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Month: June 2021

How low can they go?

I’m sure there are more tasteless, crude, grotesque things to write on this year’s Father’s Day, but this low class drivel from the National Review has to be right at the top.

It was announced Saturday that Joe Biden’s dog Champ has died at age 13. By all accounts, the family German Shepherd was – as we would say – a good boy. Dogs are with us too briefly, and saying goodbye to them is inevitable but never easy. That leaves the family with another German Shepherd: Major, who was kicked out of the White House for a month after reportedly biting a Secret Service agent and a National Park Service employee.

On the eve of Father’s Day, the contrast between the two dogs – one uncomplicatedly beloved, the other a constant source of trouble – put me in mind of the Shakespearean tragedy at the heart of the Biden family: Joe’s sons Beau and Hunter…

On Father’s Day, the day after Biden lost his beloved dog.

There is no bottom.

Sad!

Trump has thrown a monkey wrench into QAnon’s belief that he’ll be back in office in a matter of months. They are very confused:

QAnon supporters have acted with dismay and confusion after Donald Trump announced the December dates of his upcoming speaking tour with Bill O’Reilly, which coincides with when he is meant to have already been reinstated as president.

Trump has confirmed the upcoming dates and locations for the events with the former Fox News host in a statement while sharing links for his supporters to buy tickets, which are being sold for at least $100.

According to the statement, Trump and O’Reilly will appear in Sunrise, Florida on December 11, before moving to Orlando on December 12, as well as Houston, Texas on December 18, and ending with Dallas on December 19.

“My tour with Bill O’Reilly is getting a lot of attention, and I’m looking forward to it. Maybe tickets would make a great Father’s Day gift? In any event, I’ll see you then, and much sooner,” Trump said.

The announcement was shared by a number of popular QAnon telegram accounts, one of which has nearly 75,000 subscribers on the encrypted messaging service app.

Supporters of the radical movement expressed concerns that Trump going on a speaking tour later this year surely means that he will not be returning a president—a false claim they have continued to believe since he lost the 2020 election more than seven months ago.

“OK I GUESS MY QUESTION IS TRUMP COMING BACK? WHY WOULD HE BE DOING A TOUR THRU THE END OF THE YEAR WITH O’REILLY. HMMMMMMMMM SOMETHING DOESN’T FEEL RIGHT?,” wrote Telegram user Peace Lilly.

“So nothing will happen until December?” added Tina N.

Fellow Telegram user Jack Miller wrote: “Man I sure hope we don’t have to wait that long before you’re back in office.”

Others described the news as “depressing” while one QAnon supporter hoped that the tour announcement “better be a rouse.”

QAnon supporters previously believed that Trump would return as president on March 4 based on a wild theory heavily lifted from the sovereign citizen movement. When that prediction failed to come true, as all of them have, they simply moved onto their next hopeful prophecy.

Many QAnon supporters now believe that Trump will return in August—a false claim widely pushed by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell—if the disputed and disregarded audit in Arizona proves there was election fraud that cost him the election.

QAnon suggests the ballot recount in Arizona—which still has not revealed any widespread evidence of fraud after several weeks—will result in a domino effect which will see other states overturn November’s election result, paving a way for Trump’s return to the White House despite there being no constitutional basis for this to happen.

“So basically the August thing is a bunch of bull because a reinstated President doesn’t go on tour,” Telegram user Angela Baldwin commented after seeing the dates.

As always, some QAnon supporters are still holding onto the belief that their prediction will come true despite all the evidence against it and the fact none of the others beforehand have come to fruition.

“It’s only a few dates close together…it could be done if it works out like it should…could cancel….but yup..kinda a gut punch statement,” one Telegram user wrote. “But we are in an information war, so who the hell knows.”

I wouldn’t even mention this nonsense if it weren’t for the fact that tens of millions of our fellow Americans apparently belief this crap. And it’s scary because they are out there driving cars and working heavy machinery and, for all we know, treating sick patients or wearing a badge and a gun. Ooof.

The GOP is “a political party that also has an armed wing to coerce other political actors through violence.”

That’s from Dan Drezner comparing it to Hezbollah. Sounds about right.

Doyle McManus in the LA Times writes:

In a survey by the conservative American Enterprise Institute after the riot in January, 56% of Republicans agreed that “the traditional American way of life is disappearing so fast that we may have to use force to save it.”

In the same poll, 79% of Republicans said they still had a favorable view of Trump — and 36% said “very favorable.”

That consensus has made GOP politicians fearful of crossing Trump or questioning the actions of his most zealous supporters, including the Jan. 6 revolutionaries.

Republican officials in both Georgia and Arizona, where Trump is still agitating to reverse the election results, say their families have been physically threatened by the former president’s supporters.

When the House voted to impeach Trump in January, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) told CNN, “There were members who told me that they were afraid for their own security — afraid, in some instances, for their lives.”

The result, says Tufts University political scholar Daniel Drezner, is a GOP that has begun to resemble Lebanon’s Hezbollah, “a political party that also has an armed wing to coerce other political actors through violence.”

“The comparison is stronger now than before,” Drezner told me last week. “The Republicans who wanted to impeach Trump have been marginalized, and the state parties sound more and more secessionist with each passing day.”

Daniel Drezner is not a left wing liberal symp. In years gone by, we would have considered him a conservative. This is the kind of inflammatory comparison that would normally garner a shrill, shrieking pushback from the right wing but so far, it seems to have been overlooked. (Good luck Drezner…)

But he certainly has a point. The essay addresses the left as well:

At this point, some readers may ask: But what about the Democrats? Don’t they have a violent fringe, too?

Not really. The antifa movement, which conservatives point to as an example of left-wing violence, isn’t part of the Democratic Party; its militants don’t wave Biden flags, show up at Biden rallies or, in most cases, support Biden at all. And while Republicans have attacked Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles) for urging demonstrators to “get more confrontational,” that comparison doesn’t hold, either; whatever Waters meant by those words, she isn’t her party’s two-time presidential nominee and leader-in-exile.

This is the Republican Party’s problem, and Republicans need to solve it.

Thank you. I am watching conservative David French on CNN right now make the case that both sides are driven by negative partisanship and the nationalization of outrage and he has a point, sort of. We’re all kind of addicted to the outrage of the day and most of us are certainly drive by negative partisanship. I do believe that the Republicans are a danger to our democracy. And that’s because they are!

The difference between the two sides is that most of what the right says about the left is a lie. And they are the ones with the guns, the rhetoric of violence and the agenda to destroy the democratic process. One side is reacting to reality. The other side is reacting to bullshit and propaganda. (No, the public schools are NOT teaching Critical Race Theory — a law school curriculum — in first grade classrooms, fergawdsakes.)

They are trying to tiptoe around a fundamental problem: Their candidate lost a presidential election, but he not only refuses to accept the voters’ verdict; he wants his party to “fight” to restore him to power. They want to move past the embarrassment of Jan. 6 — but that can’t happen until they settle their internal debate: Are they a party that condones extraconstitutional violence or not?

We already know the answer to that by their refusal to vote for a bipartisan commission and ongoing genuflecting to the Dear Leader of Mar-a-lago. DC GOPers may want to move it, but he and the GOP voters do not. I don’t know what will break that fever but there’s no sign of it at the moment.

Barstool Republicans

This article in Politico about the so-called “Barstool Republicans” (named for the pro-Trump Barstool Sports digital media empire) traces the evolution of the GOP over the past couple of decades to the “I’m an asshole and proud of it” ethos it currently celebrates. I’m not sure this fellow is as central as the article makes him out to be — these threads have always been present, particularly among a certain group of young (and immature-but-old) males, and the women who love them. But it’s interesting to see it embodied so thoroughly in a particular person who is, of course, making big bucks selling it as his brand. Is this a great country or what?

One of Trump’s early adopters articulated the mindset perfectly in August 2015, back when Jeb! was still his closest primary threat: “I am voting for Donald Trump. I don’t care if he’s a joke. I don’t care if he’s racist. I don’t care if he’s sexist. I don’t care about any of it. I hope he stays in the race and I hope he wins. Why? Because I love the fact that he is making other politicians squirm. I love the fact he says shit nobody else will say, regardless of how ridiculous it is.”

No points for guessing the author: Dave Portnoy, birthing the Barstool Republican with a single 200-word blog post. Trump transformed the political landscape by tapping into a powerful desire for freedom from criticism or censure — a desire that Portnoy shared, and which has only grown more intense and widespread as the panopticon of social media becomes the primary stage for not just national politics, but civic life at every level.

In a column this February for The Week, the Catholic social conservative writer Matthew Walther referred to “Barstool conservatives” as primarily sharing a “disdain for the language of liberal improvement, the hectoring, schoolmarmish attitude of Democratic politicians and their allies in the media, and, above all, the elevation of risk-aversion to the level of a first-order principle by our professional classes.” In other words: culture-war issues.

Oddly enough, despite the inherent thirst for conflict that it brings, the ascent of Barstool-ism within the Republican Party can be chalked up to ideological diversity within the GOP. What could unite free-market libertarians, revanchist Catholics, Southern evangelicals, and working-class Reagan Democrats but their shared hatred of… actual Democrats?

With that as the party’s guiding principle, and no clear policy agenda to speak of — the 2020 RNC literally did not have a new policy platform — those willing to trash the Democratic cultural regime most loudly and consistently are firmly in command, with more staid Republicans forced to at least provide cover, if not actively follow their cues.

I truly believe that this loathing of liberals, immigrants and racial minorities, especially their aggressive earnestness (and, yes, sanctimony) is what is driving the right to go down the fascist rabbit hole. Aside from the essential bigotry, which is the framework on which all of this ignorance is built, they simply don’t like being challenged and they can’t stand anyone caring about things that require them to behave in a responsible, thoughtful way. It is arrested development. They are stuck in a middle school, early adolescent mindset — even in their 60’s!

I like irreverence and mocking of sacred cows. As I have often said, one of my main influences in life was MAD Magazine. But this stuff is just shallow, stupid, puerile, bully-boy, bullshit. It’s always been with us, but now it’s exalted as a higher calling. It’s not funny and I hate to say it, but it’s present on the left as well as the right although it isn’t dominant.

It’s as if half the country is suffering from a massive case of arrested development and I don’t know what caused it. Participation trophies? Spoiled affluence? Lead in the water?

And the little prince Donald Trump is their perfect avatar:

Donald Trump’s temper-tantrum tactics have been explained by the man himself. The frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination admitted to his biographer that, “When I look at myself in the first grade and I look at myself now, I’m basically the same. The temperament is not that different.”

Pulitzer-Prize winning reporter Michael D’Antonio, whose book, Never Enough: Donald Trump and the Pursuit of Success, comes out in late September, nabbed the quotable gem during his six hours of interviews with the real estate king, The New York Times reports. However, as all good reporters should, D’Antonio also corroborated Trump’s statement with evidence — from Trump’s ex-wives.

“The little boy that still wants attention,” explained Marla Maples, Trump’s second wife. She wasn’t the only one who thought so.

“He wants to be noticed,” said Ivana Trump, wife No. 1, who recalled sending [Trump] into a fit of rage by skiing past him on a hill in Aspen, Colorado. Mr. Trump stopped, took off his skis and walked off the trail.

“He could not take it, that I could do something better than he did,” she recalled.

This is what his followers relate to.

Happy Father’s Day

Back to abnormal

The Covid-era directional aisle markers vanished from the local grocery store weeks ago. The “masks required” signs are slowly disappearing many places – with the obvious exception of medical facilities. I still wear a mask when entering businesses, if for no other reason than I haven’t had so much as a common cold in well over 18 months. STAT reported this month that owing to mask wearing, school closures, and travel restrictions, perhaps two strains of flu virus may have gone extinct. I can live with that.

But the old normal may have gone extinct as well. And the new normal, well … it leaves something to be desired.

CNN:

Just when you thought you were ready for a soft return to public life, this happens: An unruly plane passenger commandeers an intercom. A grocery store clerk was killed after asking a customer to pull up his mask. Countless shootings result in lives lost, others permanently changed.

And that’s just in the last week.

For those who were already tiptoeing back into public spaces with some trepidation, seeing these incidents splashed across their news feeds may make them even more hesitant to live the way they did before the pandemic.

Whether these public outbursts and violence have increased recently — the experts CNN spoke to said it’s too soon to tell — seeing so many of them is likely driving some Americans to delay their reentry into society a bit longer. But it’s unlikely that anyone will write off reentry completely — it may just take some of us a bit more time to feel comfortable again, experts told CNN.

Especially when wingnuts are still waging a culture war against mask wearing. Two “adults” in Pennsylvania felt compelled to film themselves harrassing three kids for wearing masks. They then uploaded the video to social media. Why?

Raw Story:

The people in the video are following the instruction of Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who told viewers on April 26 that they should accost Americans they see wearing masks and call 911.

“So the next time you see someone in a mask on the sidewalk or on the bike path, do not hesitate,” Carlson told his audience. “Ask politely but firmly, ‘Would you please take off your mask? Science shows there is no reason for you to be wearing it. Your mask is making me uncomfortable.'”

“Call the police immediately, contact child protective services,” he told the Fox News audience.

https://twitter.com/AshaRangappa_/status/1386852356730490884

CNN again:

Reentering public spaces can put many of us on edge. Filling public spaces with people again — people who have weathered the last year in different ways — may increase the likelihood of incidents of chaos, said Dr. Crystal Clark of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.”

Now that the world is reopened, we may see less patience, more irritability, less stress tolerance because people have been trying to hold it together for so long,” said Clark, who is an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences and of obstetrics and gynecology. “Even though they are finally able to ‘relax,’ they remain on edge because the effects of the mental stress over the past year do not go away overnight.”

For the same reasons that social isolation and undue stress may motivate people to act in bizarre ways when they’re out in public, that isolation might cause those of us who aren’t acting out to react with “excessive fear or avoidance,” Taylor said.

I’m not letting the Pennsylvania couple off that easy. They were under a different kind of stress before the pandemic. Fear of losing status and political power. Fear of no longer being able to dominate Others existed among conservatives long before Donald Trump’s presidency. Decades ago, Rupert Murdoch constructed his media empire’s business model around stoking that fear day in and day out.

Next, they’ll be coming to your door and demanding you come outside, you snowflakes. Lord Trump is displeased that you have not returned to serving the wants and desires of The Market. He said it. They believe it. That settles it.

Two months. That didn’t take long.

A pickup truck slammed into pedestrians gathering for the Stonewall Pride Parade on Saturday in Wilton Manors in South Florida, killing one and hospitalizing another.

The driver lined up with other vehicles preparing for the parade when, witnesses said, he slammed on the gas and struck spectators.

USA Today:

Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who was at the Stonewall Pride Parade event, along with U.S. Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Ted Deutch, confirmed the incident on Twitter and said the driver was in custody.

[…]

Chris Caputo, a city commissioner in Wilton Manors, said on Twitter it was “increasingly probable it was an accident.” But Fort Lauderdale Mayor Dean Trantalis told WSVN-TV the driver accelerated into the crowd, describing the incident as a deliberate attack on the LGBTQ community.

Joey Spears, 25, told USA TODAY he was walking up to the start of the parade when he saw the truck drive through the crowd.

“All of a sudden I see this truck peel out and just going through the people,” Spears said.

[…]

Photos and video from the scene showed Wasserman Schultz in tears while in a convertible at the parade. A spokesperson for congresswoman did not immediately return an email seeking comment.

https://twitter.com/pinto_spears/status/1406391586062225415?s=20

WPLG:

Police took the man who was driving the truck into custody and were questioning him. He was wearing a Fort Lauderdale Gay Men’s Chorus t-shirt.

Justin Knight, the chorus’ president, said through a spokesman that chorus members were the ones injured and that the driver was “part of the Chorus family.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with those affected by the tragic accident that occurred when the Stonewall Pride Parade was just getting started,” Knight said in a statement. “Our fellow Chorus members were those injured and the driver was also a part of the Chorus family. To my knowledge, this was not an attack on the LGBTQ community. We anticipate more details to follow and ask for the community’s love and support.”

Witnesses heard the driver telling police it was an accident.

Let’s hope so.

The incident comes just two months after Florida Gov. Rick DeSantis signed an “anti-riot bill” granting civil immunity to people who drive into protesters who are blocking a road.

Notes from Tribeca 2021: Week 2

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This year’s Tribeca Film Festival is being presented with one foot in the virtual world, and the other in the real world. While the brick and mortar portion of the festival wraps up tonight, you will still be able to watch select titles from this year’s TFF catalog through Wednesday, June 23rd via Tribeca At Home. The Online Premieres section has select new films, shorts and documentaries, as well as a showcase of VR selections, podcasts and games programming. For the full catalog and ticket information, click here.

I’ve got a few more reviews to share this week for my TFF 2021 wrap-up. Hopefully, some of these films will be coming soon to a theater (or streaming platform) near you!

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Bitchin’-The Sound and Fury of Rick James (***½) – They broke the mold when James Ambrose Johnson Jr. (aka Rick James) came into the world. In his documentary (headed for Showtime later this year), Sacha Jenkins wisely debunks the caricature popularized by Dave Chappelle (“I’m Rick JAMES, bitch!”) right off the bat, clearing the way for an honest, down-and-dirty portrait of the gifted (if maddeningly self-destructive) singer-songwriter-musician-producer (he died in 2004). Viewers only familiar with his personae from the late 70s onward that yielded hits like “You & I”, “Mary Jane”, “Bustin’ Out”, and “Super-Freak” may be surprised to learn about his formative mid-60s Canadian period, when he hung with the likes of Joni Mitchell and Neil Young and explored folk, psychedelia and hard rock (all of which he later incorporated into his unique brand of “punk-funk”). Slickly produced, fast-paced and thoroughly engrossing.

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Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road (***½) – It’s been a long, strange trip for Beach Boys founder/primary songwriter Brian Wilson. After a 2-year streak of hit singles about sun, surf, cars and girls (beginning with the 1963 release of “Surfin’ U.S.A.”), Wilson hit a wall. The pressures of touring, coupled with his experimentation with LSD and his increasing difficulty reconciling the heavenly voices in his head led to a full scale nervous breakdown (first in a series). Still, he managed to hold the creeping madness at bay long enough to produce the most innovative work of his career (Pet Sounds, in 1966). Wilson’s roller coaster ride was only beginning, with a number of well-documented ups and downs (personal and professional); but his unique creative faculties remained intact. Considering what he has been through, it is amazing Wilson is even alive to tell the tale.

Brent Wilson’s documentary borrows the “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” concept, following Rolling Stone editor Jason Fine and Brian Wilson as they cruise around L.A., listening to Beach Boys tunes. Fine gently prompts Wilson to reminisce about the personal significance of various stops along the way. Most locales prompt fond memories; others clearly bring Wilson’s psyche back to dark places he’d sooner forget. What keeps the film from feeling exploitative is the fact that Wilson demonstratively trusts Fine (they are longtime friends). A sometimes sad, but ultimately moving portrait.

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Buddy Guy: The Blues Chase the Blues Away (***) – If this straightforward, by-the-numbers documentary about blues man Buddy Guy seems destined for PBS…that’s because it is (set to premiere in July as an episode of American Masters). Not that there’s anything wrong with that; especially if it helps introduce the man and his music to a new generation of fans. A “musician’s musician” (especially for guitar players), he is one of those artists whose influence is more recognizable than his name (e.g. Hendrix, Clapton and SRV). The Louisiana-born Guy recounts how he was initially inspired by John Lee Hooker, then developed his own fiery blues style working the Chicago club scene (cutting his teeth with the likes of Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf and Otis Rush). Admirers like Carlos Santana and John Mayer also chip in. A solid bio of a great player.

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Creation Stories (**) – Nick Moran’s manic, hyper-kinetic biopic about Creation Records founder Alan McGee (who spearheaded the Britpop explosion of the 1990s) plays like a mashup of 24-Hour Party People and Trainspotting. This is not surprising considering the screenplay is co-written by Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh (with Dean Cavanagh). The narrative is framed by McGee (Ewen Bremner) telling his life story to a journalist. Cue the flashbacks, starting with McGee’s modest early successes in the 80s with acts like The Jesus and Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine and culminating with his mentorship of Oasis in the mid-90s. The film moves too quickly for its own good, giving you no real sense of who McGee is (apart from establishing that he is an “outsider”). Another major hurdle is Bremner, who remains the most unintelligible actor in the English-speaking world (even for a Scotsman). Subtitles really would have helped. As much as I dug Moran’s 2009 Joe Meek biopic Telstar, I am afraid this one is a letdown.

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Father of the Cyborgs (***) – The story of pioneering neuroscientist Dr. Phil Kennedy is like a real-life version of Michael Crichton’s The Terminal Man (with more than a touch of Blade Runner). Kennedy invented the “neurotrophic electrode” brain implant device-a tiny glass cone with gold wires designed to artificially process and interpret brain signals. Ideally, the function of the implant is to enable activation of critical pathways that might be otherwise blocked by motor disease or paralyzing injuries. In the 1990s, Kennedy famously tested his invention on a young man who had complete “locked-in” paralysis, teaching him to control a computer with his mind. This prompted ethical debates, which ignited anew in 2014 when Kennedy had electrodes implanted in his own brain (all in the name of science). David Burke’s documentary recounts Kennedy’s experiments and delves into all the associated issues in this fascinating profile.

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Larry Flynt for President (***½) – Director Nadia Szold’s wild documentary about the Hustler magazine publisher’s infamous 1983 bid for the White House makes Milos Forman’s 1996 biopic The People vs. Larry Flynt look like a Saturday morning cartoon. An ever-polarizing public figure, Flynt (who died earlier this year) was paralyzed from the waist down after a would-be assassin shot him in 1978. After several years of painful recovery, Flynt began to incorporate more sociopolitical satire into Hustler, which led to his presidential campaign. He ran as a Republican (with a rather progressive agenda and a healthy sense of irony). Szold had access to a trove of previously unreleased footage by a film crew that followed Flynt around on his campaign trail. She also documents his high-profile First Amendment court battle with religious Right demagogue Jerry Falwell. At turns hilarious and harrowing (harrowing in the sense of how Flynt’s purely performative flirtation with politics presaged Donald Trump and the MAGA cult).

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Like a Rolling Stone: The Life and Times of Ben Fong-Torres (***) – Nothing against Ben Fong-Torres, but I approached this film with trepidation. “Please, god,” I thought to myself, “Don’t let ‘Fortunate Son’ be on the soundtrack.” Thankfully, there’s credence, but no Creedence in Suzanne Joe Kai’s documentary, which despite the implications of its title is not another wallow in the era when being on the cover of the Rolling Stone mattered, man. OK, there is some of that; after all, journalist and author Ben Fong-Torres’ venerable career began when he first wrote for Rolling Stone in 1968. By the following year he was hired as the editor and wrote many of the cover stories. Fong-Torres quickly showed himself to be not only an excellent interviewer, but a gifted writer. His journalistic approach was the antithesis to the gonzo stylists like Lester Bangs and Hunter Thompson in that his pieces were never about him, yet still eminently personal and relatable. Just like her subject, Kai’s portrait is multi-faceted, revealing aspects of Fong-Torres’ life outside of his profession I was not aware of (like his activism in the Asian-American community, and how it was borne of a heartbreaking family tragedy).

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Settlers (***) – Writer-director Wyatt Rockefeller’s sci-fi drama is Once Upon a Time in the West on Mars. The story centers on 9-year-old Remmy (Brooklyn Prince), who lives with her settler parents (Sofia Boutella and Jonny Lee Miller) at a remote homestead. Following an attack by hostile parties and subsequent arrival of a drifter who claims that the homestead rightfully belongs to him, Sofia’s life (as well as the family’s dynamic) changes drastically. The story takes place over a 9-year period; with Nell Tiger Free playing 18-year-old Remmy. Not wholly original, but smartly written and well-acted, with great production design and cinematography (exteriors were filmed in South Africa).

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The Price of Freedom (***) – From a 2016 piece I wrote in the wake of the Orlando nightclub mass shooting:

You know what “they” say-we all have a breaking point. When it comes to this particular topic, I have to say, I think that I may have finally reached mine. I’ve written about this so many times, in the wake of so many horrible mass shootings, that I’ve lost count. I’m out of words. There are no Scrabble tiles left in the bag, and I’m stuck with a “Q” and a “Z”. Game over.

I wrote that five years ago; if anything, it seems gun violence in America has increased. Let’s put it this way…it’s an ongoing and complex issue. This timely documentary from Judd Ehrlich focuses on the political angle, more specifically the political influence of the NRA. How did the gun lobby become so powerful? Taking an evenhanded approach, Ehrlich has politicians, victims of gun violence, and NRA representatives all weighing in. He also offers an absorbing history of the NRA, pinpointing how the organization transitioned from hobbyists to lobbyists. There are no easy solutions; but as Ehrlich reminds us, there is a generation of young people like Parkland school-shooting survivor-turned activist Emma Gonzalez who are out there providing light at the end of the tunnel.

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Wild Men (***) – Every film festival has at least one quirky road movie (it’s a rule). Danish director Thomas Daneskov’s (wait for it) quirky road movie concerns Martin, a white-collar worker who flips his lid and heads to the Norwegian hinterlands to gather nuts and berries (sans wife and kids). After a day or two, failing to bring down any wild game with his homemade bow and arrow, he’s craving protein and heads for the nearest convenience store (looking like a cross between Dilbert and Hagar the Horrible). Unfortunately, he’s forgotten his wallet and despite honest intentions ends up in an altercation with the manager and ultimately on the run from the cops. Fate puts him on a path with an injured drug runner, and a male bonding/buddy film ensues. An entertaining dramedy with a Coen Brothers vibe, mixed with typically deadpan Scandinavian humor.

Previous posts with related themes:

Notes from Tribeca 2021: Week 1

More reviews at Den of Cinema

Dennis Hartley

Tucker’s latest folly

He’s got a new one and it’s spreading like wildfire. He’s truly gone crazy. Of course he’s not the only one. There are many people who were once just regular mainstream conservatives or iconoclastic liberal/libertarians who have simply lost their minds. Lead paint? Drugs? Honestly, it’s hard to just attribute this mass delusion to just greed and cynicism. It’s too damned out there.

The Huffington Post’s Christopher Mathias and Ryan J. Reilly dissect it for you:

The conspiracy theory — that the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol was a false flag event orchestrated by the FBI — traveled the way so many conspiracy theories do in America: from a fringe far-right site run by a white nationalist to this country’s most-watched cable news show. 

“Strangely, some of the key people who participated on Jan. 6 have not been charged,” Fox News host Tucker Carlson told millions of viewers on Tuesday. “Look at the documents. The government calls those people ‘unindicted co-conspirators.’ What does that mean? Well, it means that in potentially every single case, they were FBI operatives.”  

Carlson was citing a report written by Darren Beattie for Revolver News. Beattie is perhaps best known for being forced out of the White House of former President Donald Trump in 2018 after CNN revealed he’d spoken at a white nationalist conference. Since then, Beattie has allied himself with open white nationalists and founded Revolver News to push his specific brand of far-right propaganda. 

But none of this background was mentioned on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” on Tuesday when Carlson introduced Beattie as a guest on the program. 

“It sounds like according to this — I have to say — remarkable piece you put up late last night — I read it in bed at midnight — that the FBI was organizing the riots of Jan. 6!” Carlson exclaimed. 

“Well, yes, it certainly suggests the possibility,” Beattie responded, “and I’m hearing from people that this is the most important and darkest investigative piece they’ve seen in years.” 

But Beattie’s “investigative piece” and the claims made on Carlson’s show Tuesday quickly fall apart under scrutiny, which exposes them for what they really are: the right-wing noise machine’s latest attempt to shift blame for the political violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6, and to rebrand the rioters — a coalition of MAGA extremists attempting to violently overturn the results of a fair presidential election — as proud patriots who stood up to a tyrannical government.

By Wednesday morning, in a demonstration of Carlson’s influence over Republicans in Washington, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) announced he had sent an open letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray demanding to know “how many [of the unindicted Jan. 6 co-conspirators] worked as a confidential informant or as an undercover operative for the federal government.”

“I expect an answer from your office by August 1, 2021,” Gaetz wrote.

During his show on Tuesday, Carlson pointed to two “unindicted co-conspirators” mentioned in the indictment of Thomas Caldwell, whom federal prosecutors allege conspired with members of the Oath Keepers, a far-right militia group, to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6. 

Caldwell’s indictment mentions a “Person Two” with whom he shared a hotel room, and a “Person Three,” whom Caldwell allegedly identified as being part of a “quick reaction force,” which prosecutors say was a group of armed Trump supporters in a hotel across the river, on standby to aid the insurrection on Jan. 6 if need be.

“But wait, here’s the interesting thing,” Carlson said on his show. “Person Two and Person Three were organizers of the riot. The government knows who they are, but the government has not charged them. Why is that?” 

“You know why: They were almost certainly working for the FBI,” Carlson continued. “So, FBI operatives were organizing the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, according to government documents.” 

Carlson then used this leap in logic to insinuate that “nearly 20” unindicted co-conspirators mentioned in the indictments against the Oath Keepers could all be government agents or informants. (The accusation mirrors other MAGA conspiracy theories claiming that bureaucrats, forming a “deep state,” were secretly working to thwart Trump’s presidency.)  

But Carlson’s claims are debunked with just the tiniest bit of basic fact-checking. It’s a wild, irresponsible jump to equate an unindicted co-conspirator with an FBI informant. After all, former President Donald Trump was “Individual-1” in the case against his former personal lawyer Michael Cohen, and that didn’t mean that Trump was a FBI informant against himself. The same goes for former President Richard Nixon, whom a grand jury also listed as an unindicted co-conspirator in connection with Watergate.

As The Washington Post noted, there are multiple reasons prosecutors might call someone an “unindicted co-conspirator” in court documents. Often, prosecutors don’t have enough evidence to charge that person with a crime and want to withhold their name so as not to unfairly damage their reputation. Sometimes, unidentified co-conspirators are individuals whom prosecutors have simply not yet identified. Other times, they’re people who strike deals with prosecutors, agreeing to cooperate with investigations in order to avoid being charged with crimes themselves.

One thing they are almost certainly not, however — as many legal experts have argued this week — are undercover operatives who are carrying out their duties on behalf of the government. 

Yet “unindicted co-conspirator” inexplicably meant just one thing to Beattie and Carlson when it comes to Jan. 6: an undercover FBI agent or informant. 

Had Carlson’s producers scratched the surface a bit on Caldwell’s case, they’d realize that it’s already clear who Person Two is: Caldwell’s wife, Sharon.

Sharon turned into Person Two in a subsequent indictment, but her name was unredacted in an early affidavit in the case. Carlson’s team didn’t even have to go digging through court records: This information is readily available on the Justice Department’s website

“Sharon and I are setting up shop there,” Caldwell wrote in one message, referring to a hotel. “Driving in with my wife from Berryville VA but am spending night before at Comfort Inn Arlington/Ballston on Glebe Road,” he wrote in a Facebook post. 

It’s also not hard to figure out why Caldwell’s wife hasn’t been charged yet.

While the indictment states that Person Two stormed past the barricades and climbed up the stairs to the balcony on the West side of the Capitol, so did hundreds if not thousands of others. At the moment, federal law enforcement officials have focused their limited resources on those who entered the Capitol building or engaged in combat with the Capitol Police and D.C. Metropolitan Police officers protecting the building. Unless federal prosecutors dig up more evidence of her involvement in her husband’s planning, they may not attempt to draw her into the more serious criminal conspiracy.Subscribe to the Politics email.From Washington to the campaign trail, get the latest politics news.

Caldwell was very proud of his wife’s actions, saying that she was “right with me!” “ready for it” and didn’t “mind the tear gas.”

Since her husband’s arrest, Sharon Caldwell — the woman Tucker Carlson casually suggested to his large audience might be an FBI informant — has continued living with her husband and spending time by his side around the clock.

If, as Carlson’s viewers now believe, Person Two is an FBI mole, she’s in deep: A defense filing last month stated that Caldwell, “because of physical limitations and health concerns, rarely travels without his wife, Sharon Caldwell.” The filing said that the Caldwells “rarely venture out of Clark County, Virginia … except for legal and medical visits” and that “Mrs. Caldwell is willing to accompany the Defendant each and every time he leaves the property.”

The segment with Beattie was the second time Carlson devoted airtime to the Jan. 6 riot this week.

On Monday night, Carlson invited the husband of Ashli Babbitt, who was fatally shot by a police officer after she stormed the Capitol, onto the program. 

“Somebody in D.C. knows, I think a lot of people know, but nobody is telling us. And the silence is deafening,” Aaron Babbitt told Carlson of the Capitol Police’s apparent unwillingness to identify the officer who killed his wife, adding that he never thought he’d lose his partner to “political violence.” 

“How do you feel about seeing her characterized the way you have?” Carlson asked Babbit’s husband. “How do you feel about the total lack of interest in her death?” 

“It sickens me to hear what people say about Ashli,” Aaron Babbit said. “There has never been a person Ashli ran across in her daily life that didn’t love her and wouldn’t remember her in some way, shape or form for the rest of her life,” he said. “But this is the game. This is the social media craziness that people just run with a theory and just take off with it. You know, it is up to us and the ones that love her and people like you for not giving up on it. So I appreciate that, Tucker.”

The interview did not really address Babbit’s extremism — she was a believer in the QAnon conspiracy movement — or the lies that brought her to the Capitol that fateful day, when a police officer shot her as she attempted to climb through a broken glass door that led to the Speaker’s Lobby inside of the Capitol, an American flag draped across her back. (The Justice Department investigated the shooting, clearing the officer of any criminal charges.) 

What matters to Carlson, it seems, is to continually muddy the waters about what really happened on Jan. 6. He has long attempted to downplay the severity of that day, which resulted in at least five deaths and has since led to nearly 500 arrests. He once called it “a political protest” that “got out of hand,” and has denied that it was an insurrection at all. 

Carlson has also repeatedly denied that white supremacists and other extremists, like the Proud Boys, played a significant role in the riots, even though there are mountains of evidence proving otherwise. 

“The Fox host’s ‘false flag’ theory fits into a broad and largely successful effort by elements of the GOP and right-wing press to confuse the public and shatter the initial, fragile consensus that the events of January 6 had been bad and reflected poorly on then-President Donald Trump and his supporters,” Matt Gertz, a senior fellow at Media Matters, wrote of Carlson on Thursday. 

Gertz argued that Carlson is a “founding father” of a “1/6 truth movement,” from whom many Republicans in Washington often take their cue. 

Even on Jan. 6, when Carlson paid lip service to how bad political violence was, he was already laying the groundwork for eventually defending the rioters and casting Trump supporters as the real victims. 

“What happened Wednesday will be used by the people taking power to justify stripping you of the rights you were born with as an American,” he warned. “Your right to speak without being censored, your right to assemble, to not be spied upon, to make a living, and to defend your family.” 

He also essentially put the blame for the violence on Democratic leaders for not listening to the complaints of the rioters in the first place. 

“You can be horrified by the violence, and we are,” Carlson said. “But if you don’t bother to pause and learn a single thing from your citizens storming your Capitol building, then you’re a fool, you lack wisdom and self-awareness, and you have no place running a country. We got to this sad, chaotic day for a reason.”

This is just rank paranoid conspiracy stuff, propaganda for the wingnuts. It’s hard to to think they are are just working them up for another insurrection. It’s almost certain that someone is going to take this stuff seriously.

The biggest grift

It’s fine if presidents want to play golf. Everybody needs a break. But before Trump they played at local courses, they didn’t pay themselves to play at their private golf resorts. Even GWB, who travelled all the time to “The ranch” at Crawford, Texas (which was bought for him just before he became president) didn’t personally benefit from the taxpayer money that had to be spent for his constant vacations.

This was a grift that only the worlds most famous con man could have pulled off:

Donald Trump’s trips to his Bedminster golf club as president cost U.S. taxpayers more than $2.4 million, according to U.S. Secret Service records obtained by NJ Advance Media.

The lion’s share of the amount, $1.9 million, went for Secret Service agents’ hotel stays in the Bedminster area. The records, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, found that the Secret Service also spent $35,415 on rooms at the golf club, which served as Trump’s weekend and August getaways during the warmer months.

The Secret Service also spent $285,219 on travel, $41,499 on rental cars, $80,800 on golf carts, and $46,520 on portable toilets.

The Secret Service declined comment.

Not included are other costs of Trump’s frequent visits to Bedminster, including the estimated $142,000 an hour it costs Air Force One to fly, according to figures obtained by the conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch, and the cost of taking the presidential helicopter from the Morristown Airport to the golf club.

He was the first president not to divest his business holdings, and came under fire from ethics experts for refusing to do so.

“When President Trump would go to Bedminster, it wasn’t because he liked golf — he was making promotional appearances at a business he continued to own and profit off of,” said Jordan Libowitz, a spokesman for the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

“Now we know his decision not to divest from his assets cost taxpayers millions of dollars. The Trump Organization should reimburse that money, but we know it won’t.”

Last August, Trump held two press conferences at the golf club before an audience of club members who booed what they considered unfriendly questions and cheered his answers.

One of the press conferences was notable for the lack of social distancing and mask wearing among his guests in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. At the time, New Jersey guidelines limited indoor gatherings to 25 people.

The golf club hosted the U.S. Women’s Open in July 2017. Trump watched the proceedings from a skybox, and $68,000 was spent to install and remove ballistic glass. Several players visited Trump after their rounds.

And the president crashed several weddings at the golf club.

Bedminster also served as a venue for fundraising events for Trump, the Republican Party and GOP candidates.

Trump spent 99 days at Bedminster during his presidency, second only to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, according to NBC News. He’s currently back at Bedminster before he returns to Florida when the weather turns colder.

That’s just Bedminster. He spent even more time at Mar-a-lago. What a beautiful scam.