Skip to content

Month: March 2022

The Coarsening of the Culture

It’s not the word “fuck” it’s the message they are sending

As someone who grew up in the freewheeling 70s, my language has always been laced with profanity and I’ve never been much on the rules of “polite society.” But there is little doubt that something has changed in our society and it isn’t just the common use of bad language (which doesn’t offend me.) It’s the cruelty, the simple meanness, of the discourse that feels new. People are just acting like assholes all the time and it’s mostly coming from the nasty politics being practiced these days by the Republican party led by Donald Trump.

In the pandemic’s darkest days, a man living across the street from a Methodist church in this small town raised a flag in front of his house emblazoned with the words “Fuck Biden.”

Neighborswere so repulsed they brought it up with church leadership. A resident complained about the profanity to the zoning commission but never heard back. It wasn’t just that the slur offended their sense of propriety. Some here felt a sense of betrayal, too. The flag’s owner lived in a home that once belonged to pillars of the church community. They were the man’s late grandparents. And when they had gotten sick, neighbors recalled delivering them home-cooked meals. One church member urged the man to remove the flag.

For months, the man refused, and his brusque demeanor frightened some people off. He eventually decided to take the flag down, only to replace it with another one, which still hangs outside the house. It reads: “Joe and the Ho got to Go.”

“We’ve never seen this before,” says Joanne Fitzpatrick, a Democrat from DuBois, running through a tally in her head of anti-Biden signs that still cover her town and surrounding communities. “I’m not a prude by any stretch, but it’s offensive. We’ve just never seen this level of vulgarity after an election — and so long after the election at that.”

“In a civilized society,” she added, “we just don’t do that.”

Barrels of ink have been spilled over the past seven years examining Donald Trump’s appeal in rural places like Clearfield County, an old timber and coal regionsituated along Interstate 80 on the western edge of central Pennsylvania. Blue-collar “diner stories” about disaffected Democrats and independents who crossed over to support Republicans are so common they’ve become their own media subgenre. And the reasons for that massive defection have become familiar from repetition—the erosion of manufacturing and energy jobs, the withdrawal of private-sector labor unions, an explosion of technology and expanding cultural divisions.

What those tales often leave out is the other side of the same coin. In these towns and counties, there remain thousands of Democrats like Fitzpatrick who are faithful to their party—and feel that they are paying an increasingly steep price for that loyalty. Nearly 30,000 people in Clearfield County voted for Trump in 2020, roughly three-quarters of the ballots cast. But the other 25 percent who voted for Joe Biden—9,673 people—find themselves in an unusual position: They supported the ultimate winner and yet a relentless and toxic campaign to delegitimize his victory and overturn the election makes them feel somehow as if they’re under siege.

They are people like Kathy and Frank Foulkrod. Both are 73-year-old retired schoolteachers whose families have lived in the region for generations. They’re also Democrats, members of a minority group in a place that’s suddenly unfamiliar to them. On a tour of the town and nearby communities, they told me theyhave never felt so detached from their neighbors. “Life here has never been as coarse as it is now,” Frank says.

Daily rituals are a series of passive insults. Our drive reveals multiple signs as profane as the one across from the church, another sign calling Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris “Baby Killers,” not to mention the “Don’t Tread on Trump” placard in the window of The Cheapo Depo 2. It wasn’t far from where a handmade sign once stood with the ominous warning: “We shoot looters.” It goes beyond threats. Once-benign personal encounters between acquaintancesin bookstores and barber shops have turned into bitter, ridicule-infused standoffs over abiding by Covid-19 protocols. On a community website Frank gets on from time to time, where people once reacted to ordinary news about store openings and closings, anonymous commenters now unleash anti-government diatribes and allegations of corruption against Biden’s son, Hunter. “They’re adding timber to the fire,” Frank says.

Let’s not blame Trump entirely for this. Incivility that had been growing in the GOP coalition for some time. (Recall the grotesque behavior around the health care debates in 2009 and 2010.) But there’s little doubt that he completely unleashed the beast. And it’s gone way beyond politics. It’s now permeated our culture with everyone taking sides in a tribal battle for cultural supremacy.

It’s awful.

When your relatives are brainwashed

Oleksandra's dog in a helmet
,Oleksandra’s dogs have been a source of support during the bombing

I’m not talking about Fox News and Breitbart in this case. We all know about that problem. This is about how that plays out in a time of war:

“When I heard the first explosions, I ran out of the house to get my dogs from their enclosures outside. People were panicking, abandoning their cars. I was so scared,” she says.

The 25-year-old has been speaking regularly to her mother, who lives in Moscow. But in these conversations, and even after sending videos from her heavily bombarded hometown, Oleksandra is unable to convince her mother about the danger she is in.

“I didn’t want to scare my parents, but I started telling them directly that civilians and children are dying,” she says.

“But even though they worry about me, they still say it probably happens only by accident, that the Russian army would never target civilians. That it’s Ukrainians who’re killing their own people.”

It’s common for Ukrainians to have family across the border in Russia. But for some, like Oleksandra, their Russian relatives have a contrasting understanding of the conflict. She believes it’s down to the stories they are told by the tightly-controlled Russian media.

Oleksandra says her mother just repeats the narratives of what she hears on Russian state TV channels.

“It really scared me when my mum exactly quoted Russian TV. They are just brainwashing people. And people trust them,” says Oleksandra.

“My parents understand that some military action is happening here. But they say: ‘Russians came to liberate you. They won’t ruin anything, they won’t touch you. They’re only targeting military bases’.”

While we were interviewing Oleksandra, the shelling went on. The internet connection was weak, so we had to exchange voice messages.

“I’ve almost forgotten what silence sounds like. They’re shelling non-stop,” she said.

But on Russian state TV channels on the same day, there was no mention of the missiles striking Kharkiv’s residential districts, of civilian deaths, or of four people killed while queuing for water.

Russian media say the threat to Ukrainian civilians doesn’t come from the Russian armed forces, it comes from Ukrainian nationalists using civilians as human shields.

Russian state TV channels justify the war by blaming Ukrainian aggression, and continue to call it “a special operation of liberation”. Any Russian outlet using the words “war”, “invasion” or “attack” faces being blocked by the country’s media regulator for spreading “deliberately false information about the actions of Russian military personnel” in Ukraine.

Some Russians have taken to the streets to protest against the war – but these demonstrations were not shown on the main state television channels.

Mykhailo, a well-known Kyiv restauranteur, didn’t have the time or inclination to watch Russian TV coverage of the invasion.

When shelling of Ukraine’s capital started, he and his wife were concentrating on how to protect their six-year-old daughter and baby son.

Mykhailo with his father before the war
Image caption,Mykhailo with his father before the war

At night their children woke up at the sound of explosions and couldn’t stop crying. The family made the decision to move to the outskirts of Kyiv and then flee abroad.

They travelled to Hungary, where Mykhailo left his wife and children and came back to Western Ukraine to help the war effort.

He was surprised not to have heard from his father, who works at a monastery near Nizhny Novgorod in Russia. He called his father and described what was happening. His father replied that this wasn’t true; there was no war and – in fact – Russians were saving Ukraine from Nazis.

Mykhailo said he felt he knew the power of Russian propaganda, but when he heard it from his father, he was devastated.

It’s one thing to simply believe what you see on TV. It’s quite another to believe what you see on TV over the first hand testimony from their own kids. People believe what they want to believe.

From what I gather, most older people believe the government propaganda but a lot of young people, who are conversant with alternate means of communication and are more skeptical of the government are getting the real story, hence the big protests. Unfortunately, the television isn’t showing them so most people don’t know they are happening.

Propaganda has been around forever in one form or another. In the 20th century it was systematized by authoritarian governments (and used to good effect by non-authoritarian governments as well.) Russia has always been quite adept at it although in recent years with the advent of social media and some liberalization of the press it has been less restrictive. Now the government has once more shut down the alternative sources of info, especially TV, which just shows how fragile it was in the first place.

The GOP gave Putin good reason to believe they would support him

In light of the brutal carnage being perpetrated by the Russian army on Ukraine this week, it’s good to see that most Republicans have found it in themselves to finally condemn the invasion. It obviously wasn’t easy for them. As we’ve just witnessed with the pandemic, they hate to be on the same side as a Democratic president for any reason, no matter how high the body count is. But they have come around, with even the most reluctant Republican now rallying to the side of the Ukrainian people. In fact, some of them have gone so far in the opposite direction that they have become reckless and dangerous:

That may be one of the most irresponsible comments by a sitting U.S. senator in modern memory.  When Graham repeated it on Fox News, even Laura Ingraham was left bewildered.

Of course, many Republicans still blame President Joe Biden for failing to prevent the crisis.

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas declared that Vladimir Putin didn’t invade while Donald Trump was in office because Trump was so tough on him, which is, of course, laughable. Cruz’s evidence is the sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline (which Trump didn’t even sign into law until the end of his term.) But former national security adviser John Bolton claimed that Trump actually fought all of the sanctions every step of the way, adding, “the fact is that he barely knew where Ukraine was. He once asked John Kelly, his second chief of staff, if Finland were a part of Russia.”

And in a stunning reversal, after boldly insisting for months that he supported Russia over Ukraine, even extolling the virtues of Vladimir Putin, last night Fox News host Tucker Carlson even admitted he was wrong … sort of.

He claimed that he didn’t think the threat was real because Joe Biden had allegedly sent Vice President Kamala Harris to “fix” it so it couldn’t have been that serious. (The president did not send Harris to fix it.) Nobody does smug, unctuous trolling quite like Tucker Carlson.

Nonetheless, it does appear that Republicans have finally recognized that their admiration for the Russian strongman Vladimir Putin may have been a bit of a bad look. And I’m sure they are hoping that no one will remember the last few years of smears and false charges against Ukraine, all designed to create the false narrative that it was Ukraine that interfered in the 2016 election rather than Russia, on behalf of Hillary Clinton instead of Trump.

Recall that Trump said something very specific on that “perfect” phone call with Ukrainian President Zelensky that had nothing to do with Hunter Biden and Joe Biden’s alleged corruption. It came right after the “I’d like you to do us a favor, though.”

 I would like you to find out what happened with this whole situation with Ukraine, they say Crowdstrike… I guess you have one of your wealthy people… The server, they say Ukraine has it. There are a lot of things that went on, the whole situation. I think you’re surrounding yourself with some of the same people. I would like to have the Attorney General call you or your people and I would like you to get to the bottom of it. As you saw yesterday, that whole nonsense ended with a very poor performance by a man named Robert Mueller, an incompetent performance, but they say a lot of it started with Ukraine.

Trump was pushing a convoluted lie that the alleged “missing DNC server” (which was not missing) was in Ukraine and he seemed to suggest that Zelensky could do him a solid by producing “evidence” that would suggest that Russia was framed for hacking the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in 2016. As for the reference to Crowdstrike, the internet security company which was hired by the DNC to investigate the hack, Trump was convinced that the company was based in Ukraine and owned by a wealthy Ukrainian Oligarch, none of which was true. (The company’s headquarters is in Sunnyvale, California, and the company’s co-founder Dmitri Alperovitch is a Russian-born U.S. citizen who emigrated as a child.

Nonetheless, this and other bogus conspiracy theories were all over the right-wing fever swamp and gained even more currency when the impeachment battles over Trump’s call commenced. One of the most prominent was the idea that the Ukraine government had actually interfered in the 2016 election because a prominent official and some others had made public statements critical of Donald Trump, which a group of right-wing journalists ginned up into a convoluted conspiracy. That opened the door to a full-blown narrative that Ukraine framed Russia for the hacks with the help of Democratic operatives in order to take down Trump — and naturally, it was anti-Trump Deep State actors saying that Russia was behind the 2016 election interference.

In reality, intelligence officials had concluded that this entire Ukraine storyline had been concocted by Russia. Putin even joked at one point that he was glad the world was finally blaming Ukraine instead of him.

And then there was Rudy Giuliani, working ostensibly on behalf of the president in a private capacity, pressuring Ukrainian officials, working with every unsavory character in the region and constantly appearing on television spreading progressively more baroque conspiracy theories.

He was not the only one:

When the House held its first impeachment hearings, the Republicans on the committee, led by Trump henchman then-congressman Devin Nunes (now CEO of Trump’s fledgling social media platform), went full bore with this alleged conspiracy that Ukraine was the real culprit. The Washington Post described it as the “central point of focus” in their defense of Trump’s actions, with Republicans like John Kennedy of Louisiana and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin repeating the same charges over on the Senate side.

So, this was not a fringe theory nor Trump and Rudy getting a wild hair. And it wasn’t just a way to hurt Joe Biden. The entire GOP establishment went along with this inane, phony charge that a corrupt Ukrainian government had conspired with Hillary Clinton to interfere in the 2016 election and they defended Trump withholding vital military aid to the country in service of his conspiracy-addled political goals. They all (with a small handful of exceptions) actively undermined the security of a small nation that was trying desperately to defend itself against a very aggressive adversary — an aggressive adversary that was manipulating the very foolish, very unfit US president.

They are now praising Ukraine and pledging to help, which is important in this moment of crisis. But it’s hard to imagine how they sleep at night or look at themselves in the mirror in the morning after what they did. 

Salon

How anti-American are they?

“The now-famous photo captured House Speaker Nancy Pelosi standing up in the Cabinet Room, pointing her finger at a visibly angry President Trump, and, in her telling, questioning his loyalty to the country he leads.” Washington Post, Oct. 17, 2019.

“How anti-American are they?” could be a setup for a “Tonight Show” joke. In light of current events, one wonders if Democrats will bare their claws and go for the Republicans’ jugular in the 2022 campaign. The conservative party that once campaigned on being more patriotic than those lefty, socialist pinkos has shown itself to be as much a fraud as its titular head.

Besides cheering on white nationalism and the Russian dictator, Republicans have systematically shown themselves to oppose popular sovereignty and to favor minority rule. As President-elect, George W. Bush quipped that running the U.S. as a dictatorship “would be a heck of a lot easier… as long as I’m the dictator. Hehehe.” It was revealing. In a country that once prided itself on being the world’s longest-lived democracy, conservative pedants who profess American exceptionalism as an article of faith still insist we are not a democracy, but a republic. Like North Korea, or China, or Hungary, or Iran. That too is revealing.

The party of the elephant is today the elephant in the room. Do Democrats have the guts to point it out? Democrats tend to assume they don’t need to tell voters what they assume voters already know. That is a chronic mistake. Voters need to hear Democrats reflect back their views if voters are to identify and vote with them. Voters claim to like politicians who “tell it like it is”? Here’s Democrats’ chance. Like that stalled Russian convoy, Republicans have made themselves sitting ducks.

The Washington Post has it:

One of the most prominent Democratic groups released two new online ads Friday that try to portray former president Donald Trump and his followers in the Republican Party as aligned with Russian President Vladimir Putin amid Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine.

These ads, put out by Priorities USA, are one of the first concrete indicators of the Democratic Party seeking to politicize the invasion ahead of the November midterm elections. It remains to be seen how much money the pro-Biden organization will invest to promote the ads and target voters.

The videos include clips of Trump calling Putin “smart” for recognizing the independence of two breakaway regions in Ukraine. They also feature remarks from Nick Fuentes, a far-right political operative labeled a “white supremacist” by the Justice Department, asking the audience at the America First Political Action Conference last month to cheer for Putin. The event was attended by Republican Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Paul A. Gosar of Arizona.

“It is shameful that Republicans are so blinded by their fealty to Donald Trump that they have chosen to support a brutal despot rather than support Joe Biden’s efforts to bring the global community together to protect freedom and democracy,” Priorities USA chairman Guy Cecil said in a statement exclusively provided to The Washington Post.

The GOP will not hesitate to invert Republicans’ record of kowtowing to Donald Trump as he 1) fawned over Putin and a string of brutal autocrats, 2) stoked a violent, anti-democratic insurrection, and 3) inspired Republican legislation in state after state to reduce the United States to “competitive authoritarianism.” Republicans will turn on a dime and accuse President Biden and Democrats of being softer than they are. Democrats had best get ahead of it.

The problem with the Priorities USA ad is it is so obviously a political attack of the sort Americans have come to loathe. And to ignore. Political shops from the campaign industrial complex crank these out like colored extrusions from a Play-Doh maker, and it shows. Outside-the-box thinking is not welcome in campaign culture. Limp results speak for themselves.

There are writers and production people in Hollywood — professional storytellers — who’ve complained for years that they stand ready to help Democrats sell themselves. They go ignored while Democrats repeatedly employ creatively deficient, former Hill colleagues who fancy themselves political communication specialists. With so much on the line, Democrats will be more likely than ever to campaign with caution rather than with reckless abandon. It is a mistake the world cannot afford them to make.

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

For The Win, 4th Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.

Kill switch

The fire is out at the Ukrainian nuclear plant attacked by Russian forces early Friday local time:

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — No radiation was released from a Russian attack at Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant in Ukraine and firefighters have extinguished a blaze at the facility, U.N. and Ukrainian officials said Friday, as Russian forces pressed their campaign to cripple the country despite global condemnation.

The International Atomic Energy Agency’s director-general, Rafael Mariano Grossi, said Friday the building hit by a Russian “projectile” at the Zaporizhzhia plant was “not part of the reactor” but instead a training center at the plant.

Nuclear officials from Sweden to China said no radiation spikes had been reported, as did Grossi. Ukrainian officials have said Russian troops took control of the overall site, but the plant’s staff were continuing to ensure its operations. Grossi said the Ukrainians were in control of the reactor.

Nonetheless, Russia controls the kill switch to 20 percent of Ukraine’s electricity supply. The Zaporizhzhia plant on the Dnieper river is Europe’s largest and lies about 340 miles southeast of Kyiv.

After dislpacing more than one million people from their homes in Ukraine, and after attacking a nuclear plant, Russian dictator Vladimir Putin insists he has “no ill intentions towards its neighbours.”

Grand Moff Tarkin: Proceed with the operation. You may fire when ready.

● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●

For The Win, 4th Edition is ready for download. Request a copy of my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us. This is what winning looks like.

It’s the Groypers party now


Christopher Mathias at Huffington Post has written a great piece about CPAC and the White nationalist confab AFPAC (America First Political Action Conference) that was being held at the same time. I urge you to read the whole thing. Here’s an excerpt:

At about 9:30 p.m., Fuentes stepped in front of the Marriott lectern, according to a livestream viewed by HuffPost, and got the night underway. He began by praising what he felt made his movement so successful: “Our secret sauce … young white men!” The crowd — and it sounded like a sizable one; Fuentes claimed over 1,000 attendees — broke into rapturous cheers and applause.

Fuentes then, as Russian bombs fell over Ukraine, led the crowd in a chant of “Putin! Putin!”

And finally, before introducing the first mystery speaker, Fuentes issued an apology. His first choice, he explained, had a family emergency. Thomas Homan, who oversaw the Trump administration’s brutal anti-immigration policies as head of ICE, had arrived at AFPAC, Fuentes claimed, but had to rush away. He sadly wouldn’t be speaking.

Homan confirmed to HuffPost in a phone call this week that he had indeed arrived to speak at AFPAC. His assistant had arranged the appearance, he said, and Homan said they may have confused Fuentes’ group for another one. “So many names of conservative groups sound the same,” Homan said.

While sitting at a table waiting for the conference to start, Homan said he looked over the agenda for the evening and decided he’d better Google Fuentes’ name. He saw some stories labeling Fuentes a white nationalist, but he was doubtful of them — Homan said he himself has unfairly been called a bigot and a racist for “enforcing immigration laws.” But then he found a recent story that did disturb him, about Fuentes praising Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. This prompted Homan to leave the conference before it started. He says he never met Fuentes. “Shame on me for not doing my research,” Homan told HuffPost.

I asked Homan if it inspired any self-reflection that someone like Fuentes would want him at AFPAC. Homan said he didn’t know why Fuentes invited him, reassuring me that he himself is not a racist, he just likes secure borders.

A few minutes later Homan called me back to make sure I understood something. “I’m not saying this is a bad group,” he said of Fuentes and the groypers. “I’m saying I don’t know.”

Don’t worry, Fuentes assured his supporters after sharing the news about Homan; he had wrangled someone just as well known. “She is a standard-bearer of Trumpism in the U.S. Congress,” Fuentes said. “She is pro-life, she is proudly America first … We are honored, we are humbled and excited to welcome her to the stage right now … I think this is going to be the beginning of something great — the representative from Georgia, Marjorie Taylor Greene!”

Greene, who had just heard Fuentes cheer on Putin and admit to leading a movement for “young white men,” hugged Fuentes and took her place behind the lectern.

She began her speech by invoking her faith, leading the groypers to break into a chant of “Christ is king!” Then Greene — a transphobic QAnon conspiracist booted off Twitter for promoting COVID denialism who was stripped of her committee assignments last year for advocating violence against Democrats — told the assembled white nationalists that they, like her, were “canceled Americans.”

“You’ve been handed the responsibility to fight for our Constitution and stand for our freedoms, and stop the Democrats who are the communist party of the United States of America,” she said.

The evening’s other mystery guest speaker was Janice McGeachin, the Republican lieutenant governor of Idaho, whom Trump recently endorsed in her bid for the governorship. She told the assembled white nationalists to “keep up your good work fighting for our country.”

Gosar, last year’s top-billed speaker, appeared via a pre-recorded video this time, delivering a brief, forgettable statement. It was his home state colleague who stole the show.

Arizona state Sen. Wendy Rogers appeared at AFPAC remotely, via video conference, standing in front of the Arizona state flag. She addressed the crowd as “groypers,” to great cheers, and praised Fuentes, who she said had been “de-platformed everywhere” for saying things that anger “the media and the far left.”

“I truly respect Nick because he’s the most persecuted man in America,” Rogers said, adding that AFPAC was “standing up to tyranny.”

Then the state senator called for their mutual political enemies to be executed.

“I’ve said we need to build more gallows,” Rogers said. “If we try some of these high-level criminals, convict them and use a newly built set of gallows, it’ll make an example of these traitors who have betrayed our country.”

She wasn’t the only AFPAC speaker to call for murder.

“Tony Fauci literally unleashed a bio weapon on the world,” far-right podcaster Stew Peters told the crowd at one point, falsely blaming the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for the coronavirus pandemic. “Why is this man running around free instead of hanging on the end of a noose somewhere?” […]

On Wednesday, the Arizona state Senate voted 24-3 to censure Rogers over her gallows remarks. The rare bipartisan resolution has no practical effect beyond rebuking Rogers, and also makes no mention of white nationalism.

“I do not apologize, I will not back down and I am sorely disappointed in the leadership of this body for colluding with the Democrats to attempt to destroy my reputation,” Rogers wrote in response to the censure.

Thomas Zimmer, who teaches 20th century history at Georgetown University, watched clips from AFPAC with horror, and was particularly alarmed by Rogers.

“This is not some far-right internet troll, but a Republican state senator, and it’s impossible to adequately understand American politics without grappling in earnest with why her radicalism is widely seen as justified on the Right and within the GOP,” Zimmer wrote in a tweet.

“I fear that — after four years of Trumpism in power, after January 6, with rightwing fascistic militancy now all around us — we have become so accustomed to outrageous political acts that we might be becoming numb to how bizarre, how extreme, how dangerous these developments are,” he added.

AFPAC dragged on for hours, long after the nightly fireworks at Disney World exploded in the nearby sky — a spectacular sight that, for Orlando locals, has been rendered routine — and as, thousands of miles away, Ukrainians repelled a Russian attack in Kyiv.

“Now, [the media is] going and saying, ‘Vladimir Putin is Adolf Hitler,’ as if that isn’t a good thing,” Fuentes said in the closing speech shortly before 2 a.m., before adding, “Oops, I shouldn’t have said that.”

The room went wild.

Fuentes praised the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, too, pointing out that a few people in the crowd had been arrested for their actions that day. “I’ll reiterate just for you,” he said, “Jan. 6 was awesome.”

He paid lip service to some right-wing conspiracy theories about the attack being orchestrated by the FBI as a ruse to arrest conservatives, saying such theories “may very well be true.”

“But,” he added, “I was proud to be an American on Jan. 6, 2021. And I’d like to believe it was real. I’d like to believe Americans have the heart and the guts and the balls to do what they did on Jan. 6. I’d like to believe what they did was real.”

Fuentes wore a VIP badge to Trump’s speech in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, 2021, shortly before hundreds of people stormed the Capitol — something he encouraged. “Keep moving towards the Capitol; it appears we are taking the Capitol back!” he told them through a megaphone. “Break down the barriers and disregard the police. The Capitol belongs to us!” […]

Bleeding Into CPAC

Hours before she spoke to the groypers, soaking up cheers from a crowd of young men who savor saying racist slurs on livestreams and who would very much like it if America were a whites-only country one day, I had spotted Greene flitting around CPAC, relishing her celebrity status, posing for photos, and being interviewed at one of the many media booths.

Greene was scheduled to appear on CPAC’s main stage on Saturday at 11:15 a.m. as part of a panel on cancel culture that was set to be broadcast live on Fox Nation.

Before dawn that morning, I emailed the American Conservative Union, the group that organizes CPAC. Greene had just been the featured speaker at a conference of Nazi sympathizers; would she still be an official part of CPAC’s line-up in the morning?

I wanted to know if Greene lending the imprimatur of her office to a group of groypers was enough for CPAC to, well, cancel her. I hadn’t gotten a response by 10 a.m., so I called an ACU spokeswoman named Allison. She sounded somewhere between panicked and annoyed, either with me or with her bosses, I couldn’t tell. No comment, she said. She had passed my message along to the heads of ACU, she told me, adding: “It’s out of my hands.”

A short time later, for the second time in less than 12 hours, I watched Greene walk onto a stage to loud cheers.

[…]

As Ben Lorber, a research analyst at Political Research Associates and one of the foremost chroniclers of the groypers, noted recently: “The rising hard-right flank — represented in Congress by [Greene], Gosar and others — is setting the conservative agenda, and they view these leaders (correctly) as the out-of-touch establishment.”

Republican candidates across the country, including Senate hopeful and “Hillbilly Elegy” author J.D. Vance, have all sought Greene’s endorsement. A stroll around CPAC showed how the GOP is, in many ways, her’s and the groypers’ party now.

By the way, they chanted Trump, Trump, Trump at the groypers conference too …

Conspiracy to Defraud the United States

That would be the prefect title for Trump’s autobiography. As it is, it’s one of the crimes the January 6th Committee believes he may have committed. The following is a good basic rundown of the latest from Philip Bump of the Washington Post:

For eight months, the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol has been interviewing witnesses and collecting evidence. On Wednesday night, we got the first formal indication of its primary target: establishing that former president Donald Trump committed two federal crimes in his efforts to retain power despite losing the 2020 presidential election.

The case is well understood but intricate, particularly in regard to the need to meet the standards of criminal prosecution. So, below, we’ll walk through the case presented by the committee in the document produced on Wednesday. We’ll also contextualize it with other recent legal activity that hints at more significant culpability for Trump allies and maintains a risk of civil repercussions for the former president.

The committee’s allegations were outlined in a court filing submitted by the committee as it seeks to compel cooperation from an attorney named John Eastman. Eastman was a central figure in Trump’s final effort to hold power after his election loss, writing the memo that argued Vice President Mike Pence could simply set aside electoral votes submitted by several states that voted for Joe Biden. The committee wants him to provide testimony and documents related to his interactions with Trump, but he has refused to do so.

Part of the argument against cooperating is that he was acting as Trump’s attorney and is therefore subject to attorney-client privilege. But that privilege doesn’t apply if the discussions between an attorney and a client were related to commission of a crime — what’s known as the crime-fraud exception. And so the committee delineated the crimes it believes Trump committed in concert with Eastman, hoping to persuade the court to review material that can then be shared with investigators.

The Jan. 6 committee’s allegations

It’s useful to begin by clarifying that the committee’s delineation of suspected crimes is something well short of proof of guilt. It’s not even an indictment, just an articulation of what laws it thinks Trump might have broken. This may be the closest Trump comes to being charged criminally for his post-election efforts. Time will tell.

The two primary crimes it suspects Trump committed are:

Obstruction of an official proceeding: that Trump “attempted to obstruct, influence or impede … an official proceeding of the United States, and … did so corruptly.”

Conspiracy to defraud the United States: that he “interfere[d] with or obstruct[ed] one of [the government’s] lawful governmental functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest.”

Both of those allegations center on the congressional counting of electoral votes that was underway at the Capitol on Jan. 6. That count was an “official proceeding” and “lawful government function” that Trump attempted to obstruct. There’s no real question that Trump made such an attempt, though it’s worth walking through how the court filing documents that effort — and other, less-dramatic attempts to interfere with the government’s procedures.

Perhaps more important is the qualifying aspect of each charge: Did Trump obstruct an official proceeding “corruptly”? Was his interference with the lawful functions “deceitful or dishonest”? For a prosecutor, this would be the heart of the case, showing that Trump knew that his efforts to steal a second term in office were rooted in falsehood.

The case for attempted obstruction

Let’s work backward.

As the riot was underway at the Capitol, Trump made no effort for hours to intervene, despite the rioters obviously acting on his behalf. It’s not included in this week’s filing, but the committee has numerous messages sent to Trump’s team as the riot was going on that called for the president to intervene, understanding that people believing themselves to be effecting Trump’s will would probably be responsive if he asked them to stop. He didn’t. In fact, the filing claims, Trump was aware of the violence underway at the Capitol when he tweeted an excoriation of Pence, who was still in the building.

Before the riot began, Trump had given a speech at the Ellipse in which he encouraged the thousands of people who he had asked to come to Washington to continue to fight. There had apparently been some debate about sending the Ellipse crowd to the Capitol, something for which the organizers had no permit. But Trump called for people to march to the Capitol anyway: “You have to show strength, and you have to be strong,” he said. “We have come to demand that Congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated.” This, of course, depends heavily on the idea that some electors weren’t legal, which was not the case. We’ll come back to this.

Before he spoke, Trump had learned that Pence would not be enacting Eastman’s plan to reject those “unlawful” electors. There had been enormous pressure on Pence to do so for days as Trump’s options for retaining power dwindled. A memo from Eastman outlining the process was circulating by early January. It advocated having Pence set aside electors “without asking for permission.” In the memo, Eastman predicts that Democrats would “howl” futilely in response.

Pence did ask permission, including from the Senate parliamentarian, and didn’t receive it. On Jan. 4, Pence told Trump that he had been advised that he couldn’t simply reject electors — but Trump and Eastman, as articulated in the filing, continued to insist that he could. Eastman also spoke from the Ellipse; he and Trump both insisted that Pence could do something Eastman later “admitted that not a single Justice of the Supreme Court” would validate, according to the filing.

That apparently comes from testimony provided by Gregory Jacob, Pence’s attorney. Eastman has repeatedly tried to argue that he was advocating for something short of simply rejecting electors, despite that being the initial focus of the first of the two memos he filed. According to Jacobs’s testimony, Eastman on Jan. 5 “came into the meeting saying, ‘What I’m here to ask you to do is to reject the electors.’ ” As Trump had endorsed.

In other words, Trump and Eastman tried repeatedly to get Pence to impede the final counting of lawful electoral votes, and, once the count was halted by the riot, Trump did nothing for an extended period of time that would get the electoral-vote count back on track. In late January, Trump bolstered the idea that he intended to obstruct the finalization of the election broadly, saying in a statement that Pence on Jan. 6 “could have overturned the Election!”

The filing notes other points at which Trump tried to obstruct lawful functions, as when he contemplated overhauling the Justice Department to potentially provide a stamp of authority on his claims about rampant fraud. There were also those alternate slates of electors that Trump’s team encouraged to meet in mid-December, hoping to provide a pretext under which Congress could pretend to be considering two different submissions from states. One can understand how these might fold into a claim that Trump and his allies (including Eastman, who the filing says was aware of the alternate slates plan) were attempting to derail government functions.

All of this, of course, depends on Trump’s claims about rampant fraud in the 2020 election, claims that led directly to the rioters’ efforts to do what Pence wisely opted against. The filing offers some direct connections from Trump to that violence:“[A] number specifically cited the President’s tweets asking his supporters to come to Washington, D.C. on January 6. For example, one defendant who later pleaded guilty to threatening Nancy Pelosi texted a family member on January 6 to say: “[Trump] wants heads and I’m going to deliver.”110 Another defendant released a statement through his attorney, stating: “I was in Washington, D.C. on January 6, 2021, because I believed I was following the instructions of former President Trump and he was my president and the commander-in-chief.”

That last message continued: “His statements also had me believing the election was stolen from him.”

And this brings us to the other half of the question of criminality.

The case for corrupt intent

One defense Trump can deploy against criminal charges is the idea that he sincerely believed that the election had been stolen from him and that he and his allies were trying to figure out how to derail a historic usurpation of the American presidency.

The committee’s filing spends a good deal of time offering evidence that Trump and his allies should certainly have not believed that the election was stolen. For example:

“President Trump’s legal team and his supporters took their [fraud] allegations to the courts, ultimately litigating and losing more than 60 challenges to the election results in seven States.”

“According to the President’s senior campaign advisor, soon after the election, a campaign data expert told the President ‘in pretty blunt terms’ that he was going to lose.”

In early December 2020, Attorney General William P. Barr “stated publicly that the ‘U.S. Justice Department ha[d] uncovered no evidence of widespread voter fraud that could change the outcome of the 2020 election,’ a position he reiterated on December 21 when rejecting calls to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate election fraud.”

On multiple occasions that month, other Justice Department officials “informed [Trump], both as to specific allegations and more generally, that the President’s claims of massive fraud sufficient to overturn the election were not supported by the evidence.”

In a well-documented Oval Office meeting on Dec. 15, Trump was told that “people are telling you things that are not right.”

In a Dec. 27, 2020, call, a senior Justice Department official told Trump “in very clear terms” that “the major allegations are not supported by the evidence developed” after investigating several swing states.

This is simply the official documentation of why Trump should have known his claims didn’t hold water. There was a widespread public conversation adjudicating the claims in the media, revealing quickly that none of his assertions about rampant fraud were valid. Officials in targeted states repeatedly offered evidence undercutting Trump’s assertions, evidence that received no response from Trump or his allies. The filing focuses on Trump’s claims about the election in Georgia.

On Jan. 3, Trump called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and outlined a number of unfounded claims about fraud as he asked the state to “find” enough votes to declare him the victor. The next day, a staffer from Raffensperger’s office held a lengthy news conference, rebutting the claims one by one. During his speech at the Capitol on Jan. 6, though, Trump continued to make those debunked claims.

One of the fundamental questions of the Trump era in politics has been the extent to which he believes the false claims he makes. When he would tweet debunked nonsense as president, for example, observers would quickly point out that it had been debunked. Trump so frequently repeated long-debunked claims that The Washington Post’s fact-checking team invented a new category of falsehood to capture those events.

Should charges be brought against Trump, this is likely to be a central question. Trump was told repeatedly by experts, government officials and the media that what he was saying was false. But Trump also repeatedly ignored and derided the opinions of experts, government officials and the media and may have come to believe the assertions that he was making. If he tried to steal power out of a sincere delusion that it was warranted, is that a sufficient condition for innocence?

At the very least, Trump’s long-standing habit of being immune to reality provides him some useful political cover. At least in this case.

The other questions of culpability

Those possible criminal violations are not the only threats Trump faces.

In the filing itself, for example, the committee points to Trump’s refusal to accept the reality that no fraud occurred in Georgia as evidence supporting another possible crime:common law fraud. To meet a criminal standard under the statute in D.C., where the committee alleges this crime occurred, Trump would have had to make “(1) a false representation; (2) in reference to material fact; (3) made with knowledge of its falsity; (4) with the intent to deceive; and (5) action is taken in reliance upon the representation.”

As articulated in the filing, (1) and (2) are Trump’s false claim that ballots were illegally counted in Fulton County, a claim made based on misrepresented security footage. When we hit (3) we again see the utility of Trump’s demonstrated immunity to reality: Did he know that the claim that he centered in campaign ads and during his speech on Jan. 6 (meeting part (5)) was false (meeting part (4))? The filing again makes clear that he should have known, and any insistence that he didn’t depends heavily on an idea that Trump somehow lacks competence to adjudicate between true and false information. But it is a defense.

In other contexts, that defense may be less useful.

Last month, D.C. District Judge Amit Mehta published a remarkable opinion in which he allowed several civil lawsuits against Trump to move forward. In it, he noted that there was evidence that Trump had engaged in a civil conspiracy — that is, not necessarily a criminal one — with far-right extremist groups such as the Oath Keepers that on Jan. 6 aimed to block the finalization of the election. The bar is lower here, with participants in the conspiracy needing only to have “a mutual understanding to try to accomplish a common and unlawful plan” — like blocking the counting of electoral votes — “[the] general scope of which were known to each person who is to be held responsible for its consequences,” though not necessarily the details.

Again, this is not a determination that such a conspiracy unfolded, just that Mehta can’t dismiss the lawsuits because there’s sufficient evidence to think that it might have. The Jan. 6 committee’s filing points to Mehta’s opinion as “demonstrat[ing] the breadth of conspiratorial conduct and further support[ing] the existence of common law fraud.”

There was a less-noticed development on Wednesday that adds another complicating layer to the question of how Trump might have been more intertwined in the actions that unfolded Jan. 6 on Capitol Hill. In a plea agreement with the federal government, an Oath Keeper named Joshua James pleaded guilty not only to obstructing an official proceeding — the charge floated by the Jan. 6 committee as potentially applying to Trump — but also to “seditious conspiracy.”

When a group of Oath Keepers was charged with seditious conspiracy in January (that is, a conspiracy aimed at sedition, rebelling against the government), it marked a significant escalation in the government’s treatment of those who participated in violence on Jan. 6. James’s plea agreement is an agreement that he was part of precisely such a conspiracy.

But James’s role on Jan. 6 is interesting for another reason, as journalist Marcy Wheeler notes. That morning, before he breached the Capitol, he was part of a security detail that shuttled longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone around Washington, apparently including to the Willard Hotel, where Trump’s allies were trying to persuade members of Congress to block the counting of electors. In his opinion on the civil suits, Mehta noted that Stone’s involvement with the Oath Keepers “might prove … to be important.” James suggests one way that could be the case.

Over the past 24 hours, we haven’t learned much more about what Trump was doing in the days before Jan. 6 and on the day itself. But we have learned a lot about the context in which those actions were occurring and how those evaluating his actions believe they might have violated the law.

Trump faces both civil and criminal threats because of his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. But any accountability may come down to one of the central questions of his presidency: Does he actually believe the false assertions he amplifies?

I don’t think he does believe it. Every once in a while he’ll slip up and say something like “if I’d won the election” or “they only won because” which indicates he knows the truth. I do believe he is unhinged and believes that he can literally change reality simply by insisting that black is white and up is down. And he can — for millions of deluded souls who follow him like a god. But he knows.

If you want more on this subject, check out emptywheel.net to go deep into the weeds. Marcy has been telegraphing this exact referral for months now. The evidence has been there in the public record and now the committee is filling out details with the depositions of people who were involved.

Will this add up to anything? I don’t know. There’s every possibility that the DOJ will decide this is too hot to handle and will punt. I will not be surprised. To be honest, I think most of the political establishment is just waiting for Trump to die. Accountability is just too risky.

Here’s the once and future president’s response to all this:

The Untouchables

I’m not talking about Elliot Ness. Sadly, I’m talking about the congressional leaders of the white nationalist movement:

Far-right Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) are untouchable inside the House Republican conference.

 Greene and Gosar can attend as many white supremacist conferences as their hearts desire, safe in the knowledge there’s nothing they need from leadership — and nothing left for leadership to take from them. They’ve already been stripped of their committees. They have zero need or interest in leadership’s endorsements or money. And their power actually comes from offending Republican leadership in Washington. “They literally have nothing tangible [to punish them] in terms of the traditional congressional levers,” a GOP leadership source told Axios.

Greene has long gloated she’s immune to punishment by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. That’s true even after she and Gosar appeared at a gathering of white nationalists hosted by the outspoken Holocaust denierantisemitichomophobic and racist activist Nick Fuentes.

When Donald Trump was running for president in 2016, he famously boasted he “could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and wouldn’t lose any voters.” Greene made her own version of that statement, bragging during a rally in Texas last month that “Kevin can’t do anything about me.”

She’s right. McCarthy can’t do anything to punish her — even if he wanted to (which, we’re told, he doesn’t). Greene can’t be stripped of any congressional committee assignments because Democrats have already removed her and Gosar from all their committees. “In a way, the Dems have helped,” the GOP leadership source told Axios. “It would be a lot harder for leadership right now if she and him were both still sitting on a committee.”

And there’s no chance Greene and Gosar will be expelled from the Republican conference. That would require a two-thirds vote, which is hard to imagine ever happening even if McCarthy were whipping the votes as if his life depended on it.

Greene doesn’t need money or connections to big-time donors that GOP leadership could offer her in exchange for good behavior. She’s independently wealthy and a grassroots fundraising powerhouse, due purely to her intense appeal among committed Republican base donors. Greene raised nearly $7.5 million in 2021, according to Federal Election Commission records.

Among House Republicans, only McCarthy, Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) and Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) raised more. Nearly all of Greene’s fundraising came from individual donors; just a single corporate PAC gave to her campaign last year — donating a paltry $2,500.

Gosar’s fundraising picture is bleaker. He brought in under $350,000 last year, FEC records show. But given he’s impossible to outflank on the far-right, Gosar has little trouble fending off Republican primary challengers.

Neither is particularly vulnerable in a general election either; the Cook Political Report rates both of their districts as solidly Republican.

In 2019, GOP leadership stripped then-Rep. Steve Kinof Iowa of his committee assignments for making comments sympathetic to white nationalists. Now, though, there’s nothing available to take away from Greene or Gosar. “MTG [Marjorie Taylor Greene] is worse than Steve King,” said a senior Republican aide. “With King, there was a path to getting him out of the House, but Greene is a fundraising machine with a following, loving the spotlight,” the aide added. “The best [House] Republicans can hope for is that she runs for the Senate someday.”

Rep. Tom Rice (R-S.C.) said their attendance at the white nationalist event was a “huge mistake” that “confirms what people like to say about us, which I believe is generally untrue.” Asked if there should be consequences, though, he repeated: “It was a huge mistake.”

Crenshaw called Fuentes, the organizer of the event, a “psychopath and an antisemite,” and said, “Nobody should ever be speaking at any of his events.” However, Crenshaw said punishments are “always for show” and balked at the idea of backing primary opponents to either lawmaker.

Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) said his party has “got to make very clear” it is “100%, steadfast against white nationalism.” But Bacon said all the party can do in response is “make clear we don’t like it,” and “give them the stiff arm and say it’s repugnant.” “You would hope their districts would see this and make a better choice,” Bacon added. “I’ll leave it to their districts.”

McCarthy said Monday that Greene’s and Gosar’s appearances at the white nationalist conference were “appalling and wrong,” but he’s made clear he won’t publicly say anything more about the subject. McCarthy has told colleagues he’s addressed the matter with Greene in a private conversation.

A source familiar with McCarthy’s thinking said he’s “frustrated by the constant distractions” from Greene and Gosar. “We have a great opportunity to take the House back; we have a great opportunity to set ourselves up for ’24,” the source added. “And you have … folks who don’t seem to want to keep the team in the forefront.

I have a sneaking suspicion that if they had a member who was backing Build Back Better or clamoring for social justice they could find a way to punish them. These people are doing a lot of dirty for the party and they have value. The white nationalist faction of the GOP is a real constituency and somebody’s got to service it. These two, and a handful of their cohorts, are more than willing to do it.

But let’s have yet another article about Squad’s pernicious influence on the Democratic Party and the country. I haven’t seen one in at least a week.

The threat is real

In keeping with our rather bracing theme today, this piece by MIcah Sifry is going to keep me up tonight. As someone who is old enough to have done nuclear drills when I was a kid (and had the nightmares to go along with them) the thought of nuclear war has never been far from my mind. I grew up thinking it was almost inevitable and I’m sure it shaped my worldview in ways I cannot fathom.

Over the years, my existential terror faded quite a bit. It didn’t happen. It seemed the world was becoming more sane. And when the cold war ended I felt a weight lifted from my shoulders. It’s one of the reasons I resented George W. Bush’s cynical used of the “weapons of mass destruction” lie to imply that Saddam Hussein had nuclear weapons. Using nuclear fears for propaganda was reckless in the extreme.

But as much as we might want to put this threat in the back of our minds, it’s still there. And now we are in one of those acute moments that have periodically happened in the nuclear age. Sifry writes:

While the anti-nuclear movement of a generation ago is largely gone, the nuclear war planners of both the United States and Russia haven’t stopped thinking about what they might do with these fearsome weapons, and they’ve continued to “modernize” their forces, making a wide range of nuclear-enabled weapons, including many with smaller yields than the bombs the US dropped on Japan that could conceivably be used on conventional battlefields. Which brings us to the current moment.

For when Russian President Vladimir Putin puts his nuclear forces on a “special regime of combat duty” (a form of high alert) and tells his fellow Russians in a nationally televised speech about his “incursion” into Ukraine that “No matter who tries to stand in our way or all the more so create threats for our country and our people, they must know that Russia will respond immediately, and the consequences will be such as you have never seen in your entire history,” these actions are not being constrained by any kind of public counterforce. No one, except a relatively small cadre of expert civilian analysts and ex-military, has spent any time considering how risky it is for two nuclear-armed global powers to be facing off in Eastern Europe, especially when their arsenals include all kinds of low-yield weapons explicitly designed for battlefield use.

But now the warning lights are blinking red. No less an expert on Putin than Fiona Hill, a former senior director for Europe and Russia at the US National Security Council, told Politico a few days ago that she believes “he would” use nuclear weapons “if push comes to shove.” After all, Russian military doctrine, which was updated by Putin since he came to power in 2000, explicitly discusses the possible use of nukes in the context of a conventional war: “The Russian Federation reserves the right to use nuclear weapons in response to the use of nuclear and other types of weapons of mass destruction against it and (or) its allies, as well as in response to large-scale aggression utilizing conventional weapons in situations critical to the national security of the Russian Federation and its allies.”

The idea is called “escalate to de-escalate,” and it imagines that by making a small number of nuclear strikes, Russia might stop an opponent in their tracks and on terms to its advantage. Top American military planners have called this strategy “playing with fire” because of the obvious danger of it leading to all-out war, but they have also responded by developing their own ways of delivering precision low-yield nukes to be able to respond in kind to any Russian low-level nuke. The lovely and lethal logic of nuclear deterrence should always remind us that these weapons can never be used, but instead war planners always think that when they develop and brandish a nuclear capability it is only for defensive purposes, even though to the other side it can just as easily be read as having offensive purposes.

This isn’t the first time that Russia has threatened the use of nuclear weapons over Ukraine by the way; in September 2014 Ukrainian Minister of Defense Colonel General Valeriy Heletey stated, “The Russian side has threatened on several occasions across unofficial channels that, in the case of continued resistance, they are ready to use a tactical nuclear weapon against us.”

Perhaps these are just threats aimed at cowing Ukrainians and their supporters in the West into backing down. One analyst who has been publicly skeptical of how much Russia might adhere to the “escalate to de-escalate” doctrine, Kristin Ven Bruusgaard of the Oslo Nuclear Project, is not so sure any more. A few days ago on Twitter, she said that Putin’s decision to raise the alert level of his nuclear forces was a “stark departure from existing and officially communicated doctrine regarding nuclear employment — Western statements, no matter how evil, could not realistically be spun as ‘threatening the existence of the Russian state’.” If he’s being rational about trying to achieve political objectives with his invasion of Ukraine, then, she argues, it is unlikely that he would use nukes on Ukraine. But then she asks, “who will break the news to Putin that this may in fact not work — and be as utterly counterproductive as his other efforts at producing the outcome he seeks?”

Unfortunately, we are now at a precipice that a few have always worried about and most of us ignored. If Putin thinks the Russian state, which he personifies, is existentially threatened, he may believe that he is justified in escalating in Ukraine and imagine that firing a few low-yield nukes at Kyiv would scare the world into submission. Or, he may first seek to contrive a pretext, like setting off a “dirty bomb” in Russian-held territory to then claim that he was only retaliating. Having gotten away with brutal conventional wars in other places, like Chechnya and Syria, he may also believe that there is no effective taboo against using low-yield nukes in war. To our horror, he may even be right.

The good old days are over

I am persuaded by this analysis from Naomi Klein on (at least part of) what is fueling the global right wing movement — and the existential threat it poses:

NOSTALGIA FOR EMPIRE is what seems to drive Vladimir Putin — that and a desire to overcome the shame of punishing economic shock therapy imposed on Russia at the end of the Cold War. Nostalgia for American “greatness” is part of what drives the movement Donald Trump still leads — that and a desire to overcome the shame of having to face the villainy of white supremacy that shaped the founding of the United States and mutilates it still. Nostalgia is also what animates the Canadian truckers who occupied Ottawa for the better part of a month, wielding their red-and-white flags like a conquering army, evoking a simpler time when their consciences were undisturbed by thoughts of the bodies of Indigenous children, whose remains are still being discovered on the grounds of those genocidal institutions that once dared to call themselves “schools.”

This is not the warm and cozy nostalgia of fuzzily remembered childhood pleasures; it’s an enraged and annihilating nostalgia that clings to false memories of past glories against all mitigating evidence.

All these nostalgia-based movements and figures share a longing for something else, something which may seem unrelated but is not. A nostalgia for a time when fossil fuels could be extracted from the earth without uneasy thoughts of mass extinction, or children demanding their right to a future, or Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports, like the one just released yesterday, that reads, in the words of United Nations Secretary General António Guterres, like an “atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership.” Putin, of course, leads a petrostate, one that has defiantly refused to diversify its economic dependence on oil and gas, despite the devastating effect of the commodity roller coaster on its people and despite the reality of climate change. Trump is obsessed with the easy money that fossil fuels offer and as president made climate denial a signature policy.

The Canadian truckers, for their part, not only chose idling 18-wheelers and smuggled jerry cans as their protest symbols, but the leadership of the movement is also deeply rooted in the extra-dirty oil of the Alberta tar sands. Before it was the “freedom convoy,” many of these same players staged the dress rehearsal known as United We Roll, a 2019 convoy that combined a zealous defense of oil pipelines, opposition to carbon pricing, anti-immigrant xenophobia, and explicit nostalgia for a white, Christian Canada.Oil is a stand-in for a broader worldview.

Though petrodollars underwrite these players and forces, it’s critical to understand that oil is a stand-in for a broader worldview, a cosmology deeply entwined with Manifest Destiny and the Doctrine of Discovery, which ranked human as well as nonhuman life inside a rigid hierarchy, with white Christian men at the top. Oil, in this context, is the symbol of the extractivist mindset: not only a perceived God-given right to keep extracting fossil fuels, but also the right to keep taking whatever they want, leave poison behind, and never look back.

This is why the fast-moving climate crisis represents not just an economic threat to people invested in the extractive sectors but also a cosmological threat to the people invested in this worldview. Because climate change is the Earth telling us that nothing is free; that the age of (white, male) human “dominion” has ended; that there is no such thing as a one-way relationship comprised only of taking; that all actions have reactions. These centuries of digging and spewing are now unleashing forces that make even the sturdiest structures created by industrial societies — coastal cities, highways, oil rigs — look vulnerable and frail. And within the extractivist mindset, that is impossible to accept.

I don’t think there’s any doubt about this. “Make America Great Again” was the first tip-off. And it seems to be animating Vladimir Putin with his professed desire to reassemble Greater Russia. The Califate. Hungary. It’s all an attempt to put the genie of modernism back in the bottle and recreate a past in which the people who feel they are losing out were winners.

Sometimes things aren’t as complicated as they seem.