and dragging out the epidemic where other countries have gotten control, Trump insists schools reopen so parents can get back to work resuscitating the economy before November.

The New York Times reports this morning:

Last week in Ohio, officials found Legionella at five schools in an assortment of towns. On Friday, a district in Pennsylvania also announced it had found Legionella at four of its schools.

That’s. Just. Great.

* Update: Heather Cox Richardson has a more optimistic take on how ere meet the future, even in the White House last night “looked like a Biff Tannen fantasy.”

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QOTD: Mistress of the obvious

In case you weren’t already aware of the Trump strategy for November:

“The more chaos and anarchy and vandalism and violence reigns, the better it is for the very clear choice on who’s best on public safety and law and order.” — Kellyanne Conway

The fact that the man who is already in the White House is fomenting violence as she speaks is supposed to go unnoticed by the American people, I guess.

Basically, Trump is ginning up violence in order to scare people into voting for him to … stop the violence? Ok.

The logic here is a bit obscure but I’m sure it makes sense to the Cult.

The outgoing White House counselor was talking about the “unfortunate” violence in American cities and the need for “law and order” when CNN reporter Joe Johns asked, “Is the president calling on his supporters in Kenosha, people like Kyle Rittenhouse, to stop the violence?” about:blankAdvertisement

Johns was referring to the 17-year-old vigilante who was charged with murder for coming into Kenosha, Wisconsin, from out of state to gun down protesters. Rittenhouse was spotted in the front row of a Trump rally in Des Moines, Iowa, in January, and expressed support for the “Blue Lives Matter” movement on social media.

“The president wants everybody to stop the violence,” Conway said in response. “And I know you’re trying to conflate that individual with President Trump and you really shouldn’t do that. Just like CNN shouldn’t have had a chyron last night that said ‘mostly peaceful protests’ with fire in the background. So, that’s pretty offensive, Joe.”

When Johns continued to press Conway on “vigilantes” who “are supporters of the president,” Conway interrupted: “Why are you talking about who they may vote for? Why are you trying to incite more trouble?”

The vigilante teenager in the front row of a Trump rally:

Kenosha shooting suspect attended Trump rally in January - Business Insider

President Super-Spreader

Last night we had this:

Not to be outdone, Dear Leader will double down:

The grand finale of the Republican National Convention will reportedly include President Trump delivering his renomination acceptance speech to a rally-sized audience.

According to a Washington Post report on Wednesday, a person familiar with the GOP convention planning said about 1,000 people are expected to attend Trump’s Thursday night speech at the White House where he will accept the GOP’s nomination for re-election.

The Post noted that the expected crowd outsizes the approximately 70 attendees who attended first lady Melania Trump’s RNC speech on Tuesday night at the newly renovated White House Rose Garden.

It is unclear what area of the White House grounds the President’s speech will take place in, nor what, if any, coronavirus-related safety protocols may be taken for it.

A Trump campaign official told TPM on Wednesday that a coronavirus adviser has been consulted for in-person RNC events and necessary precautions are instituted based on their guidance.

On Tuesday, first lady chief of staff Stephanie Grisham told CNN that those who sat “in the rows near” President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence during Melania Trump’s speech were tested for COVID-19 prior to the event.

Should be lit. And contagious.

The good and the bad

This was good:

Meanwhile, the bad. We have the new breed of Villagers at Politico doing their thing. Eric Boehlert takes on one of the more egregious examples in today’s PRESS RUN:

Signaling its complete disregard for laws, statutes, protocols, and tradition, Trump’s Republican Party has spent convention week gleefully violating a long-standing law prohibiting federal employees and property from being used for political purposes, and specifically used to try to sway an election. In defiance of that, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue has been used as a central prop for the GOP convention.

“In open violation of the Hatch Act, President Trump turned the White House into a convention stage,” noted Jonathan Chait in New York. “He even held an immigration ceremony on camera, and had his secretary of State deliver a speech in explicit violation of State Department regulations.” This comes after Trump has routinely used his office and taxpayer money for campaign events.

Republicans used to care about the Hatch Act. As then-Congressman David McIntosh (R-IN), insisted when there was a Democrat in the White House, “Very clearly, it is wrong to use government property, government assets for political purposes.”

Not anymore. “Nobody outside of the Beltway really cares,” claims Trump’s Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, when asked about the Trump administration’s obvious disregard in keeping government and politics separate.

Like Republicans, the press today tends to dismiss Hatch Act abuse. Increasingly immune to Trump administration lawbreaking, the political press seems uninterested and underwhelmed by the corruption. The New York Times recently reported that White House aides say they gleefully violate the Act at every possible turn. Yet that cavalier revelation was buried two-thirds into the Times article, and not treated as important news.

This week, the Times’ published a passive headline, “At RNC Trump uses tools of presidency in aim to broaden appeal,” as if violating the Hatch Act is the norm in American politics.

“Of course, much of this is improper, and, according to most every straight-faced expert, it’s a violation of the Hatch Act,” Politico conceded on Tuesday. “But do you think a single person outside the Beltway gives a hoot about the president politicking from the White House or using the federal government to his political advantage?”

Somebody tell Al Gore.

Because the same Beltway press corps that today waves off concerns had a much different response when Democrat Gore was accused of violating the Hatch Act for making campaign fundraising phone calls from his White House office as Vice President. Compared to Trump’s pay-for-play corruption of today, Gore’s alleged sin seems quaint. At the time though, the story was treated as a Major Scandal. It generated endless, scolding media coverage and was kept in the headlines for years by eager journalists.  

The New York Times editorial page actually called for an independent counsel to launch a sweeping investigation into Gore’s actions. “The extent to which Mr. Gore’s admission dented his own Presidential hopes cannot be known immediately,” the paper warned. “Mr. Gore now bids to be remembered as the Vice President who went a clear step beyond what previous Vice Presidents and Presidents were willing to do.” 

Republicans jumped on the media bandwagon. The GOP-led Senate held three months worth’s of hearings, and Republicans in the House spent $7.4 million investigating Gore’s phone calls.

The whole scandal was over optics for both Gore and Bill Clinton fundraising. “The scrutiny of the Democrats has turned both on the legality of some of the donations they received and on the seemliness of Mr. Clinton’s use of his incumbency to raise money,” the Times reported. It turns out Ronald Reagan had also made fundraising calls from the White House.

Incredibly, the gotcha media narrative at the time was that Gore was too good at raising money for his campaign. The fact that so many people wanted to give so much money, the press suggested, meant Gore was tainted and unseemly. “Gore’s facility with total-immersion fund-raising, then, may be his greatest strength. Yet it may also prove to be his greatest vulnerability,” the Times warned:

Before it’s all over, there will almost certainly be attack ads from foes recalling his role in the 1996 election as the Democratic Party’s ”solicitor in chief,” cold-calling donors for cash. If he does not do this, and thus move the story of his campaign away from fund-raising, the defining impression left in the minds of the electorate could simply be his ability to charm the deep-pockets crowd; that could be disastrous at a moment when his standing in the polls is anemic and campaign-finance reform is popular.

The Times warned Gore that the “defining impression” with voters would be fundraising, in part because the Times seemed determined to make fundraising the defining impression. (The Times in the 1990s, having declared war on Bill Clinton seemed anxious to take down his No. 2.)   

This is the stunning media double standard that won’t go away: Republicans under Trump get a free pass, while journalists demand Democrats be honest and decent and abide by longtime rules of public discourse.

Just ask Al Gore.

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Worse than Trump? It’s a tough call.

What an ass:

“Look, I think that the NBA players are very fortunate that they have the financial position where they’re able to take a night off from work without having to have the consequences to themselves financially,” Kushner said. “So they have that luxury, which is great.”

Kushner added: “Look, I think with the NBA, there’s a lot of activism, and I think that they’ve put a lot of slogans out. But I think what we need to do is turn that from slogans and signals to actual action that’s going to solve the problem.”

Uhm, Kushner is in the goddamn White House. It’s really not up to the NBA to come up with solutions, although they’re definitely doing more than he and Trump are. In fact, Trump is making everything worse.

And if anyone knows about privilege, it’s him.

There’s more:

“This country’s seen enough of the protests and some of the negative things that can happen when the protests go too far or are hijacked,” Kushner told Politico in a video interview.

“You look at a lot of these cities, and you look at a lot of these politicians that were talking last week,” he said. “They’ve done a lot of complaining, but a lot of these people have been here for decades and haven’t gotten anything done.”

“We’re offering solutions with policy,” Kushner said. “The other side’s doing a lot of complaining. What I’d love to see from the players in the NBA, again, they have the luxury of taking the night off from work. Most Americans don’t have the financial luxury to do that.”

Ivanka says she’s looking forward to going back to her life in New York. No. They must never, ever be allowed anywhere near normal society again. They can socialize for the rest of their lives with the most disgusting, rightwing millionaires. But that’s it.

And if the Trump organization is really under investigation, Ivanka herself is implicated. She made a whole lot of false statements selling Trump condos over the years. She’s in it up to her neck. And Kush humself is as dirty as they come. I won’t be at all surprised to see him in the legal crosshairs.

This family is the worst family in the world. All of them. Including Tiffany.

Just half the population, that’s all

PHOTOS: DC, US sites light up in purple and gold to celebrate 19th Amendment  centennial | WTOP

Politico:

ROUGHLY 100 LANDMARKS, including the KENNEDY CENTER, the WHITE HOUSE and SMITHSONIANS on the National Mall, were lit in purple and gold Wednesday night as part of the “Forward into Light” campaign organized by the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.

ONE BUILDING NOT PARTICIPATING: The U.S. CAPITOL. Organizers had approached Speaker NANCY PELOSI and Senate Majority Leader MITCH MCCONNELL to have the Capitol complex participate in the effort. Pelosi immediately signaled her support. A Pelosi spokesman said “the speaker is deeply disappointed the U.S. Capitol building is not participating in this historic event.” A McConnell spokesman declined to discuss senior staff-level discussions.

Since the congress doesn’t usually participate in “causes” McConnell said he didn’t want to break precedent.

But holding the Republican Convention in the White House is perfectly fine.

By the way, you would have thought the Republicans celebrating their greatness in DC might have made something of this. But as far as I know, they didn’t.

Ignorance and gross credulity

Former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi addressed the Republican National Convention Tuesday.

Do not underestimate the corrupting power of power.

Trumpism and the Republicans’ embrace of it runs deeper than greed or racism. Those are mere surrogates for a more animalistic drive: dominance. The politics of Trumpism is about power: who has it and who is unwilling to share it. The United States’ founders took care to craft a republic in which political power is shared among three branches of government, each holding a check on the other. The very structure tacitly acknowledges Man’s thirst for power and propensity for misusing it.

The Civil War was about the South holding onto its power to enslave. Decades of lynchings after Reconstruction, the KKK, Jim Crow, monuments to the Lost Cause, and the Wilmington and Tulsa riots were about white people threatened with sharing power maintaining their historic dominance. So are movement conservatism, the militia movement, and Christian Dominionism. The Civil Rights and gay rights movements sought for the historically disempowered a share of the power this republic’s founding documents promised but never delivered.

People addicted to power will do almost anything to maintain theirs, including murder.

The mistake Liberty University makes, Kaitlyn Schiess learned in her years there, lies in assuming “that if we know the right information, we will act rightly.” And “in underestimating the power of the loves in our lives — in this case, political power — to shape our actions and alter our moral commitments.”

She writes in the New York Times:

At Liberty, our minds may have been receiving correct content, but our hearts were being trained to love wrongly: to love political power, physical security and economic prosperity as higher goods than they are. The leaders of the university may have believed that we could be immersed in the stories and values of the Republican Party while maintaining any theological truths incompatible with them, but the power of our affective education was stronger. 

Strong enough to pervert the Gospel. Strong enough to corrupt Jerry Falwell Jr. who resigned Tuesday as university president.

“Proximity to power is its own kind of education,” Schiess writes. “It shapes who you are and what you desire in life. A thirst for political power — and sometimes, obtaining that power — begets more than corruption: It often involves sexual immorality, degraded moral judgment and financial malpractice.” In its dalliances with cultural and political power, Liberty has lost its way.

The love of money is not the root of all evil. Money is a surrogate for power. What we are witnessing this week are the lengths to which members of the Party of Trump will go to to maintain theirs. Democratic and ethical principles they claim, like those of Liberty’s believers, they will sacrifice for dominance.

Truth died decades ago, long before “truthiness” became a punch line. The Republican convention this week is a carnival of “depraved” and “scurrilous” lies, the Washington Post’s Editorial Board writes.

Pam Bondi, a former Florida attorney general, leveled a string of corruption charges on Tuesday against former Vice President Joe Biden and his family. That her allegations have been repeatedly proven false was no impediment to Republicans flinging them again. They assume there is a sucker born every minute. They assume their supporters are just as willing to do anything and believe anything to keep from sharing power. Including sacrificing the republic itself.

Unthinkable? The Civil War proves otherwise. Joshua Geltzer considered over a year ago what might happen if Donald Trump loses reelection but refuses to leave office, Dahlia Lithwick recalls:

“One big reaction to my article was the same one that’s come to define the Trump era: ‘He wouldn’t really do that, would he?’ ” Geltzer said. “But then I’d start ticking off all of the times many of us had said that about Trump before, only to see him do the unthinkable.”

The press finds itself paralyzed, Lithwick writes, over how to raise that question without making his refusal to leave more likely. Failure to treat a Trump presidency as an “existential threat to democratic norms and protections” helped lead us here:

The media cannot avoid frightening, unconstitutional, or disempowering ideas this election cycle. It is our job to do quite the opposite: to help clarify what may come, even if it strikes us as unlikely or disturbing, and even if it’s later dismissed as a “joke.” Just as we have explored Trump’s worst fanciful suggestions—about physically abusing criminal defendants, changing the legal protections for journalists, or doing away with birthright citizenship—we should also explore the dark and scary ones, about refusing to accept defeat or encouraging supporters to reject the election results. Does it make us all complicit in the daily mayhem of Schrödinger’s chaos election? Of course it does. But is it smarter than covering our eyes and ears and hoping none of it is coming, as too many of us did in covering the 2016 contest? Um, yes. Because wishing that away didn’t keep it from coming true.

Republicans unbounded by any other principle than the will to power are filling voters’ ears with lies, false history, and spurious Lincoln quotations. Some in their ignorance they likely believe themselves. Others they expect born-again Tories among their base to lap up without question.

The Post’s Editorial Board concludes:

The Republican case against Mr. Biden assumes both ignorance and gross credulity by voters. Let’s hope this cynical and insulting estimation of the American electorate turns out to be wrong.

Hope is not enough. Plan for the worst and work to prevent it.

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For The Win, 3rd Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free countywide GOTV mechanics guide at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.