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Author: tristero

21 for ’21 from Ocasio Cortez

By any measure, this is an exceptional politician, regardless of whether you agree with all her positions or not (for the record, I’m hard pressed to find much to disagree with her on, and she is tactically brilliant). She is not the only great national Democrat but she is among them.

It is my sincere hope that the leaders who are proactively sidelining her will soon retire — because if this list is what she can accomplish without any serious support from the party’s leaders, imagine what great things this country could accomplish if she and (her talented peers) had really strong backing from the Democratic party.

It’s Happy Hollandaise time here at Hullabaloo. If you would like to support this site to keep the lights on for another year, you can do so through the buttons below. Thank you so much. I am very grateful. cheers — digby


I Picked the Wrong Week to Stop…

Stig Abell on Twitter: "Looks like we picked the wrong week to quit  sniffing glue. #penalties https://t.co/7mIoutJslN" / Twitter
What? You don’t get the reference? See Airplane now! You’ll thank me.

Unfortunately, Senator Elizabeth Warren has tested positive for COVID. I join millions of other Americans in wishing and praying her symptoms continue to be mild and that she recovers quickly.

Also in the article is this mind boggling and heartbreaking sentence:

On CBS News’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said that cases will increase steeply over the next couple of weeks and that the country could soon see 1 million new cases a day of omicron, dramatically exceeding the record of about 250,000 new cases per day set in January.

That is an impossible stat for me to process right now. It’s just too much.

Please stay safe, people. And if Airplane isn’t your speed, I humbly suggest that Tampopo, the first (and I believe only) Ramen Western will surely brighten your day.

Adding: There is nothing funny about the tragic horror of the pandemic. But the stress is monumental and we all need a break. These two films invariably do it for me and for those who haven’t seen them, you are in for several hours of sublime silliness. You deserve it.

It’s Happy Hollandaise time here at Hullabaloo. If you’d like to drop a little something in the old Christmas stocking you can do so here:


American Toast

American Flag Toast recipe | Eat Smarter USA

At the end of a sobering roundup of scholarly opinion on the state of American democracy, Thomas Edsall concluded in a way that scared the daylights out of me:

Far higher percentages of Republicans, many of them preoccupied by racial and tribal anxiety, believe “American democracy is under attack” (75 percent agree, 22 percent disagree) than Democrats (46 percent agree, 48 percent disagree). Republicans are also somewhat more likely to believe (57-43) than Democrats (49-51) “that, in the next few years, some elected officials will successfully overturn the results of an election in the United States because their party did not win.”

This level of anxiety is in and of itself dangerous, all the more so when it masks the true aim of America’s contemporary right-wing movement, the restoration and preservation of white hegemony. It is not beyond imagining that Republicans could be prepared, fueled by a mix of fear and provocation, to push the nation over the brink.

That’s right, a plurality of Democrats do not yet believe that “American democracy is under attack” and a majority of Democrats don’t believe that upcoming elections will be stolen. What on earth are they thinking?

I’m afraid that by the time the rest of the Dems wake up to what is patently obvious to anyone who’s paying close attention it will be far too late. In my most pessimistic moods, I worry we are already toast.


Holier Than Thou

Ah, yes, the religious exemption to the COVID vaccine:

The Supreme Court on Monday refused to block New York’s requirement that health care workers be vaccinated against the coronavirus even when they cite religious objections…

In his dissent on Monday in the case from New York, Justice Gorsuch wrote that the practical consequences of the court’s decision would be grave.

“Thousands of New York health care workers face the loss of their jobs and eligibility for unemployment benefits,” he wrote.

“These applicants are not ‘anti-vaxxers’ who object to all vaccines,” Justice Gorsuch added. “Instead, the applicants explain, they cannot receive a Covid-19 vaccine because their religion teaches them to oppose abortion in any form, and because each of the currently available vaccines has depended upon abortion-derived fetal cell lines in its production or testing.”

“The Free Exercise Clause protects not only the right to hold unpopular religious beliefs inwardly and secretly,” he wrote. “It protects the right to live out those beliefs publicly.”

This argument, as Gorsuch well knows, is utter nonsense and hypocrisy. He knows full well that these people don’t seriously “oppose abortion in any form.”That’s because if they really didn’t want to take medicines based on “abortion-derived fetal cell lines,” they would never take an immense number of prescription and over the counter medicines, including Tylenol and Tums. In fact, at least one organization, fed up with this ridiculous posturing, called their bluff:

A hospital system in Arkansas is requiring employees to confirm that they won’t use common medications — such as Tylenol, Tums, and Preparation H — to receive a religious exemption for the COVID-19 vaccine, according to Becker’s Hospital Review.

The Conway Regional Health System has required the flu shot annually as part of employment, but managers saw a spike in vaccine exemption requests for the COVID-19 vaccine.

“This was significantly disproportionate to what we’ve seen with the influenza vaccine,” Matt Troup, president and CEO of the health system, told Becker’s.

The majority of requests cited the use of fetal cell lines in the development of vaccines as part of the religious exemption. The practice uses cells grown in labs to test many new vaccines and drugs, including common antacids and cold medications.

“Thus, we provided a religious attestation form for those individuals requesting a religious exemption,” Troup said.

The hospital’s form includes a list of 30 common medications that used fetal cell lines during research and development. The list includes acetaminophen, albuterol, aspirin, ibuprofen, Tylenol, Pepto Bismol, Tums, Lipitor, Senokot, Motrin, Maalox, Ex-Lax, Benadryl, Sudafed, Preparation H, Claritin, Prilosec, and Zoloft.

Employees are asked to attest that they “truthfully acknowledge and affirm that my sincerely held religious belief is consistent and true” and that they won’t use the medications listed.

Health system administrators want to “educate staff who might have requested an exemption without understanding the full scope of how fetal cells are used in testing and development in common medicines,” Troup said.

Employees who don’t sign the form will be given a temporary exemption, he said. If they don’t receive a vaccine or full exemption, they can face disciplinary action, including termination.

COVID vaccine refusal “on religious grounds” is actually based on political extremism and ignorance fed by far right right propagandists. Period. And Gorsuch knows this very well.

Update: more here.


Right On Time

Tips to Teach Kids Time Management

Like clockwork. I’d think that maybe they might have a point if it wasn’t for the fact that when Democrats win, the Times also thinks it’s a signal for them to tack right. Oh, excuse me, to the center.

The Rittenhouse Killings

Avowed 'boogaloo boi' Ryan Balch says he roamed Kenosha streets with Kyle  Rittenhouse before shootings - Chicago Sun-Times
Former Boogalo Ryan Balch (R) with Kyle Rittenhouse prior to the slaughter

The NY Times has put together a devastating reconstruction of the night 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse killed two people. A few takeaways:

There is a very good case to be made that the police deliberately herded the protestors down a street where heavily armed white supremacists and other gun-crazed psychopaths were waiting. In fact, one of the armed rightwingers (Ryan Balch, above) was video’d strongly suggesting in real time that he knew that the police planned to do exactly that. The police could have forced them down a different street, one not overrun with neo-Nazis. They didn’t — and if the police didn’t know exactly what would happen, they didn’t care.

The amount of madness on the streets that night is in stark display in the video. Not just Rittenhouse and not just his first victim. There’s the revolting, strutting narcissistic entitlement of Balch; the dead-eyed white chief of police dodging tough questions with a barely concealed smirk; and even a paramedic who brought his own gun, smiling as he non-justifies this stupidity: “It’s my right.” (He who got wounded by Rittenhouse). And then there are the police who actively encourage the white supremacists and even drive by Rittenhouse after his killing spree, as he tries to surrender, people screaming at the police that this kid just shot people. The cops ignore them, he’s just a white guy with a gun walking towards them, after all. Harmless.

And you can’t help thinking, “If Rittenhouse was black…” and we all know how the next phrase would read.

As bad as the 60’s. Worse, in many ways.

Facebook’s Next CEO

A woman reacts as Rohingya refugees wait to receive aid

Kara Swisher writes that Zuckerberg’s days as FB’s CEO are numbered. The question is, who will replace him? I’m not sure but I definitely know where they should recruit from.

Someone from the Rohingya community in Myanmar would be an ideal CEO to replace Zuckerberg. A person who has experienced firsthand the dangerous insanity of Facebook’s current business model would be uniquely qualified to transform Facebook for the better.

White Knight? Riiiiight….

Do You Have White Knight Syndrome?

Forsooth, ye fayre maidens and gentlemen, partake of hearty laugh-ery as thou contemplateth this seditious bastard’s stupid bullshit:

John Eastman, a lawyer and fellow at a right-wing think tank, is now desperately downplaying the memos he wrote before January 6 laying out how then-Vice President Mike Pence could overturn the election and subvert the will of the American people.

He’s now presenting himself as more of a savior of democracy.

“Call me the white-knight hero here, talking [Trump] down from the more aggressive position,” Eastman told the National Review in an interview published last week.