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Author: Tom Sullivan

What They Mean To Destroy

For your consideration, some light reading

Let’s start this morning with an aside.

Trump The Ignorant’s longstanding claim that the U.S. is “the only country in the world” that awards citizenship to persons born within its territory is not true. The years have not informed the “stable genius” otherwise. Donald Trump thus signed a disputed executive order on Day One of his second term purporting to revoke the birthright citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment.

It is an institution with English roots and a U.S. tradition before Americans codified it in 1868. Nativist radicals like Trump, his coterie, and his cult now wish its destruction. We’ll see them in court. A federal judge on Jan. 22 temporarily enjoined the order for fourteen days.

The Cato Institute, the D.C.-based, Koch-funded think tank, features on its landing page this morning “There Is No Good Reason to Revoke Birthright Citizenship.” The practice stems from as early as Calvin’s Case in 1608:

In 1869, the British jurist Lord Chief Justice Alexander Cockburn summed up English law as:

By the common law of England, every person born within the dominions of the Crown, no matter whether of English or of foreign parents, and, in the latter case, whether the parents were settled or merely temporarily sojourning, in the country, was an English subject, save only the children of foreign ambassadors (who were excepted because their fathers carried their own nationality with them), or a child born to a foreigner during the hostile occupation of any part of the territories of England. No effect appears to have been given to descent as a source of nationality.

That was the aside.

David J. Bier, Director of Immigration Studies at Cato, testified before the House Judiciary
Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement last week on the same day as the judge’s order (C-Span). He described an immigration system left “in shambles” by the first Trump administration and improved by Joe Biden, thus drawing the ire of Republican members.

Since Republican members doubted data in his presentation, Bier decided to present them Sunday in a long thread on X as he had in a Substack on Jan. 16. (“Biden Didn’t Cause the Border Crisis“).

Bier told the committee:

“President Trump abused his authority to cut legal immigration from abroad by nearly 80 percent.”
“Refugees by 92 percent.”
“He shut down asylum for legal crossers.”
“He removed requirements to target public safety threats. As a result, he released twice as many convicted criminals from detention as President Biden.”
“He forced US attorneys to prioritize misdemeanor family separation prosecutions of parents over sex offenders.”
“By the time President Biden took office, the US immigration system was in shambles. Immigration courts, consulates, ports of entry—all shuttered. Even detention centers were at half capacity.”

There’s more (with charts) you can review at the links above.

The other posting I invite you to review comes from historian Heather Cox Richardson.

Abraham Lincoln, then 28, in his 1838 Lyceum speech, “The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions,” warned of the sort of men who, “Having ever regarded Government as their deadliest bane,” thus “make a jubilee of the suspension of its operations; and pray for nothing so much as its total annihilation.”

(You don’t need a weatherman to know which way this wind blows.)

The Lyceum speech argued for the defense of American institutions and law while arguing that bad laws should be repealed. “But the underlying structure of the rule of law, based in the Constitution,” Richardson recounts, “could not be abandoned without losing democracy.”

Lincoln didn’t stop there. He warned that the very success of the American republic threatened its continuation. “[M]en of ambition and talents” could no longer make their name by building the nation—that glory had already been won. Their ambition could not be served simply by preserving what those before them had created, so they would achieve distinction through destruction.

For such a man, Lincoln said, “Distinction will be his paramount object, and although he would as willingly, perhaps more so, acquire it by doing good as harm; yet, that opportunity being past, and nothing left to be done in the way of building up, he would set boldly to the task of pulling down.” With no dangerous foreign power to turn people’s passions against, people would turn from the project of “establishing and maintaining civil and religious liberty” and would instead turn against each other.

And hand men of cruel ambition the power to do it, Lincoln didn’t say.

The passions that gave birth to the American experiment must fade, Lincoln said, and they had. To sustain it would require “general intelligence, sound morality, and in particular, a reverence for the constitution and laws.”

Lincoln would face in just over 20 years a different kind of passion, one fed not by a thirst for national liberation but by the need of a regional privileged class to maintain the bondage of a permanent underclass and its own cultural and political supremacy. That passion has not faded in over a century and a half and may yet unmake “the proud fabric of freedom” for us all.

Lincoln invoked the name of Washington as inspiration for maintaining what the Revolution had birthed. Don’t expect to hear Trumpists invoke Lincoln’s name as inspiration for saving the constitution and laws they mean to destroy.

Stop Helping Him

Pick a fight

For all their sky-is-falling rhetoric about Project 2025 last year, Democrats (with exceptions) have settled into business as usual in D.C. They just chose old and busted over new hotness for a top Oversight Committee post. It’s what they know. It’s their comfort zone, well-worn groove, rut [your preferred metaphor here]. Well, the rest of us will be feeling discomfort beyond serving in the congressional minority for the forseeable future. If Democrats have another gear, they’d damned well better find it now.

From December 2016 during the first Trump transition:

The biggest challenge Democrats face is not Donald Trump, but constitution. Not the one in the National Archives, but their inner constitution.

The Democratic Party as an “establishment” organization is conservative by disposition. When shaken or defeated, or when facing the unknown, like now, such organizations by reflex seek safety in the comfortable and familiar. They shy from risk. Democrats fret about what Republicans might say about them at election time. Inner circles across the country worry about fundraising: regular donors might not support untested, young leaders. Democrats fret about how a new direction might induce “division in the party.” (Translation: chieftains might have less influence going forward).

[…]

After confiding my concerns about Democrats playing it safe in the age of Trump, my friend summed up the situation in a single, powerful metaphor: “The Ring has to go to Mordor. It won’t help to carry it back to The Shire.”

Thank you. Now if only Democrats will reach inside and find some heroes.

It’s clear that Trump’s allies and enablers are spineless. Democrats need to find theirs. Pick a fight. Take risks. Stop living in the past. The norms you grew up with are gone.

Politics Girl (Leigh McGowan) gets what I’ve been writing (but is much better on camera.) *

Democrats are bringing 20th-century knives to a 21st-century gun fight. The Trump-oligarch alliance is not your grandfather’s country-club Republican Party. That’s gone.

Stop trying to play ball with autocrats, hoping for crumbs. Former RNC chair Michael Steele knows better. He knows who gave him fleas.

Next Saturday, Democrats as a party have a chance to set a new direction when they elect new leaders in National Harbor, Md. Will it be new hotness or business as usual? Whom they choose to lead for the Trump 2.0 years will define them or perhaps sink the greater Us.

Choose your fighters and pray they do. We have to work with what we elected in November for at least two years.

* FYI, Bluesky vids still won’t play inside WordPress. Otherwise, I try to avoid X posts.

Surviving The Flood Of Sh*t

Not burning out is key to pushing back

An AI-generated image of President Trump applying a sharpie to the Constitution (via Civic Texts).

This next period of American history is going to be more of slog than the first Trump administration. Pray it isn’t as deadly.

We’re all trying to summon an effective response to Trump 2.0, but the angst gets in the way, doesn’t it? Greg Sargent points to recommendations at Civic Texts, the blog website of technology journalist Alexander B. Howard.

In the wake of Trump pardoning violent Jan. 6 seditionists and portraying them as victims, Howard offers some suggestions for self-care and safety online. “If you want to hit the trifecta of intolerance, ignorance, and bigotry, however, post online about religion, immigration, and the First Amendment at the same time. (It’s like grabbing a third rail, but less fun.)”

Trump and his enablers in the states, in Congress, and in the Supreme Court represent “the worst crisis for the rule of law in my lifetime, paired with a muted response from American society,” Howard writes. “The flood of actions is intentionally designed to overwhelm, intimidate, and flood the zone with cruelty expressly designed to instill hopelessness and fear. The authoritarian playbook is being deployed against Americans at scale.” So far, reaction in Congress is “relatively muted.”

I don’t know where and when the line will be crossed that force Republican senators to check the presidency so clearly unbound by the constitution or rule of law. There is nothing practically to be done about President Trump or former President Biden’s pardons, as that power is near-absolute under our Constitution, checked only by the impeachment and removal from office that is currently unimaginable in this Congress.

For now, senators (including a few Democrats) have submitted to Trumpish humiliation. Not an auspicious sign for any nascent resistance.

Almost as unimaginable is how in an “I’ve got mine culture” where freedom is a worship-word, few seem alarmed that Trump and his Project 2025 allies mean to take theirs from them in a “concerted assault on truth, the rule of law, & the Constitution.”

Howard directs readers to Ben Raderstorf’s “If You Can Keep It” where the policy advocate for Protect Democracy offers advice on how to triage your responses to Trumpish actions and statements. Modulate your expenditure of intellectual and emotional responses to the flood of Trump 2.0 outrages “based on the likelihood and irreparability of the damage.”

It’s best not to burn yourselves out. “Numbing down” (pun intended) opponents is a deliberate component of the authoritarian plan for turning the United States into Viktor Orbán’s Hungary. Or worse.

Authoritarianism thrives on despair. Trump aims to grind down critics by throwing so much at the media, civil society, and his political opponents that they can’t keep up. Every moment we collectively spend chasing outrages that don’t really matter makes it more likely that we lose heart or focus, and then some threat that truly matters slips through.

They mean to “flood the zone with shit,” as Steve Bannon put it. So prioritize.

A few key bullet points:

  • Is the action tangible, actionable, and detailed? Or intangible, abstract, and vague?
  • Does this thing cause irreparable harm to real people?
  • Does this action target the opposition in a way that may cause anticipatory obedience?
  • Does this entrench the authoritarian faction in power and make it more difficult to dislodge?

Raderstorf fleshes out those points in “How to pay attention.”

“We refuse to allow any of what we have created to be lost, says Kimberlé Crenshaw of the African American Policy Forum. We are here because the forces behind the Confederacy never gave up after Reconstruction, or after Brown v. Board. Not in 150 years. “What are we gonna do to make sure that we don’t give up?”

First, don’t burn yourselves out chasing every shiny object Trump (and Musk) toss out to elicit an angry response. Be strategic.

Bring Out The Gimps

Shamelessness was their superpower

For a man with a decades-long obsession with the world laughing at us (him) and a visceral fear of looking weak, Donald Trump sure is determined to give the world plenty to laugh about. Especially for our sworn enemies.

Vice President J.D. Vance cast a tie-breaking vote Friday night in the U.S. Senate to confirm Pete Hegseth, the scandal-spangled, alleged hard-drinking, former Fox News weekend talk show co-host, as Trump’s next secretary of defense. What won’t Hegseth do at Trump’s whim? Shooting Americans in the legs could be the least of it.

Stuart Stevens, former chief Republican strategist and Lincoln Project adviser, posted to social media Friday night that “Trump could have appointed serious Conservatives to his Cabinet. Instead, he picked nuts and freaks. Why? To prove he could make Republican Senators do whatever he told them to.”

“Humiliation through submission,” Stevens concluded.

Republican senators are not the only ones Donald Trump means to humiliate through submission. He just wants to “do them” first to show the world who’s boss and who’s the gimp.

Screenshot from Pulp Fiction (1994).

Shamelessness was once the conservative superpower. Now it’s spinelessness. Trump is the Shameless One.

Every Democrat voted against Hegseth. In the end, only three Republicans voted against Trump’s nominee for defense secretary. No one else had the guts to be the final vote to defeat Trump’s pick (CNN):

Vice President JD Vance cast the 51-50 tie-breaking vote after former GOP Leader Mitch McConnell and GOP Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine joined Democrats to oppose Hegseth’s nomination. It was just the second time in history that a vice president has broken a tie for a Cabinet nominee – the other being then-Vice President Mike Pence for Betsy DeVos’ 2017 confirmation to lead the Education Department.

Politico describes McConnell as some kind of principled maverick for taking a stand against Hegseth.

McConnell’s chance to take a stand was during the Senate impeachment vote after Trump was charged with incitement of insurrection. McConnell’s shrinking from his responsibility in February 2021 led directly to Trump’s reelection and the complete debasement of Lincoln’s former Republican Party:

McConnell, in a lengthy statement, warned that whoever leads the Pentagon faces a “daily test with staggering consequences for the security of the American people and our global interests.”

“Mr. Hegseth has failed, as yet, to demonstrate that he will pass this test. But as he assumes office, the consequences of failure are as high as they have ever been,” he said.

McConnell has failed repeatedly. The world is living with the consequences of his spinelessness before Trump, even if the childhood polio survivor votes against Trump HHS secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr., or Russophile Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence nomination, or Kash Patel for FBI director.

North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis was rumored to be a Republican swing vote in the Hegseth confirmation. Tillis in the end swung Trump.

I make a lot of movie references in these pages. The images, characters and narratives are cultural shorthand. Too often, moderate Democrats and progressives would rather satisfy their egos and show off how smart they are by laying out detailed philosophical arguments against political adversaries. This is a mistake. Invoking sounds, images and stories already in people’s heads is more straightforward, as well as quicker than trying to plant and water them until they sprout. That’s not to say that there are not ideas that need cultivating, like renewing a sense of common purpose and civic duty. Those will take time and movies that might never be made.

For now, it is plain that Trump is trying to turn his own supporters into his gimps. I don’t need to paint that picture. Quentin Tarantino has already done that.

A Widespread Massacre

Oversight, His ass!

Casanova Frankenstein (Geoffrey Rush): It’s so easy to get the best of people when they care about each other. Which is why evil will always have the edge. You good guys are always so bound by the rules (throws switch & electrocutes the Frat Boys). You see, I kill my own men. And lucky me…I get the girl. (Mystery Men, 1999.)

Donald Trump, twice-impeached convicted felon and career huckster, spent the first week of his second term exacting revenge against current and former officials who as much as contradicted his frequent misstatements. He cancelled the federal security details for Dr. Anthony Fauci, John Bolton, Mike Pompeo and Brian Hook (The Hill):

Fauci led the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) for almost 40 years, including at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Bolton was Trump’s national security adviser, and Pompeo was Trump’s secretary of State. Hook was a key Pompeo aide.

All four men have fallen out of favor with Trump, with Bolton in particular now a strident critic of the president.

Fauci has long been the target of threats from anti-vaccine extremists. Iran has targeted Bolton for his role 2020 drone killing of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani.

Friday night, Trump fired 17 federal inspectors general, internal watchdogs for multiple government agencies, including the Departments of Defense, State, Transportation, Veterans Affairs, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, and Energy, reports The Washington Post. Trump’s action is an apparent violation of a federal law requiring that the president give Congress 30 days’ notice of firing a Senate-confirmed inspector general:

Most of those dismissed were Trump appointees from his first term, which stunned the watchdog community. One prominent inspector general survived the purge — Michael Horowitz at the Justice Department, an appointee of President Barack Obama who has issued reports critical of both the Biden administration and Trump’s first administration.

“It’s a widespread massacre,” said one of the fired inspectors general. “Whoever Trump puts in now will be viewed as loyalists, and that undermines the entire system.”

You see, Trump fires his own men. In his first term, Trump hired “the best people” and subsequently fired dozens of them, and did again Friday night (New York Times):

The firings threatened to upend the traditional independence of the internal watchdogs, and critics of Mr. Trump reacted with alarm.

“Inspectors general are charged with rooting out government waste, fraud, abuse and preventing misconduct,” Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, said in a statement. “President Trump is dismantling checks on his power and paving the way for widespread corruption.”

Trump is in the process of sweeping away the last remnants of the Old Republic, to borrow from a cultural touchstone.

Peter Cushing as Grand Moff Tarkin in Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope (1977).

In firing his own men, Trump sends a clear signal that he will tolerate no insubordination. There will be no oversight, no rules unbroken, no limits in his second term. Trump always wanted to be emperor and, as far as he’s concerned, he is one now. He has all but subjugated his entire political party and reduced its “leaders” to fawning courtiers. (But that’s another post.)

Meantime, Democrats in the minority struggle to find any way to restrain Trump’s worst instincts, unwilling or unable as many senior Democrats in Congress are, to face the fact that they are bringing 20th-century knives to a 21st-century gun fight. The Washington they knew was a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.

Why Trump Really Wants Greenland

The APs provides a hint

A post a couple of weeks ago suggested Donald Trump’s fascination with Greenland stemmed from his not understanding how maps work. Specifically, the Mercator projection that distorts Greenland to make it look larger than it is. I mocked up the image above while imagining Trump wanting to slap his name on the island in letters large enough to be seen from space.

A post from The Bulwark this morning has me thinking he might want more than a massive logo.

Trump this week signed executive orders renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, and changing Alaska’s Denali back to Mt. McKinley. Noting that other countries are not obliged to follow Trump’s dicta and its own global audience, The Associated Press has updated its widely used style guide (I have one here) to version Trump 2.0:

The Gulf of Mexico has carried that name for more than 400 years. The Associated Press will refer to it by its original name while acknowledging the new name Trump has chosen. As a global news agency that disseminates news around the world, the AP must ensure that place names and geography are easily recognizable to all audiences.

As for Denali:

Trump also signed an executive order to revert the name of North America’s tallest peak, Denali in Alaska, to Mount McKinley. Former President Barack Obama changed the official name to Denali in 2015 to reflect the traditions of Alaska Natives as well as the preference of many Alaska residents. Trump said in his executive order that he wanted to “restore the name of a great president, William McKinley, to Mount McKinley.”

The Associated Press will use the official name change to Mount McKinley. The area lies solely in the United States and as president, Trump has the authority to change federal geographical names within the country.

Trump will undo everything Biden and Obama ever did, if he can. He’s just starting with checklist items he can manage with the stroke of a sharpie.

The Bulwark asks, “If Trump signed an order changing the name of Mt. Rushmore to Mt. Trump, would the AP follow along? It’s important in the Gulf of Mexico example that ‘all audiences’ be able to identify places with their names, but that doesn’t count if the places are ‘within the country’?”

Why would the size-obsessed Fauntleroy stop at Rushmore? Greenland is bigger … much bigger. If Trump somehow managed to “acquire” Greenland, why stop at just slapping a Trump brand on it large enough to be visible from the moon but not from the ground?

Isle of Trump? Trump Island? Trumpland?

President Disaster Comes A-callin’

Go find another $60 billion in the couch cushions

Donald Trump comes a-callin’ today in Western North Carolina. “Significant traffic impacts” are expected. It is typical of presidential visits: no details released publicly until the last minute. It’s a security thing:

“I’m going to North Carolina, very importantly, first,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday evening from the Roosevelt Room of the White House, before confirming the rest of his itinerary about heading to the West Coast.

If nothing else, the visit suggests our blue city won’t have its recovery funds slashed just yet. Despite so much attention to candidates and “authenticity,” don’t expect much from any Trumpish attempt to mimic empathy today (pay attention to my bolding):

North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein is planning to meet President Donald Trump on the tarmac of Asheville Regional Airport during Trump’s Jan. 24 visit to Western North Carolina, a spokesperson for Stein told the Citizen Times.

Earlier in the week, Stein, a Democrat, said Trump’s planned visit to WNC, which was ravaged by Tropical Storm Helene nearly four months ago, was “very good news” for the region’s residents. The storm killed more than 100 people across the state and caused an estimated $60 billion in damage, according to the latest estimate from the North Carolina Office of State Budget and Management. During Stein’s first week in office, he issued five executive orders to aid Helene recovery.

North Carolina Senator Thom Tillis stepped up to spread some more disinfo for the boss:

“President Trump’s visit on Friday is welcome news for the thousands of families dealing with a state of uncertainty when it comes to securing housing. Under President Biden, FEMA’s failure to act and communicate swiftly put vulnerable families at risk with freezing temperatures outside. Despite our continued pressure, FEMA made little progress in providing direct housing solutions for those most affected by Helene. Things will be changing under President Trump, and his visit shows his Administration is committed to the people of Western North Carolina as he promised during the campaign. I look forward to working with the Trump-Vance Administration to ensure that every available federal resource is deployed and that red tape preventing families from accessing housing is eliminated.”

Except Trump plans to dump disaster relief management on states (the way he made them compete for ventilators and other supplies during Covid?). He told Fox News (New York Times):

Mr. Trump continued, “The FEMA is getting in the way of everything.” Referring to Oklahoma, he said: “If they get hit with a tornado or something, let Oklahoma fix it. You don’t need — and then the federal government can help them out with the money.”

Project 2025, the blueprint for a Republican administration that was produced by the Heritage Foundation, calls for flipping the financial burden of response to small disasters so that 75 percent is carried by states and the rest by the federal government.

Define “small.” Of course, Project 2025’s war plan will not last beyond contact with a hurricane washing over Mar-a-Lago.

Shifting the burden for disaster relief to states “would hit Republican-leaning states hardest, federal spending figures suggest,” the Guardian notes. “Since 2015, states that voted for Trump last year have received $31bn in assistance from Fema, with storm-prone Florida, Texas and Louisiana leading the way, compared with just $7bn for states that voted Democratic.”

North Carolina’s 2024 budget was $34 billion. Josh Stein is unlikely to find another $60 billion in the governor’s mansion couch cushions.

I don’t think I’ve posted this here before. You’ve seen Helene flood photos from the river valleys. This is what Helene’s arrival was like for residents higher upslope. Many of those slopes are now as bare as Pacific Palisades hillsides. There will be spring rains and mudslides. Trump will have moved on. FEMA may be dismantled or defunded by then.

Resist and Persist

And get a whole lot louder in the right spaces

“Maybe the media that I’m following is not showing these.”

It’s going to be a long several years until the nation collapses. Or Trump does and VP Elegy takes over. Or the world somehow survives.

A couple of posts to flag.

Rude Pundit (Lee Papa) notes that hardcore MAGA types are beyond reaching. “Most,” anyway. Democrats trying to placate them, policy-wise, will win no points with them.

Most Trump supporters would be happy to die in a ditch as long as they feel free to use the n-word again and liberals are mad. The sooner Democrats get their head around that, the better they will be able to oppose Republicans.

The Rude Pundit (@rudepundit.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T12:54:14.042Z

Democrats need to do they best they can policy-wise to pursue their own agenda without compromising in the mistaken belief it will help their electoral prospects in Trump country. They cannot oppose Trump by trying to play nice with him and prove they are the adults in the room. It only makes the weak appear weaker. Nobody wants to vote for that. And even if they do, they won’t turn out to vote for that.

Will Stancil has sharper words on pushing back visibly.

If you work with elite journalists or top Democrats, you have a moral obligation to shout at them to stop hiding what's going on and start reacting appropriately. They're failing the country right now with consequences that will reverberate through generations

Will Stancil (@whstancil.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T12:54:05.846Z

For all their experience, the Democrats’ gerontocracy is bringing 20th-century knives to a 21st-century gun fight. Too many learned politics in the 1980s. Even if they could learn new tricks, they’re not the ones to bring it now. The Trump-oligarch alliance is not your grandfather’s country-club Republican Party. That’s gone.

Younger Dermocratic leaders were born into this media and political milieu. Senior Democrats should be learning from the young-uns, but not trying to lead with half-learned skills they picked up last week. Remember your cringe when Joe Biden tried his hand at TikTok?

I’m not saying they are all reacting inappropriately. Some Dem senators brought real heat to questioning Trump nominees. But who sees that besides geeks like us, Dear Reader? Not the general public and not Trumpists with their eyes wide shut. That’s what Stancil’s responding to.

It’s what Jordan Klepper’s demonstrating here, especially in the last half of the clip:

It’s Everything Everywhere All at Once time. Democrats who can’t chew the leather anymore need to step back and let their junior members with the right skills stand in front.

Suffer The Little Children

In Trump 2.0, suffering is a directive

Digby covered this guy on Wednesday, but Russell Vought, Donald Trump’s nominee to head the Office of Management and Budget, merits (I use that term loosely) more time in disinfecting sunshine.

Sen. Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, has a lot of federal employees living in his state. People with families, Americans trying to do a good job and make ends meet. Kaine questioned Vought, an architect of Project 2025, about his authorship of a budget proposal titled “A Commitment to End Woke and Weaponized Government” that Vought produced for the Center for Renewing America where Vought was its president.

Vought, an avowed Christian nationalist, proposed deep cuts to the SNAP program (food stamps) and Medicaid. Quoting from the Bible, Kaine had questions for Vought about that and about what programs he considers “woke” during his Senate confirmation hearing.

Hafiz Rashid writes at The New Republic:

“Is providing nutrition assistance to low-income kids ‘woke and weaponized’? Kaine asked Vought, who refused to answer, replying that he “wasn’t here to talk about the budget that center put out.”

Kaine pressed further, but Vought claimed he was only there on behalf of the president. The Virginia senator then pointed out that in the same document, Vought proposed deep cuts to Medicaid for low-income families, tenant-based rental assistance, and low-income housing energy assistance.

“This was all in your document about ending woke and weaponized government. OK, let’s see, we want to traumatize federal employees and then we want to take all of these programs that help everyday people who are struggling and cut them because they’re ‘woke and weaponized.’ Those are your words, not mine,” Kaine concluded. “From the fullness of the heart, the mouth speaks.”

You may remember Vought from undercover video shot by two reporters from the nonprofit Centre for Climate Reporting.

The New Republic noted when the video posted in August:

Vought revealed his group plans to create “shadow” agencies to implement its draconian vision to solidify the “Judeo-Christian worldview value system.”

“We’ve been too focused on religious liberty, which we all support, but we’ve lacked the ability to argue we are a Christian nation,” said Vought.

“I want to make sure that we can say we are a Christian nation,” he said. “And my viewpoint is mostly that I would probably be Christian nation-ism. That’s pretty close to Christian nationalism because I also believe in nationalism.”

Vought means to “rehabilitate Christian nationalism.” Perhaps that’s just in his off-the-clock spare time, but he seems quite committed to it.

As Digby noted, “Trump is too stupid and narcissistic to even vaguely understand or care what this man is up to.” He’s too obsessed with wreaking vengeance on anyone and everyone he thinks done him wrong. “I don’t care,” Trump told Sean Hannity when the Fox News celebrity tried to turn their conversation to the economy. Vought can have at the rest of us for all Trump cares.