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Month: September 2022

Keeping Q in the cult

Trump goes there

He’s working hard to keep the crazy coalition together:

After winking at QAnon for years, Donald Trump is overtly embracing the baseless conspiracy theory, even as the number of frightening real-world events linked to it grows.

On Tuesday, using his Truth Social platform, the Republican former president reposted an image of himself wearing a Q lapel pin overlaid with the words “The Storm is Coming.” In QAnon lore, the “storm” refers to Trump’s final victory, when supposedly he will regain power and his opponents will be tried, and potentially executed, on live television.

As Trump contemplates another run for the presidency and has become increasingly assertive in the Republican primary process during the midterm elections, his actions show that far from distancing himself from the political fringe, he is welcoming it.

He’s published dozens of recent Q-related posts, in contrast to 2020, when he claimed that while he didn’t know much about QAnon, he couldn’t disprove its conspiracy theory.

Pressed on QAnon theories that Trump allegedly is saving the nation from a satanic cult of child sex traffickers, he claimed ignorance but asked, “Is that supposed to be a bad thing?”

“If I can help save the world from problems, I’m willing to do it,” Trump said.

He has said he is the chosen one. So, of course…

DeSantis pulls another cruel stunt

And Trump can’t be happy about it. It was his idea.

There were so many scandals during the Trump years that it’s hard to remember them all. Some stand out, of course, like his blatant obstruction of justice in the Russia investigation and his attempted extortion against the Ukrainian government in hopes of smearing Joe Biden. And of course Trump went out with a bang, attempting a coup and inciting an insurrection. Those things got him impeached — and may end up getting him indicted. But there was so much more.

You certainly recall the horrific family separation policy at the border, which caused an international outcry and was finally reversed under pressure. Trump eventually did build segments of his silly wall, but did not get the sharp spikes on top or the alligator moat, ideas he actually raised at various points. He asked whether the Border Patrol or National Guard could shoot undocumented immigrants at border crossings (OK, maybe just in the leg) and he campaigned on the idea of reviving the hideous 1950s policy “Operation Wetback,” which rounded up immigrants (and sometimes U.S. citizens as well) and dropped them off in the Mexican desert with no food, water or money. Luckily, American law has evolved enough to prevent such inhumane practices, which I’m sure disappointed him. (These days he’s proposing a similar approach with unhoused citizens in American cities, so the idea has stuck with him.)

Trump also had what he thought was an exceedingly clever plan to bus asylum seekers waiting for their court appearances to cities in blue states. The Washington Post reported in 2019 that the point of this proposal was to “retaliate against his political rivals” and that he had been pushing the idea for more than six months. He specifically wanted officials to ship suspected criminals off to “Democrat-run” cities but couldn’t find a way to do that. Immigrants suspected of crimes are not released on bond, as are migrants who’ve been granted temporary asylum. Legal counsel for immigration officials nixed the idea, calling it “inappropriate” — largely because of liability issues and bad PR, not concern over human rights or basic decency — and it didn’t go anywhere.

Trump no doubt thought he had come up with this idea himself but most likely it was Stephen Miller, his infamous immigration adviser. who put that bug in his ear. Knowing that Trump loved to take credit for all political slogans and stunts (including “Make America Great Again,” “America First” and “Drain the Swamp”), Miller likely didn’t tell Trump that this idea had a long and disgusting history in America, most recently going back to the civil rights era when White Citizens’ Councils in the south retaliated against the Freedom Riders by rounding up Black folks and sending them to Northern cities with fake promises of jobs and opportunity, dropping them off in places where they knew no one. I’m sure they had some good laughs over that one.

I guess  that kind of stunt never falls out of fashion with the far right. Just a few months ago it came up again on Tucker Carlson’s White Power hour:

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott apparently saluted smartly and got right to work. By early August he was sending busloads of asylum-seekers to New York and Washington, D.C., “as part of the Governor’s response to the Biden Administration’s open border policies,” as an official statement from his office put it. (Never mind that the Biden administration has no such policies.)

Those two cities have been coping with the influx, and a number of charities and churches have stepped in to help. This is stretching their already stretched systems, but so far no one has even contemplated putting the migrants on buses back to Houston or San Antonio (or maybe to other red-state cities) because the officials in New York and D.C., whatever their flaws, aren’t monsters. They are trying to figure out ways to help these people find family members and get jobs and housing as they await hearings on whether they qualify to stay in the U.S.

Not to be outdone by Abbott’s stunt, the GOP’s current troll king, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, decided this week to take Carlson’s advice to send asylum seekers to Martha’s Vineyard, the affluent resort island off the coast of Massachusetts. Even though Florida is not a border state, DeSantis has already had the state legislature appropriate millions for the purpose of sending migrants out of state. (His lieutenant governor made a major gaffe, however, when she suggested the state might use that money to send the recent influx of Cuban refugees back to that island, a huge political no-no in Florida.)

Since DeSantis didn’t have any refugees readily available to expel this week, he used his forced deportation money to charter a couple of jets and coerce migrants who were in Texas — halfway across the country — to board them, claiming they were being sent to Boston with promises of resources and support. Instead the migrants were dropped off on Martha’s Vineyard, a famous summer resort with a year-round population of around 15,000. No one there knew they were coming, and they were essentially dumped at the island’s tiny airport like cargo. 

Since DeSantis didn’t have any refugees available in Florida, he chartered a couple of jets and coerced migrants in Texas — halfway across the country — to board them, claiming they were going to Boston and promising resources and support.

DeSantis arranged for a video crew to record this atrocity for the entertainment of the xenophobic miscreants who watch Tucker Carlson’s network. No doubt they enjoyed watching the footage of exhausted mothers and fathers with small children in their arms walking across the tarmac and wondering where the hell they were. Locals on Martha’s Vineyard rose to the occasion, somewhat redeeming the reputation of human beings by offering the new arrivals food and shelter, along with legal advice and emotional support.

DeSantis seems exceedingly proud of his immoral little stunt. He held a press conference in which he claimed that his reasoning for chartering airplanes to abduct migrants in Texas and fly them to the New England coast was to save money:

One of the reasons why we want to transfer [people is] because, obviously it’s expensive if people are coming here, you got to pay taxes, social services, and all these other things.

A lot of Floridians love this stuff, apparently. Consider, DeSantis’ “election police force,” a particularly flamboyant display of government waste. He’s up for re-election and leading Democrat Charlie Crist in the polls. Most observers don’t think it will be all that close. Greg Abbott is also running for another term (against Democrat Beto O’Rourke), and he dropped off a busload of asylum seekers in front of the Naval Observatory in D.C. this week — that’s the official residence of Vice President Kamala Harris. Abbott and DeSantis’ biggest fans are uncomfortably similar to the White Citizens’ Council members who clearly enjoyed the misery they inflicted by sending Black citizens north under false pretenses. They are cruel, immoral bigots who take pleasure in hurting others.

I’m sure the other Big Florida Man is gnashing his teeth in Mar-a-Lago over DeSantis, his likely 2024 opponent, getting all this great press for owning the libs when Trump thinks it was all his idea in the first place. If he slithers back to the White House you can bet he’ll seek to get this done on a national scale. But so will any other Republican likely to get elected to national office anytime soon. The red-state “laboratories of democracy” are leading the way.

Salon

What, no boxcars, Ron and Greg?

From fascism-lite to the full-bodied brew

How desperate are Republicans to distract voters from the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade, the GOP’s proposed national abortion ban, extremist threats to democracy, and criminality by Donald Trump and his Jan. 6 co-coup-plotters?

Pretty desperate. The cruelty of it is just a bonus for them. Republican governors Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas are shipping human beings across the country as pawns in a political stunt aimed at changing the subject. They have no qualms about dehumanizing foreign migrants at their (lack of ) mercy. DeSantis and Abbott used planes and busses instead of railcars, at least for these “shipments,” in an attempt to change the national dialogue from the GOP’s fascism-lite to brown-skinned asylum seekers.

The tactic has been used before (1963), notes the JFK Library Foundation.

Washington Post:

Republican Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas are turning migrants into political pawns — quite literally — by moving them to liberal areas to try making a point about border security. DeSantis on Wednesday flew dozens of migrants to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts, while Abbott on Thursday announced that he had bused yet more of them to the vice-presidential residence in Washington.

Amid claims that some of those migrants might not have participated willingly or might have been misled, critics are raising questions about the legality of these efforts, likening them to human trafficking.

Abbott shipped other migrants to Chicago on Wednesday. Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) indicated that state and local authorities were looking into whether Abbott’s actions could involve “criminal liability.”

“Victims of kidnapping”

Progressive messaging expert Anat Shenker-Osorio drew the obvious parallel Thursday evening:

Rachel Self, a Martha’s Vineyard attorney, “issued a statement saying that she is looking at potential legal avenues after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis took credit for sending the 50 people to Martha’s Vineyard on two planes.”

“We believe they are victims of kidnapping,” Self declared, “and the perpetrators of this breathtakingly cruel political stunt should know that it may well result in every individual who was induced onto those planes by fraud becoming eligible for a U visa” that protects them from deportation.

The fish rots from the head. One obvious conclusion from these governors’ stunts is Republicans feel no laws can touch them. Donald Trump spent his entire life evading the law, dodging taxes, and litigating people he cheated until they gave up trying to get justice. He survived two impeachments and drew no obstruction charges from the Mueller investigation. He’s accelerated the rot in his party.

Trump and his MAGA cult now see the law not as a tool for seeking justice — certainly not equal justice — but for punishing political adversaries and for evading accountability themselves. Until justice finds, the slide towards fascism in this country will continue. DeSantis and Abbott just demonstrated they don’t care whose bodies they use or abuse along the way.

It’s a short walk from fascism-lite to the full-bodied brew. Perhaps a single election.

UPDATE: A longer video of Rachel Self. DeSantis is a sadistic monster.

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Request a copy of For The Win, 4th Edition, my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us.

More mass graves

Some shot, others, including civilians, died from artillery fire, mines or airstrikes

As shells fall in the distance, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky tours liberated city of Izium, one reason Ukraine’s moral remains high, CNN reports.

Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russian invaders uncovered more mass graves in Izium, a town of roughly 46,000 on the Donets River in Kharkiv Oblast of eastern Ukraine.

Note: Spellings for Ukraine’s president’s name vary with news outlet.

Associated Press:

Ukrainian authorities were expected to begin recovering bodies Friday from a mass burial site in a forest recaptured from Russian forces, a delicate task that President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said would help show the world “what the Russian occupation has led to.”

The site, containing hundreds of graves, was discovered close to Izium after a rapid counteroffensive by Ukrainian forces retook the northeastern city and much of the Kharkiv region, breaking what had largely become a stalemate in the nearly seven-month war.

Over 400 marked with numbered wooden crosses have been reported by Ukrainians and AP reporters. Witnesses say some were shot and others killed by artillery fire, mines, or air strikes. One mass grave may hold 17 or more Ukrainian soldiers. Individual markers found in Izium are different from other mass gave sites found during the war.

Izium resident Sergei Gorodko said that among the hundreds buried in individual graves were dozens of adults and children killed in a Russian airstrike on an apartment building.

He said he pulled some of them out of the rubble “with my own hands.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed the discovery of a mass burial site (The Guardian):

Speaking in a video address on Thursday night, Zelenskiy called on the world to “hold Russia to real account for this war”.

“Russia leaves death everywhere and it must be held responsible for that,” he declared. “The necessary procedures have already begun [in Izium]”.

More “clear, verifiable information” should be available later on Friday, he said, inviting the international media to visit the scene.

Video from Izium showed a sandy pine forest dotted with graves. Wooden crosses marked the locations. One handwritten sign read: “Ukraine armed forces, 17 people, Izium city, [taken] from morgue.” A few listed numbers – 345, 347, 444. Others had no inscriptions.

Al Jazeera:

In his address, Zelenskyy invoked the killings in Bucha, on the outskirts of the capital Kyiv, where Ukrainians found bodies of civilians lying in the streets in early April after Russian soldiers withdrew. He also referenced the southern port city of Mariupol, where Ukraine says tens of thousands of civilians probably died in the Russian assault and prolonged siege.

“Bucha, Mariupol, now, unfortunately, Izyum. … Russia leaves death everywhere. And it must be held accountable for it. The world must bring Russia to real responsibility for this war,” he said.

Russia has denied targeting civilians or committing war crimes.

The U.S has authorized another $600 million in military aid for Ukraine that includes ammunition for the HIMARS multi-rocket launchers that have played a key role on the battlefield since their deployment. Ukraine struck the occupied Kherson region “at least five times on Friday” using the missiles, Newsweek reports. One strike hit an administative building where Russian officials were holding a meeting.

Zelensky’s visit to the front is another reason Ukrainian morale remains high, reports CNN. “Russian President Vladimir Putin is uusally hundreds of miles away in Moscow when he gives out medals.”

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Shocker

Republicans are wrong again

By 54-43%, voters approve of canceling up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt. That includes support from 79% of Democrats, 51% of independents, and 30% of Republicans. Majorities of those both with a college degree (52%) and those without (56%) support the loan forgiveness.

When asked about the role of government generally, 38% think it is doing too much and involved in things better left to individuals and businesses, while a majority of 55% says the government should be doing more to solve the country’s problems. That “do more” number is up from 49% in 2021 and 44% in 2016.

That last strikes me as a big sign that the old conservative movement small government dogma is truly out of fashion. Unfortunately, I’m not so sure that is translating into a traditional liberal view of government. I think there are quite a few Repub icans who have decided they do want the government to do more — they just want it to use its power to subdue their political adversaries and punish their perceived enemies. An authoritarian government is an activist government.

But it is good news, nonetheless that Americans are happy with the government helping the poor and middle class relieve some of the education debt that’s killing them. A lot of those people are young and it bodes well for the future they see a government doing something that results in their personal material gain. If they vote for Democrats now studies show they will almost certainly stick with the party going forward.

Joe shows improvement

Democrats are coming home

The Dems seem to be gaining momentum at the right moment:

President Joe Biden’s popularity improved substantially from his lowest point this summer, but concerns about his handling of the economy persist, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Support for Biden recovered from a low of 36% in July to 45%, driven in large part by a rebound in support from Democrats just two months before the November midterm elections. During a few bleak summer months when gasoline prices peaked and lawmakers appeared deadlocked, the Democrats faced the possibility of blowout losses against Republicans.

Their outlook appears better after notching a string of legislative successes that left more Americans ready to judge the Democratic president on his preferred terms: “Don’t compare me to the Almighty. Compare me to the alternative.”

The president’s approval rating remains underwater, with 53% of U.S. adults disapproving of him, and the economy continues to be a weakness for Biden. Just 38% approve of his economic leadership as the country faces stubbornly high inflation and Republicans try to make household finances the axis of the upcoming vote.

Still, the poll suggests Biden and his fellow Democrats are gaining momentum right as generating voter enthusiasm and turnout takes precedence.

[…]

Republicans have also faced resistance since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and its abortion protections. And Biden is openly casting former President Donald Trump as a fundamental threat to democracy, a charge that took on resonance after an FBI search of Trump’s Florida home found classified documents that belong to the U.S. government.

This combination of factors has won Biden some plaudits among the Democratic faithful, even if Americans still feel lukewarm about his leadership.

“I’m not under any belief that he’s the best person for the job — he’s the best from the people we had to choose from,” said Betty Bogacz, 74, a retiree from Portland, Oregon. “He represented stability, which I feel President Trump did not represent at all.”

Biden’s approval rating didn’t exceed 40% in May, June or July as inflation surged in the aftermath of Russia invading Ukraine.

Yes, that is correct. And it’s more potent than people realize.

Driving the recent increase in Biden’s popularity is renewed support among Democrats, who had shown signs of dejection in the early summer. Now, 78% of Democrats approve of Biden’s job performance, up from 65% in July. Sixty-six percent of Democrats approve of Biden on the economy, up from 54% in June.

Interviews suggest a big reason for Biden’s rebound is the reemergence of Trump on the national stage, causing voters such as Stephen Jablonsky, who labeled Biden as “OK,” to say voting Democratic is a must for the nation’s survival.

“The country has a political virus by the name of Donald Trump,” said Jablonsky, a retired music professor from Stamford, Connecticut. “We have a man who is psychotic and seems to have no concern for law and order and democracy. The Republican Party has gone to a place that is so unattractive and so dangerous, this coming election in November could be the last election we ever have.”

Republicans feel just as negative about Biden as they did before. Only about 1 in 10 Republicans approve of the president overall or on the economy, similar to ratings earlier this summer.

Republicans are still brainwashed, of course. They only believe the bad stuff:

Christine Yannuzzi, 50, doubts that 79-year-old Biden has the capacity to lead.

“I don’t think he’s mentally, completely aware of everything that’s happening all the time,” said Yannuzzi, who lives in Binghamton, New York. “The economy’s doing super poorly and I have a hard time believing that the joblessness rate is as low as they say it is.”

“I think the middle class is being really phased out and families are working two and three jobs a person to make it,” the Republican added.

People are still upset about the economy which is what’s keeping Biden’s rating below 50%. Inflation is a miserable political problem because it’s so obvious to every consumer. People aren’t going to be happy as long as it remains so high and their memories of the old prices remain fresh in their minds.

But as long as Trump runs the GOP and stays in the headlines, the Dems continue to have a chance to hold on in the midterms. A woman talking about Biden:

“I always feel like he could be better, but then again, he’s better than our last president,” she said.

That’s the last thing the Republicans wanted. But he just won’t go away.

He really did want to buy Greenland

He thought he could trade Puerto Rico for it

Not kidding. The NY Times’ Peter Baker, flogging his new book:

One of the odder moments of Donald J. Trump’s presidency came when he publicly floated the idea of buying Greenland. It caused a predictable furor, generated gales of late-night television jokes and soured relations with Denmark, which rejected the idea of selling the giant Arctic territory.

But it was no passing whim. While many assumed at the time that it was just Mr. Trump being Mr. Trump, expressing a far-fetched thought that came into his head, in fact the idea had been planted by one of his billionaire friends and became the subject of months of serious internal study and debate that flabbergasted cabinet secretaries and White House aides.

The notion came from Ronald S. Lauder, the New York cosmetics heir who had known Mr. Trump since college. “A friend of mine, a really, really experienced businessman, thinks we can get Greenland,” Mr. Trump told his national security adviser. “What do you think?” That led to a special team being assigned to evaluate the prospects, resulting in a memo that laid out various options, including a lease proposal akin to a New York real estate deal.

This account of the Greenland escapade is based on interviews with a wide array of figures close to the former president for a forthcoming book by this reporter and Susan Glasser of The New Yorker magazine called “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021,” to be published by Doubleday on Tuesday. The portrait that emerged of Mr. Trump was of a mercurial commander in chief with a retinue that struggled to manage him, baffled by his flights of fancy and fearful that he would launch a war or violate the law long before his drive to overturn the 2020 election led to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The Greenland idea was just one of many that left aides trying to find ways of steering Mr. Trump away from paths they deemed bizarre or reckless. After an early Oval Office meeting where he expounded on his interest in Greenland, one mystified cabinet member was struck by the delusional nature of it. Other advisers tried to keep the idea from leaking out for fear that it would cause a diplomatic incident.

Mr. Trump’s mercurial approach to the presidency so baffled John F. Kelly, his second chief of staff, that Mr. Kelly secretly bought a copy of a best-selling book by a group of psychiatrists questioning Mr. Trump’s mental health. Mr. Kelly told others that the book was a helpful guide to a president he came to consider a pathological liar whose inflated ego was in fact the sign of a deeply insecure person.

Mr. Kelly often regaled others with stories of Mr. Trump’s ignorance about basic historical facts and his inability to absorb information. But it was Mr. Trump’s flawed judgment that most rattled Mr. Kelly, and he concluded that the problem was not that Mr. Trump did not know right from wrong, but that “he always does the wrong thing.”

Mr. Kelly grew so disaffected from Mr. Trump that he snapped at him when the president refused to lower the flag after Senator John McCain’s death. “If you don’t support John McCain’s funeral, when you die, the public will come to your grave and piss on it,” Mr. Kelly told Mr. Trump, according to interviews for the book.

Rarely restrained in front of a camera, Mr. Trump nonetheless was even more caustic at times behind the scenes. He harshly criticized women for their looks, telling visitors that Speaker Nancy Pelosi was an example of why women should be careful about plastic surgery and that he would not pick Nikki Haley, his United Nations ambassador, as a running mate because she had a “complexion problem.”

He sometimes denigrated his own son-in-law, Jared Kushner, telling other aides that “all he cares about is his New York liberal crowd.” Some aides interpreted those and other comments by Mr. Trump to mean that he wanted Mr. Kushner and Ivanka Trump to leave the White House and return to New York, but he never forced the issue.

So many cabinet secretaries were disenchanted with the president that at one point they discussed a plan to resign en masse. There were other mutual suicide pacts during the Trump administration as well. Kirstjen Nielsen, the homeland security secretary, agreed with Alex Azar, the health and human services secretary, that they would both resign in protest if Mr. Trump resumed separating the children of migrants at the border from their parents.

Mr. Trump regularly sought to use government power to punish his enemies, ordering aides to block a merger in retaliation against CNN and to ensure that a government contract did not go to Jeff Bezos’ Amazon — actions aides considered illegal or unethical. He was so intent on targeting the former intelligence officials James R. Clapper Jr. and John O. Brennan that he demanded some 50 to 75 times that aides strip them of their security clearance. When the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals blocked one of his policies, Mr. Trump ordered aides to “cancel” or eliminate the court altogether, another demand they ignored.

While advisers sometimes were able to slow-walk or avoid acting on some of Mr. Trump’s desires, he often ignored their counsel. At one point, it fell to Melania Trump to push her husband to take the Covid-19 pandemic more seriously. “You’re blowing it,” she told him aboard Air Force One flying back from India, according to an account she gave former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey when she called him to implore him to talk sense into the president.

Greenland was one issue that absorbed the National Security Council staff for months. Mr. Trump later claimed the idea was his personal inspiration. “I said, ‘Why don’t we have that?’” he recalled in an interview last year for the book. “You take a look at a map. I’m a real estate developer. I look at a corner, I say, ‘I’ve got to get that store for the building that I’m building,’ etc. It’s not that different.”

He added: “I love maps. And I always said: ‘Look at the size of this. It’s massive. That should be part of the United States.’”

But in fact, Mr. Lauder discussed it with him from the early days of the presidency and offered himself as a back channel to the Danish government to negotiate. John R. Bolton, the national security adviser, assigned his aide Fiona Hill to assemble a small team to brainstorm ideas. They engaged in secret talks with Denmark’s ambassador and produced an options memo.

Mr. Bolton, concerned about expanding Chinese influence in the Arctic, thought that an increased American presence in Greenland made sense but that an outright purchase was not feasible. Mr. Trump kept pushing. He suggested taking federal money from Puerto Rico, which he disparaged, and using it to buy Greenland. On another occasion, he suggested outright trading Puerto Rico for Greenland.

After The Wall Street Journal reported the interest in Greenland, Denmark’s government slammed the idea. “When it became public, they lost their political courage,” Mr. Trump said in the interview last year, as if the Danes had ever been serious about selling.

But Mr. Bolton believed they lost a chance for something more realistic like an enhanced security arrangement, although the United States did eventually reopen a consulate in Greenland. “If Trump had just kept his mouth shut,” Mr. Bolton told others, “we could have found out. But it was just gone, just completely gone.”

It never fails to amaze me just how many very rich morons just like Trump are out there. He really isn’t the only one. This Estee Lauder heir is just one of them. Look at Patrick Byrne the Overstock guy who’s still out there pimping The Big Lie. The Pillow Guy. There are a bunch of them.

This would all just be for the historical record at this point if he would just give back everything he stole, shut his pie hole and retire. But the man is running for president again and it’s going to be close in spite of all this.

GOP Human Trafficking

Yes, the cruelty is the point

If you didn’t think Ron DeSantis was a disgusting monster before this will leave you without any doubt. From JV Last:

Ron DeSantis did some premium lib-owning yesterday. He gave Fox the exclusive story about how he’d chartered two planes to fly 50 undocumented immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard.

You may recall that DeSantis previously appropriated $12 million of state money to conduct campaign stunts like this, because, as his comms director told Fox:

States like Massachusetts, New York and California will better facilitate the care of these individuals who they have invited into our country by incentivizing illegal immigration through their designation as “sanctuary states” and support for the Biden administration’s open border policies.

There are some ironies.

First, the Biden administration explicitly rejects open borders.

Second, the governor of Massachusetts is a Republican. (Though I suspect Martha’s Vineyard was chosen not because it’s in a Republican-governed state, but because America’s first black president owns a house there.)

Third, if the problem is being able to care for illegal immigrants then maybe the state of Florida should have spent the $12 million on, you know, caring for illegal immigrants. Instead of using the money to get earned media for the governor.

Fourth, Ron DeSantis is, supposedly, a Christian.

2. Love Your Neighbor. Or Use Him. Your Call.

Here’s DeSantis last February, talking to the Very Fine Kids at Hillsdale College:

Put on the full armor of God. Stand firm against the left’s schemes. You will face flaming arrows, but if you have the shield of faith, you will overcome them, and in Florida we walk the line here. And I can tell you this, I have only begun to fight.

On Monday, the Tampa Bay Times dove into his penchant for invoking Christian and nationalist themes:

The biblical reference DeSantis is using is from Ephesians 6, and calls on Christians to spiritually arm themselves against the “devil’s schemes.” In DeSantis’ speeches, he has replaced the ”devil” with “the left” as he tries to mobilize supporters ahead of his reelection in November and possibly a run for the White House in 2024.

“The full armor of God passage is a favorite amongst certain types of Pentecostals who really do see the world in terms of spiritual warfare,” said Philip Gorski, a comparative-history sociologist at Yale University who co-wrote the book The Flag and the Cross: White Nationalism and the Threat to American Democracy.

DeSantis has made the biblical references in numerous stump speeches. He did it at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando in February. Then, at the Florida Republican Party’s annual gathering in July. And again, in August, while campaigning alongside Doug Mastriano, a right-wing Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate who has promoted Christian power in America. . . .

On Sunday, DeSantis was a keynote speaker at the National Conservatism Conference in Aventura, a three-day event that featured several sessions about the role of Christianity in politics, including one titled “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Christian Nationalism.”

Asked about his religious commitments, DeSantis’s press secretary told the paper, “The governor is a Christian and there is absolutely no issue with him sharing his values or utilizing them in his decision-making as a leader.”

Let’s put aside the theology of immigration. Let’s pretend, just for a moment, that Jesus would have nothing to say about whether or not the state should seek to discourage undocumented migrants as a high-level matter of government policy.

Those planes were filled with actual human beings. People with dignity. People with hopes and dreams, problems and challenges. People with names and families.

And this Christian man used them as props. He didn’t clothe the naked or feed the hungry. He literally did the opposite: Evicted them—and not because he felt that he had to, because it was a requirement of the law. But because he saw that he could use them as a means to the ends of his personal ambition.

I’m trying—really trying—not to get too hot here. But Christians should look at this act and be revolted. They should be horrified.

Because using vulnerable human beings for your personal gratification is evil. Full stop.

If you want to construct a Christian ethic for immigration restrictionism, you can do it. It’ll be twisty and tortured. It probably won’t be terribly convincing, by the lights of Christianity. But it’s doable. It would go something like this:

-Jesus tells us to love our neighbor as ourselves and to welcome the stranger—actually, to put them at the head of the table.

-But we can’t help everyone, everywhere. There will always be evil in the world. The poor will always be with us.

-Subsidiarity suggests that we focus our efforts closest to home, where we can touch people.

-So we should devote our resources to caring for the needy in our communities first.

-Allowing everyone who wants to come to America to come would overwhelm the country and hurt everyone in the end.

-So we try to care for our neighbors close to home and send aid to care for our neighbors abroad where they are.

-And hopefully, in the fullness of time, we can make their lives abroad safe and fulfilling enough that they don’t need to leave their homes.

Like I said: Not super convincing. The Christian ethic of dignity and life isn’t easy. It can be uncomfortable. It often asks us to do exceptionally hard things. But whatever. You can see the outlines of a defensible position.

But even that position would hold that immigrants who do arrive here illegally must be cared for with love and charity.

And it would look with horror on a politician who sought not just to abdicate this affirmative duty, but to do the opposite: to take advantage of his neighbors.

If this politician were a conspicuous, self-avowed, follower of Christ it would be a thousand times worse. Because now he’s not just doing evil. He’s doing evil while claiming Jesus as his justification.

Let me know if you see any conservative Christians out there denouncing it.

One of the early truths we learned about Trumpism was that the cruelty was the point.

In previous eras, when a political actor pursued a policy that was useful but cruel, he would make excuses. He would pretend that actually the policy was okay. That no one would really get hurt. Or that, if someone was going to get the short end, that tough choices had to be made because there was no alternative. So sorry.

One of Trump’s political innovations was to realize that his followers wanted cruelty. They didn’t care about abstract ideas, like the free market or liberalism. They had various subsets of Americans whom they hated. What they wanted was a strongman who would target these othered peoples and hurt them. They wanted cruelty; policy TBD.

That lesson has been absorbed by Trump’s children, DeSantis first among them.

This episode is one more data point in support of the thesis that Christian nationalism is nationalism first and foremost. In this formulation, “Christian” is not a modifier so much as a marker, useful only to distinguish one nationalist tribe from another.

I hate to say this, but it’s hardly a new Trump thing. This despicably cruel, racist worldview has been embraced by conservative Christians as long as I can remember. Certainly in the years after 9/11 it was on display everywhere you looked. Their view of Christianity is that Jesus loves white people like them, period. Everyone else can literally go to hell.

Case closed

Well, ok then….

Former President Trump on Thursday said he “can’t imagine being indicted” over his handling of classified documents or a scheme to put forward alternate electors after the 2020 election, but that if he were, it would not deter him from a possible White House run in 2024.

“I can’t imagine being indicted. I’ve done nothing wrong,” Trump told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt.

“I don’t think the people of the United States would stand for it,” Trump added. “And as you know, if a thing like that happened, I would have no prohibition against running. You know that.”

Trump in the interview claimed he had no involvement in a plot to put forward alternate electors in Georgia that would have tipped the state for him despite President Biden winning by thousands of votes, though he insisted the concept was “very common.”

Georgia prosecutors have been investigating the scheme and interviewing Trump associates like Rudy Giuliani in the matter.

The former president also repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in his handling of classified documents after the FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago estate last month. The agency conducted the search months after it found dozens of classified documents at the residence and unsuccessfully tried to get the materials back from Trump.

Trump reasserted his claim that he had declassified all of the documents he kept at his home more than a year after leaving the White House, though experts have disputed he could do so without going through a more formal process and Trump’s legal team has not argued in court that he declassified the materials.

The former president repeatedly said he does not believe the American public will accept him being indicted, warning there would be “problems” if he were.

Hewitt, noting some would interpret his comments as inciting violence, asked what kind of problems he was referring to, though Trump did not specify.

“That’s not inciting, I’m just saying what my opinion is,” Trump said. “I don’t think the people of this country would stand for it.”

I wonder if the right’s patented “where there’s smoke there’s fire” strategy will ever blow back on them when it comes to Trump? I know they believe they are the most persecuted people on earth and Trump is their Jesus, but at some point don’t they have to ask,”why is this guy always saying ‘I did nothing wrong'”? “Why is there always something with him?”

Yes, I know that most of these people are brainwashed. But surely a few have to hear this whining about how unfairly he’s being treated and wonder, right? No?

Yeah, you’re right….