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Month: August 2020

Herd insanity: QAnon and Fox

“Where We Go One We Go All” is a popular QAnon slogan seen in the hashtag #WWG1WGA. (Yes, I know.)

You would be challenged to find a more stark portrayal of the choice voters face in this presidential election than this montage of comments by former Vice President Joe Biden and acting president Yeah-that-guy:

Throw in a reference to fluoridation and the Donald Trump clips could be from his audition tape for a remake of Dr. Strangelove.

Last month, the Texas Republican party adopted as its campaign slogan, “We Are the Storm,” the New York Times reports. It is a phrase used by adherents of QAnon conspiracists who believe there is a secret “cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophile Democrats who seek to dominate America and the world.” The FBI has identified QAnon as a domestic terror threat. Georgia GOP congressional candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene is an adherent, along with several other Republican politicians.

Allen West, the former Florida congressman, now runs the Texas GOP. He denies the QAnon connection, reports the Texas Tribune, which fleshes out the storm metaphor:

The concept of “the storm” is a significant part of QAnon vernacular, said Mark Fenster, a law professor at the University of Florida who studies conspiracy theories.

“The storm has been one of the metaphors that Q and his followers have used to describe the coming upheaval in which Donald Trump reveals himself to have been working heroically behind the scenes to expose and punish those who have been engaged in this horrible satanic child sex cult,” Fenster said. “Storms are longstanding metaphors going back to biblical [times]of how it is you cleanse what has otherwise been a sinful humanity.”

Since conspiracists need no proof behind their theories, let me float a no-proof one of my own.

QAnon feels like a digital prank that took on a life of its own. Along with Russian and other foreign disinformation sites were fake news sites appeared in 2016 a) to make money and b) to prove just how gullible people can be.

One such digital satirist-entrepreneur lamented he might have helped Trump win the White House. Paul Horner, 38, died in September 2017 of an “accidental overdose.” Or was it? That’s how these things work.

Brandy Zadrozny and Ben Collins of NBC News found that three such persons took the original Q posts from 4chan to YouTube and Reddit and turned them into cash flow. From there the conspiracy spread widely and attracted audience on the erroneous belief that if everyone is talking about it there must be something to it:

Part of the Qanon appeal lies in its game-like quality. Followers wait for clues left by “Q” on the message board. When the clues appear, believers dissect the riddle-like posts alongside Trump’s speeches and tweets and news articles in an effort to validate the main narrative that Trump is winning a war against evil.

There are now dozens of commentators who dissect “Q” posts — on message boards, in YouTube videos and on their personal pages — but the theory was first championed by a handful of people who worked together to stir discussion of the “Q” posts, eventually pushing the theory on to bigger platforms and gaining followers — a strategy that proved to be the key to Qanon’s spread and the originators’ financial gain.

Since then, they wrote in 2018,, “Qanon followers have allegedly been involved in a foiled presidential assassination plota devastating California wildfire, and an armed standoff with local law enforcement officers in Arizona.”

Yes, anxiety or loss of control in test subjects “triggers respondents to see nonexistent patterns and evoke conspiratorial explanations.” With white people a shrinking demographic, the economy in ruins, 175,000 dead and no end in sight, you could say people feel the world is out of control. Having a sense that you posses secret knowledge that can “out” the malefactors behind it all has real attraction.

Not to mention we have a “batshit crazy person” in the White House who feels the same pressures and is unwilling to distance himself from QAnon. “They like me very much,” Trump said about QAnon, which, Colbert I. King observes at the Washington Post, “is the standard by which Trump measures all of his relationships, both official and personal.”

MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow closed her Friday show by interviewing CNN’s Brian Stelter, author of “Hoax: Donald Trump, Fox News, and the Dangerous Distortion of Truth,” due out next week and excerpted Thursday at Vanity Fair.

A Fox staffer told Stelter on the record saying the Fox’s allegiance to Trump “is putting our democracy at risk.” Stelter writes:

“Hannity would tell you, off-off-off the record, that Trump is a batshit crazy person,” one of his associates said. Another friend concurred: “Hannity has said to me more than once, ‘he’s crazy.’”

The relationship between the channel and Trump manifests as a propaganda feedback loop in which what what Fox hosts say on TV comes out of the president’s hours later. Then Trump calls Sean Hannity and repeats it back on TV.

Life imitates art. “I say it here. It comes out there,” newsman Albert Brooks says in 1987’s Broadcast News.

And Fox News viewers, QAnon cultists among them, will believe it.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-party-of-trump-is-already-a-convention-of-ghoulish-clowns/2020/08/21/89248e90-e3ea-11ea-8181-606e603bb1c4_story.html

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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.

He made the world feel better

Now here’s a profile in courage.

That kid is my hero. And, frankly, despite the fact that I don’t love politicians, Joe Biden is a hero to me for being a hero to him.

https://twitter.com/NYinLA2121/status/1296844524682018817

They just lie

Rally planned 8/19 to save the Post Office from the Trump administration's  sabotage-NOTE THIS RALLY HAS BEEN CHANGED ...

Highlights of this morning’s Senate hearing with the Postmaster General show that DeJoy understands that he can just lie with impunity like everyone else in the Trump administration. He assumes that if Trump wins, he’s safe and if he loses no one will pursue it.

DeJoy refused to commit to providing transparency to Congress.

Senator Jacky Rosen: “Can you commit to transparency, sir?” …

DeJoy: “Ma’am, I do not accept the premise.”

DeJoy did not consider how veterans, seniors, deployed service members, and others would be hurt by mail slowdowns.

NBC News’s Geoff Bennett: “Effective questioning by Sen. Jacky Rosen — making clear that DeJoy did not do an analysis specifically taking into account how his policy changes would affect seniors, veterans, deployed service members, and others who desperately need on-time #USPS delivery.”

DeJoy claimed he and his team had not limited overtime — while postal workers across the country say it has been curtailed.

NBC News’s Geoff Bennett: “Peters: Are you limited overtime? Is that being suspended? DeJoy: We never eliminated overtime. Peters: It’s been curtailed. Dejoy: It’s not been curtailed by me or the leadership team. Every postal employee I’ve talked to (from coast to coast) disputes this.”

DeJoy testified under oath that he never discussed the USPS with Trump, but he met with him earlier this month.

CNN’s Abby Phillip: “DeJoy testifies under oath that he has never discussed the Postal Service with President Trump or his Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.”


CNN’s Betsy Klein: “Postmaster General DeJoy met with President Trump on August 3 and the postal service didn’t come up?”

DeJoy contradicted Trump by making it clear that voting by mail is safe.

Talking Points Memo Tierney Sneed: “DeJoy has repeatedly stressed that USPS has capacity to handle the surge in vote by mail expected this election. This cuts against Trump’s claim that USPS can’t handle it”

DeJoy: “I think the American public should be able to vote by mail.”

Here’s hoping Katie Porter and the other Democrats in the House can get to the truth on Monday.

ICYMI, Joe Biden gave the best speech of his life

There were a number of excellent highlights from night four of the Democratic convention which I thought was the strongest of all of them, as it should be. Considering what they were up against I think the producers did a great job. Maybe we’re all used to zoom calls and watching people talk from their living rooms so it didn’t seem strange. But it felt more intimate than they normally do and when it comes to politics, the less abstract the better.

This is not a time for a bunch of screaming and cheering in funny hats. The intimate, virtual approach worked.

And they did some excellent videos, like this one that introduced Biden:

I don’t know who wrote it but it was really good, well paced, thematic and inspirational. The direction was well done as well, with the camera very slowly moving to a big close up as the speech built to a crescendo.

And Biden delivered it perfectly:

Earlier they did a zoom meeting of most of the primary candidates that was kind of fun. But I think it was Bernie Sanders who used the one word to describe Biden that is most potent in this election and it isn’t “empathy.” He said Biden is honest. Nothing is more important right now.

Biden came out and said we can handle the truth. And like Obama the night before, he laid it out: our democracy is at stake and it’s really, really serious. Throughout these last three years, I have had to question my sanity, wondering if what I was observing was actually happening. Seeing Democratic leaders as concerned as I am and sharing that with the whole country at their convention is reassuring. At least I’m not crazy.

The two Americas

Watch full DNC roll call: The virtual convention's best part

Sturgis really churned them out this year : ATAAE

Ron Brownstein has some typically astute analysis of the big picture as we go into the last stage of this election. It couldn’t be more stark:

The energetic, quick-cut keynote speech included multiple speakers who were Latino, Black, Asian American, Native American, and LGBTQ, not to mention several women. The brilliantly reimagined convention roll call reinforced the point, with brief testimonials—some somber, others endearingly goofy—from another diverse roster of speakers in every state and territory, a change that drew rave reviews on Twitter and TV news. Some Democratic activists complained that organizers had allocated too much of the event’s limited time to Republicans and too little to nonwhite progressive leaders such as Stacey Abrams and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. But average viewers probably absorbed a very different image: On a day when Trump delivered an incendiary speech in Yuma, Arizona, touting his border wall and even reprising the language from his 2015 campaign announcement about immigrants as “murderers” and “rapists,” Democrats offered the 21st-century version of a Norman Rockwell painting.

That contrast testifies to the depth and the intractability of the modern American divide. Even as Democrats gather to nominate “Scranton Joe” Biden, whose supporters have long touted his ability to recapture working-class white voters, many indications suggest 2020 could cleave the electorate more deeply than ever before, with a diverse, more and more educated, culturally cosmopolitan, metropolitan-based “coalition of transformation” on the Democratic side and a preponderantly white, heavily blue-collar, Christian, nonurban “coalition of restoration” on the Republican side.

The stark reality of that separation would test the bridge-building capacity of any president. Through the 2020s, tension is likely to grow between the diverse communities on display this week and the white constituencies that Trump is trying to mobilize by describing the BLM movement as a “symbol of hate” and by warning “The Suburban Housewives of America” that Biden will “destroy” the suburbs by allowing more low-income housing. If a majority of working-class and Christian white America responds to Trump’s openly racist appeals when they represent a little more than 40 percent of the population, as they do today, there’s little to suggest they will be less responsive to such arguments as their share falls into the 30s, as it will inexorably within a few years.

The flurry of preconvention surveys shows a few unique twists to the 2020 matchup between Trump and Biden, such as Biden’s potential to run better among seniors than any Democrat since Al Gore in 2000. But mostly, the polling shows even further acceleration in the trends that have reshaped—and separated—the two parties’ coalitions since the razor-thin election of 2000.

Despite all of the controversies that have battered Trump’s presidency, especially his erratic response to the coronavirus pandemic, these polls show him retaining very solid support among his core groups. Surveys released since August 11 by Monmouth UniversityCNN, NBC/The Wall Street Journal, and ABC/The Washington Post all found Trump attracting from 57 to 60 percent of white voters without a college education. The latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist survey put his number slightly lower at 55 percent, while the most recent Pew Research Center poll put him higher, at 64 percent. Trump’s margin over Biden on these measures ranges from just more than 20 percentage points to about 30 points.

That’s not as formidable as Trump’s advantage in 2016, when various data sources measuring voting behavior generally put his lead among non-college-educated white voters even higher. And polls in the Rust Belt battleground states, such as the latest Marquette University Law School survey, show Biden performing better among those voters there than he has nationally. Trump’s small overall decline, especially in key battlegrounds, might be enough to deny him a second term by flipping back the three “blue wall” states he won narrowly last time: Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

But Trump’s ability to hold on to about three-fifths of non-college-educated white voters nonetheless testifies to the power of the cultural and racial attitudes that bond them to him. Even non-college-educated white women—though clearly less supportive now than in 2016—still give Trump a clear majority of their votes in all of the recent national surveys for which those data were available. (Biden leads among those women in Wisconsin, the Marquette poll found.) In the South, Trump continues to amass towering margins among white voters without a college degree: He’s at 70 percent or more among them in recent polls in North Carolina and Georgia, and nearly that high in Texas. Polls likewise show that Trump is maintaining support from about three-fourths (NBC/WSJ) to four-fifths (Pew) of white evangelical Christians. With rural voters, the Pew, NBC/WSJ, and ABC/Post polls all put him at from 55 to 60 percent support.

Those numbers in rural communities would also constitute slight declines from 2016, and that threatens Trump, given how narrowly he won last time. But all of these results signal how many white Americans remain responsive to Trump’s underlying argument that a victory for the diverse Democratic coalition on display this week would irreversibly transform the nation into something they consider alien and unacceptable. It is that audience Trump explicitly targets when he declares, as he did in his Yuma speech, that if Biden wins, “our country will not be the country that we know.” (Trump also nodded to such voters last night when he praised the victory in a Republican House primary of the extremist anti-Muslim candidate Laura Loomer, one week after he congratulated a follower of the QAnon conspiracy theory who won a GOP primary in Georgia.)

But the polls also make clear that Trump’s party is paying a heavy price for his decision to so closely align Republicans with the priorities and resentments of the constituencies most uneasy with what America is becoming. The numbers vary, but Trump rarely attracts even one-third of adults younger than 35. Trump lost minority voters by more than 50 percentage points in 2016 and usually draws support from only about one-fourth of them now. (Still, some Democrats worry he might slightly nudge up his support from 2016 among Black and Latino men.) Among the growing group of adults unaffiliated with any religious tradition, Pew found Biden winning more than seven in 10 voters.

The sharpest movement away from the GOP in the Trump era has come among well-educated white Americans. Until 2016, no Democrat had ever won white voters with a college degree in either the media exit polls (tracing back to the 1970s), or the University of Michigan’s American National Election Studies surveys (extending back to 1952). In 2016, the exit polls showed Trump narrowly carrying these voters, but some other data sources, including the ANES, gave Clinton the edge. Two years later, the midterm exit polls for House races showed Democrats winning college-educated white women comfortably, but losing the men narrowly, putting the party at 53 percent with college-educated white voters overall.

Most of the new polls over the past two weeks show Biden with much higher support: From 57 to 61 percent of college-educated white voters support him. Those numbers are unprecedented—as is Biden’s lead among both college-educated white men and women. As recently as the GOP midterm sweeps of 2010 and 2014, Democrats won only about one-third of college-educated white men. Given these patterns, the tendency of Democrats since 2000 to run better among white Americans with a college education than those without one—what I’ve called “the class inversion”—is on track to reach its all-time peak.

Trump’s appeals to cultural conservatives have compounded his difficulties with those well-educated white voters, GOP strategists I’ve spoken with acknowledge. Tom Davis, a former Republican representative from suburban northern Virginia, who chaired the National Republican Congressional Committee during his years in the House, told me there’s an audience of suburban white voters “who are disgusted” with the violence during recent protests and the calls to defund the police. But overall, he believes, Trump’s arguments are backfiring. “They’re overplaying this with a blunt force that is not the way to appeal to college-educated people that like to feel they are open-minded and open to diversity,” said Davis, now a partner at the Washington, D.C., law firm Holland & Knight.

Nick Gourevitch, a Democratic pollster, agrees. “White-grievance politics reinforces the battle lines of the last three years,” he told me. Which side that helps, he said, depends on whether you believe those battle lines are good or bad for Trump. “I’ve always felt that those battle lines are not good for him and that he doesn’t win with them,” Gourevitch continued. “I don’t think there is any real evidence that this is gaining him anybody other than the people who like him to begin with.”

New data provided to me by Pew help fill in the long-term risk in Trump’s strategy. From 2004—the last time a Republican presidential candidate won the popular vote—through 2016, the GOP’s core group of non-college-educated white voters tumbled from 52 to 42 percent of the total national vote. Over that period, those same voters declined as a share of the electorate across a broad group of battleground states: by at least 9 percentage points in the prototypical Midwest states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, and Iowa; by 8 points in Ohio; and by 7 in Pennsylvania. They fell by 8 percentage points or more in the current and emerging Sun Belt battlegrounds of Georgia, Florida, Arizona, and North Carolina; as well as by 9 points in Virginia, which has become safely Democratic since 2004. In Texas, they declined by 6 points.

In each state, the share of either college-educated white voters or people of color grew to fill in the gaps. If these trends continue this year, Trump faces the likelihood that his base of non-college-educated white Americans will shrink to about 40 percent of the total vote in November—and maybe even less if Black turnout recovers from its sharp decline in 2016.

In a parallel progression, the share of Americans who identify as white and Christian is decreasing, while those who don’t identify with any religious tradition is growing. A generational flip is coming too: By 2024, Americans born after 1981 will significantly outvote those born before 1964.

All of these transitions will produce an American electorate that looks more like the cast at this week’s Democratic convention than the likely lineup for Trump next week. Many obstacles still inhibit that emerging America from consolidating political power, including lower turnout among younger and nonwhite voters, excess concentration of Democratic support in big metro areas, and solidifying Republican dominance of rural states favored in the Senate and the Electoral College.

More immediate problems also threaten the new Democratic coalition. Blue-collar white voters still significantly exceed their national share of the vote in the big Rust Belt battlegrounds that Democrats must win until they demonstrate that they can reliably flip more diverse Sun Belt states. Widespread questions remain over whether Biden, even after adding Kamala Harris as his running mate, can excite greater turnout than Hillary Clinton did among younger voters, especially nonwhite ones. And this year, many Democratic election strategists are grappling with an unprecedented concern: fear that the party’s heavy reliance on urban and suburban voters could leave it “immensely vulnerable,” as one put it, to Trump’s efforts to suppress the vote—for instance, by disabling mail service in a handful of big cities around Election Day.

But Trump has committed the GOP to a strategy of squeezing bigger margins from a shrinking share of the electorate, while systematically alienating the growing groups that Democrats are highlighting this week. He may still be able to squeeze out another Electoral College victory even if he almost certainly loses the popular vote. But even that pathway is not realistic, strategists on both sides acknowledge, unless he can significantly cut his current popular-vote deficit. “Donald Trump basically drew an inside straight in 2016,” says the longtime Republican pollster Whit Ayres. “The question is whether he can draw an inside straight two hands in a row.”

He can do it if he cheats. And it’s clear that he will try. The Democrats have to do everything in their power to thwart him — and hope that his inexplicable good luck does not outweigh his overwhelming incompetence and the cheating will not be successful.

Long term it appears that what Trump represents is the screaming death throes of the Republican Party. It is an ugly demist. And they aren’t dead yet.

The week in Trump corruption

Steve Bannon, former Trump adviser, arrested for fraud | US & Canada News |  Al Jazeera

As the Democrats staged a successful virtual telethon-style convention over the past four days, Donald Trump has been running around the country saying that there’s no way he can lose the election unless it’s “rigged” and telling Fox News that he plans to send law enforcement to polling places, “to Democrat areas, not to the Republican areas, as an example. Could be the other way too, but I doubt it.” He’s also pretty much endorsed the conspiracy cult QAnon, saying they are people who like him “very much.” On Thursday he watched yet another of his 2016 campaign leaders hauled off in handcuffs by federal agents.

It would be just another week in the surreal world of Donald Trump if it weren’t for the fact that the election is just around the corner and his rantings have become quite serious. Certainly, seeing his former White House strategist and campaign “CEO” Steve Bannon face indictment, on the same day that another judge ruled he would have to turn over his tax returns to New York prosecutors, may have focused the mind.

Bannon and three others were indicted on federal charges for allegedly siphoning off more than a million dollars of small-donor money from the private fundraising group We Build the Wall, which had promised that all money donated would be spent on President Trump’s cherished border wall. This sort of thing is a familiar theme in Trump World: Recall that just before he assumed office in 2017, he settled a $25 million lawsuit over his fraudulent Trump University.

In fact, this isn’t all that different from the charges Trump may well face from the Manhattan district attorney’s office relating to his licensing and real estate projects. There is evidence that he and others in the Trump Organization have misrepresented how much of their own money was at stake to other potential buyers, banks and investors. And then there’s the question of whether they committed tax fraud. (Spoiler: Almost certainly, whether or not that can be successfully prosecuted.)

Trump claimed on Thursday that he was always against the private wall project that got Bannon into trouble, but his image was all over the group’s website and Donald Trump Jr. is on video endorsing it. One of the board members, Kris Kobach —who headed Trump’s short-lived “voter fraud” commission and keeps losing elections back home in Kansas — is also on video claiming that Trump told him the project had his blessing.

One of the more suspicious connections with this scam was Trump’s relentless insistence that a North Dakota construction firm called Fisher Industries should get the contract for the official border wall. According to this Washington Post story from May of 2019, Trump demanded that the military award the job to this obscure company even after its bid had been rejected by the Army Corps of Engineers, which alarmed Homeland Security officials about the appearance of corruption. And guess what?

Even as Trump pushes for his firm, Fisher already has started building a section of fencing in Sunland Park, N.M. We Build the Wall, a nonprofit that includes prominent conservatives who support the president — its associates and advisory board include former White House adviser Stephen K. Bannon, Blackwater USA founder Erik Prince, ex-congressman Tom Tancredo and former Kansas secretary of state Kris Kobach — has guided an effort to build portions of the border barrier on private land with private funds.

Jared Kushner pushed Fisher Industries as well, but in the end the firm didn’t get the government contract. It ended up building a small piece of the private wall that has been described faulty and flawed. Trump distanced himself from the We Build the Wall project last month, apparently out of the blue, saying he never believed in it in the first place.

None of this smells right: He spent months pushing the government to award that company a multi-billion-dollar contract, and suddenly their shoddy work makes him “look bad.”

On Friday we will see yet another corrupt Trump henchman appear on Capitol Hill when Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a major Republican donor, testifies before the Senate. The sabotage of the U.S. Postal Service in advance of the election is almost certainly the most corrupt act this administration has yet undertaken.

Trump openly admitted that he opposes funding the post office in order to make mail-in voting impossible during the pandemic. It’s pretty clear that the point of the various “efficiencies” DeJoy has implemented in the past few weeks, such as destroying sorting machines, removing mailboxes and ending overtime for mail carriers, are designed to make mail-in voting difficult or impossible during this deadly pandemic.

Of course, this has also had the effect of turning the Postal Service into what a small business owner interviewed by the Los Angeles Times described as “Armageddon,” with packages of rotting food and dead baby chicks piling up in postal facilities, and deliveries taking weeks instead of days. DeJoy claimed earlier this week that he would not implement any more “efficiencies” until after the election but reports from all across the country suggest the service cuts are continuing.

We can expect that DeJoy will be asked about all this at the Senate hearing Friday and a House hearing on Monday. Let’s hope the committees ask him about his reported meeting with the president earlier this month as well:

Trump has said he didn’t meet with DeJoy on that date, which is almost certainly a lie. What are the odds Trump didn’t tell him he wanted the post office crippled in advance of the election to prevent mail-in voting?

Trump’s corruption often has a blatant financial component, of course. Take his aborted gambit to hold the G7 summit at his Trump National Doral resort in Miami, for instance. Maybe there’s a money angle for him in the border wall and the post office too. But to be fair, his corrupt gambits aren’t always driven by financial gain. They can also be about personal, political benefit, even if that’s often based on an ignorant misunderstanding.

According to the Washington Post, Trump’s obsession with the Fisher Industries, the obscure North Dakota firm, stemmed from the CEO’s frequent appearances on Fox News, in which he promised he could build the wall cheaper and faster than anyone else. Trump’s antipathy toward the post office predates his panic over mail-in voting, and reflects his delusional belief that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is so much wealthier than Trump is because he’s getting a sweetheart deal from the Postal Service.

These are just two of Trump’s many nonsensical and corrupt obsessions, pursued on his orders by flunkies and henchmen who often know their assignments but carry them out anyway. Quite a few of them have been caught bilking the taxpayers and ended up losing their jobs at this point, and there’s an ignominious list of Trump’s campaign cronies who have been indicted or convicted of federal crimes, to which Steve Bannon added his name this week.

Whether Trump’s underlings are motivated by opportunism, careerism or just plain old greed, you have to ask yourself why anyone would sign on to work for this insane, childlike president. Maybe someone will ask Louis DeJoy that question when he appears on Capitol Hill. At this point the country deserves to know.

My Salon column reprinted with permission

Prelude to a day of reckoning

“Biden has had so much taken from him, and his humanity never faltered; Trump was given everything, and learned nothing,” tweeted Sam Adams, a senior editor at Slate, summing up the message underlying the Democratic nominating convention that ended Thursday night with literal fireworks.

“The terrible, crippled caricature of masculinity [Donald] Trump embodies has cost us all so much,” Adams added.

The less-subtle theme of the convention was more obvious: our democracy is on the line.

Former Vice President Joe Biden delivered an acceptance speech that, frankly, I didn’t know he had in him. “Give people light and they will find a way,” he began, quoting civil rights icon Ella Baker.

Biden invited the country to leave behind the “season of darkness” ushered in by the acting president, pledging if so honored to be a leader for all Americans. He pledged to help rescue its soul and to beat back the deadly pandemic that will forever brand the Trump administration a wretched failure.

Where his opponent speaks of mayhem and carnage, Biden offered hope:

On this summer night, let me take a moment to speak to those of you who have lost the most.

I know how it feels to lose someone you love. I know that deep black hole that opens up in your chest. That you feel your whole being is sucked into it. I know how mean and cruel and unfair life can be sometimes. 

But I’ve learned two things. 

First, your loved ones may have left this Earth but they never leave your heart.  They will always be with you. 

And second, I found the best way through pain and loss and grief is to find purpose. 

As God’s children each of us have a purpose in our lives. 

And we have a great purpose as a nation: To open the doors of opportunity to all Americans. To save our democracy. To be a light to the world once again.

It was one of the best speeches in memory. Watch it below.

But even as Julia Louis-Dreyfus mocked Trump and 13-year-old Brayden Harrington (like Biden, a stutterer) “put on a clinic of courage and guts for the country,” the sitting president spoke by phone with Sean Hannity and issued more threats against the election.

Would Trump have people monitoring polling places to prevent fraud and see “whether or not these are registered voters, whether or not there’s been identification to know that it’s a real vote from a real American,” Hannity asked. “Real American” being familiar GOP code for white and Republican.

“We’re going to have sheriffs, and we’re going to have law enforcement, and we’re going to have, hopefully, US attorneys, and we’re going to have everybody and attorney generals (sic),” Trump replied. In fact, this will be the first presidential election since the 1980s that Republicans can do some of that without pre-approval of a federal judge. They mean to make the most of it.

A Daily Beast report dismissed the statement as an empty threat:

Marc Elias, an election lawyer at the forefront of Democrat lawsuits on voting, tweeted in response: “Not without a legal fight he won’t!” According to CNN, election law experts say Trump has no authority to deploy law enforcement officials to monitor elections, but his campaign could hire off-duty police as “poll watchers.”

Far-fetched? More bluster? He may have no authority to do it. But that has not stopped Trump and his enablers before. Who imagined he would throw the U.S. Postal Service into chaos to hinder voting by mail?

Stuart Stevens (“It Was All a Lie“) was a top GOP campaign consultant for four decades. In a Politico interview this week, Stuart warned that Republican leaders’ “inability to imagine Trump” is how they (and we) ended up with Trump. People are slow to believe it can happen here:

STEVENS: Look, in July, Trump was already talking about suspending the elections. What do you think he’s going to do in October? Tell me what’s wrong with this scenario: It’s November 1, he’s losing, there are reports of voter irregularities in Florida, like there always are, and he sends those guys in camouflage into Miami-Dade County to seize the ballot boxes. Who’s going to stop him? The county security guards? They’re not going to phone ahead. What are the courts going to do? Order another election? Throw out Dade County? I don’t know. Who would object? [Attorney General William] Barr would go right along with it. The inability to imagine Trump has always been his greatest advantage.

So don’t fail to imagine what Trump might do to turn the election to chaos, Democrats. Prepare for the worst. Plan ahead. Trump plans steal the election while he has you tied up in court. Florida is just an example. Throw enough states’ elections into chaos into December and the presidential choice falls to the House of Representatives where the vote is by a majority of state delegations. Republicans currently hold a majority of the House’s state delegations.

Thursday began with the arrest of former Trump adviser Steve Bannon in Connecticut aboard a mega-yacht owned by a Chinese billionaire. Bannon and three others are charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering in their We Build the Wall fundraising campaign. A rogues’ gallery of Republican operatives including — Kris Kobach, Erik Prince, Tom Tancredo, Sheriff Dave Clarke and former pitcher Curt Schilling — have their fingerprints on that scam.

A federal judge in New York on Thursday threw out Trump’s challenge to a Manhattan grand jury subpoena for his tax records.

Documents obtained by NBC News show 11 of the president’s most senior advisers were involved in approving the plan to separate children from parents at the border. Even legal entrants. There were not enough resources to ensure parents and children could be reunited, they knew:

No one in the meeting made the case that separating families would be inhumane or immoral, the officials said. Any moral argument about immigration “fell on deaf ears” inside the White House, one of the officials said.

Then came the Biden speech even some Fox News personalities acknowledged was a masterstroke. The day that started out bad for Trump got worse as it wore on. It was a prelude to a day of reckoning.

Expect Trump and his enablers to behave like cornered animals.

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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.

Biden’s superpower

Biden: Wearing a mask is a sign of leadership, and Trump's a 'fool' -  MarketWatch

Everyone says that “grief” or “empathy” are Joe Biden’s superpower. And yes, it’s a very meaningful characteristic, especially at a time like this. But last night in the zoom call with presidential primary candidates, Andrew Yang put it differently and I think he’s right. He said that Joe Biden has a particular superpower: “whatever Biden endorses suddenly becomes the reasonable position.”

Progressives should recognize this and use it to their advantage. Biden has a gift for seeming to be a middle-of-the-road regular guy no matter what he’s saying. Think back to when he endorsed gay marriage. Pressuring him to take progressive positions may very well have the effect of mainstreaming them even more than they already are. He just doesn’t read as being extreme in any way.

This could be a potent advantage in selling the big ideas that are going to be necessary to save the country.

Where GOP goes one, GOP goes all

This article in the New York Times is the first time I’ve seen the major media take this seriously. The obvious reason is that Trump himself endorsed them yesterday, saying “they like me very much,” which is true. And he stuck with it even when a reporter pointed out that it believes he is saving the world a satanic cult of pedophiles and cannibals, asking “is that supposed to be a bad thing?” and saying that he is putting himself out there to save the world.

Anyway:

Late last month, as the Texas Republican Party was shifting into campaign mode, it unveiled a new slogan, lifting a rallying cry straight from a once-unthinkable source: the internet-driven conspiracy theory known as QAnon.

The new catchphrase, “We Are the Storm,” is an unsubtle cue to a group that the F.B.I. has labeled a potential domestic terrorist threat. It is instantly recognizable among QAnon adherents, signaling what they claim is a coming conflagration between President Trump and what they allege, falsely, is a cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophile Democrats who seek to dominate America and the world.

The slogan can be found all over social media posts by QAnon followers, and now, too, in emails from the Texas Republican Party and on the T-shirts, hats and sweatshirts that it sells. It has even worked its way into the party’s text message system — a recent email from the party urged readers to “Text STORM2020” for updates.

The Texas Republicans are an unusually visible example of the Republican Party’s dalliance with QAnon, but they are hardly unique. A small but growing number of Republicans — including a heavily favored Republican congressional candidate in Georgia — are donning the QAnon mantle, ushering its adherents in from the troll-infested fringes of the internet and potentially transforming the wild conspiracy theory into an offline political movement, with supporters running for Congress and flexing their political muscle at the state and local levels.

Chief among the party’s QAnon promoters is Mr. Trump himself. Since the theory first emerged three years ago, he has employed a wink-and-nod approach to the conspiracy theory, retweeting its followers but conspicuously ignoring questions about it. Yet with the election drawing ever closer and Mr. Trump’s failure to manage the Covid-19 pandemic harming his re-election prospects, the White House and some Trump allies appear to have taken to openly courting believers.

The president, during a White House news conference on Wednesday, described QAnon followers — some of whom have been charged with murderdomestic terrorism and planned kidnapping — as “people that love our country.”

The president has retweeted QAnon followers at least 201 times, according to an analysis by Media Matters. Some of his children have posted social media messages related to the conspiracy theory. A deputy White House chief of staff, Dan Scavino, who has for years combed corners of the internet for memes that the president could promote, has three times in the past year — in November 2019May and June — posted ticking-clock memes that are used by QAnon believers to signify the coming showdown between the president and his purported enemies.

“We once had Republican leaders that would work to keep extremists from the levers of power. Now they embrace them and their crazy and dangerous ideas,” said Rudy Oeftering, a Texas Republican who formerly chaired the Texas Association of Business and remains one of the state party’s precinct captains.

“The lunatics,” he added, “are truly running the asylum.”

There is hardly universal support inside the party for QAnon. Many of its leaders in Congress and powerful donors are privately horrified at the spread of the movement’s themes. The same goes for Republican voters, a majority of whom are unfamiliar with the particulars of the movement.

“QAnon is nuts — and real leaders call conspiracy theories conspiracy theories,” said Senator Ben Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, after the president appeared to endorse QAnon this week.

“If Democrats take the Senate,” he added, “This will be a big part of why they won.”

Other Republican elected officials who have tried to push back publicly against QAnon’s spread have found themselves under attack. This month, when Representative Adam Kinzinger, an Illinois Republican, posted a tweet that called QAnon a fabrication that has “no place in Congress,” a senior Trump campaign staff member immediately fired back at him, saying he should be focused on “conspiracy theories pushed by Democrats.”

Fearful of inviting similar blowback, few other elected Republicans have been willing to speak out publicly. Mostly, they avoid questions about it, demonstrating the thin line some officials are trying to walk between extreme elements among their base who adore Mr. Trump and the moderate voters they need to win over.

There you go. These cowards will literally go along with anything, no matter how cracked. Ane it is cracked:

QAnon followers are increasingly taking on the trappings of a discrete political movement, though one with beliefs untethered from reality. There are more than a dozen Republicans running for Congress who have signaled varying degrees of interest in the movement. One candidate has attracted a campaign contribution from the Republican National Committee, and another has raised thousands of dollars from established conservative groups like the House Freedom Fund.

And now they are getting explicit support from the president. Asked during his Wednesday news conference about the QAnon belief that he is saving the world from a cult of pedophiles, Mr. Trump said he did not know much about the movement, before all but endorsing it: “Is that supposed to be a bad thing or good thing?” he said. “If I can help save the world from problems, I am willing to do it. I’m willing to put myself out there. And we are actually.”

The reaction among QAnon followers was swift and predictable — they were elated, and the president’s comments became instant grist of the QAnon meme-making mill.

The president, who in 2016 went on a radio show hosted by the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, went on to suggest that the problems QAnon backers wanted him to solve were urban crime and the recent civil rights protests in Portland, Ore., and elsewhere, which the White House has sought to falsely portray as the work of radical leftists intent on undermining the very foundations of American society.

That awkward transition actually proves he knows what it is and felt the need to dress it up.

If only QAnon’s beliefs were that straightforward, benign or grounded in reality. The core tenet is that Mr. Trump, backed by the military, ran for office to save Americans from child-abusing devil-worshipers in the government and media. Backing the president’s enemies, the theory falsely claims, are prominent Democrats who extract hormones from children’s blood.

The theory spins off from there. In some versions, John F. Kennedy Jr., who died in a plane crash in 1999, is alive and hiding in rural Pennsylvania, biding his time until he re-emerges to back Mr. Trump’s re-election bid. Other iterations feature celebrities like Oprah Winfrey, Tom Hanks, Ellen DeGeneres and religious figures, including Pope Francis and the Dalai Lama. U.F.O.s sometime make appearances, as does the 9/11 “truther” movement and anti-vaccine beliefs.

The movement defies easy political labels — there is hardly a straight line connecting traditional, pre-Trump Republican ideas to pedophile Satanists — and its adherents include a smattering of Democrats and independents. But many of its themes play best among those on the fringes of the Republican Party, such as claims that Jews, and especially the financier George Soros, are controlling the political system and vaccines; assertions that the risk from the coronavirus is vastly overstated; or racist theories about former President Barack Obama.

And for all the theory’s disparate parts, what links them is the same kind of extreme anti-establishment bent that Mr. Trump rode to election in 2016, said Joseph Uscinski, a political science professor at the University of Miami who studies fringe beliefs.

More unusual is how QAnon adherents often portray Mr. Trump as a god-emperor figure who has been sending them coded messages of support. The QAnon slogan, “We Are the Storm,” grew out of a remark by Mr. Trump, who quipped during a 2017 photo op with generals, “You guys know what this represents? Maybe it’s the calm before the storm.”

The Texas Republicans adopted the slogan in late July after electing a new chairman, Allen West, a former congressman from Florida whose rapid political ascent during the rise of the Tea Party in 2010 was matched only by his fast fall out of Congress two years later. Though Mr. West had not previously indicated any support for QAnon, during his time in Congress he often framed issues as being part of a struggle to save the country, a theme that courses through the conspiracy theory.

Now, eight years later, under his leadership the state party appears intent on bringing the QAnon caucus into the fold in Texas. The new slogan was quickly picked up by local chapters of the state party, as well as some prominent Texas Republicans. Whether they believed it or simply saw a play for votes in an election year in which Democrats are expected to make gains in Texas is an open question, though some disaffected Republicans in Texas said QAnon-inspired beliefs were spreading dangerously inside the party.

“There are several people in the party’s infrastructure whom I would not put it past to actually believe this nonsense,” said Elizabeth Bingham, a former vice chair of the Dallas County Republican Party. “They seem giddy with the idea that they can tell as many people as possible that the Democrats aren’t just opposed to the privatization of social security or soft on Syria — that they’re in favor of child sacrifices. That the Democrats are evil.”

The true believers, she said, were being urged on by opportunists who feared primary challenges and losing elected office. “I think that’s worse,” she added.

A recent congressional primary runoff in Georgia appeared to highlight the pull of QAnon beliefs among Republican voters. The winner was perhaps the most unabashed pro-QAnon candidate in the country, Marjorie Taylor Greene, who in 2017 called the conspiracy theory “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take this global cabal of Satan-worshiping pedophiles out.”

Her competitor, a neurosurgeon, was just as conservative and pro-Trump as Ms. Greene yet did not share her belief in QAnon, mocking it as an “embarrassment.” He was trounced, losing by nearly 16 points and clearing a path to Congress for Ms. Greene, who is a near lock to win a House seat representing the deeply conservative district.

Few other QAnon candidates are likely to win seats in Congress. But at least two managed to defeat non-QAnon-believing Republicans in competitive primaries: Lauren Boebert, a House candidate in Colorado who made approving comments about QAnon, defeated a five-term Republican incumbent in a primary in June, though she is likely to lose in the general election. Jo Rae Perkins, a long-shot Republican Senate candidate in Oregon, declared in May, “I stand with Q and the team.” The next month, she posted a video in which she took what has become known as an oath for QAnon digital soldiers.

But far more than any congressional candidate, it is Mr. Trump and his campaign surrogates who are normalizing QAnon inside the Republican Party.

Language, images and ideas drawn from QAnon are now a regular feature of messages from the campaign. No voter, it seems, is too extreme to be ignored, as Eric Trump, the president’s son, demonstrated in June ahead of a rally in Tulsa, Okla.

On Instagram, he posted and then later deleted an image that featured an American flag emblazoned with black text that read, “Who’s ready for the Trump Rally tonight.” Behind the words, fainter but clearly visible, was a large letter “Q.”

And just in case the message was not clear enough, running along the bottom of the flag was a popular QAnon hashtag, #WWG1WGA, which stands for “Where We Go One, We Go All.” The post was later deleted.

I don’t think Trump believes in Q any more than he believed in birtherism. He just sees a valuable scam and knows a bunch of vacuous marks when he sees them. There have always been fringies on the right. Now it is all that’s left of the Republican Party.

As someone else memorably said, “everything Trump touches dies.” The GOP was very sick for a long time but Trump came along and gleefully pulled the plug.