Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Just Makin Ish Up Now

Donald Trump has always been a liar. He's always made stuff up. We knew that before he ran for president, before he was a birther even. Sports journalist Rick O'Reilly named it for what it was back in 2004.

But we're in a new moment with this race thing. Trump wants you to believe that entire cities are convulsed with violence when that simply isn't the case. Last week I was in a conversation with someone I truly love. Some of it went something like this.

He: I was talking with a friend from Portland last night, and he said everything's pretty much normal. The rioting is just about three blocks.

I: I know that. It's being reported all over the place, and I have friends in Portland too. 

He: Yeah, but nobody really cares how many Blacks are killing each other in Chicago. There are all these riots, but nobody's doing anything about Chicago.

It's chilling, the effect Fox News has on people. And Trump is counting on it. 

In an interview with Laura Ingraham last night, Trump went into full-on Nazi/Stalinist/Trumpist fabrication mode. Here are samples, provided by CNN.

Portland has been burning for many years. For decades, it's been burning, but now it's gotten to a point they don't want to do -- I watched the mayor try and get in with these people.

 Having said you'd be surprised who controls Joe Biden, Trump followed up: People that you've never heard of, people that are in the dark shadows.

We had somebody get on a plane from a certain city this weekend. And in the plane, it was almost completely loaded with thugs wearing these dark uniforms, black uniforms with gear and this and that. They're on a plane.... I'll tell you sometime, but it's under investigation right now. But they came from a certain city, and this person was coming to the Republican National Convention. And there were like seven people on the plane like this person and then a lot of people were on the plane to do big damage. 

It's not just Trump, it's administration policy. In Kenosha today Attorney General William Barr said that "prior to the rioting in the city last week, federal agents stationed in Chicago picked up information that 'violent instigators' from California, Washington state and Chicago were traveling to Kenosha to carry out attacks against law enforcement." (Quotation not from Barr himself but a paraphrase by ABC's Alex Mallin.)

Clearly we're at the "They'll make up anything" stage when it comes to stirring up racial animosity. And people believe it. Two months to go, and it's getting nothing but uglier. 

By the way, in Kenosha today Trump asked where Rance Priebus was. You know, Trump's FIRST chief of staff? "Where's my Rance?"

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Not Even Trying -- And Worse

Justice Department lawyer Aaron Zelinsky has issued a statement in preparation for his testimony before Congress. He describes a "deeply corrupt process" in which the Department of Justice treated Trump ally Roger Stone differently from other defendants. The statement is brutal. Zelensky said the person responsible for conducting Stone's case received "heavy pressure from the highest levels of the Department of Justice to cut Stone a break." And, he says, he was explicitly told the motivation to decrease Stone's case was political.

Last week we learned that Donald Trump almost surely lied in his responses to cases from Robert Mueller's investigative team. A newly released, and less redacted, copy of the Mueller Report indicates that 
According to multiple witnesses involved with the Campaign, beginning in June 2016 and continuing through October 2016, Stone spoke about WikiLeaks with senior Campaign officials, including candidate Trump.
Trouble is, Trump claimed he had no knowledge of these doings. And "William Barr announced after reviewing Mueller's report he 'did not find' that any Trump campaign associates coordinated with Russian interference in the election," per CNN. 

It's kinda hard to trust Barr. Last week Barr announced that the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Geoffrey Berman, had resigned his position. Trouble was, Berman had not resigned and had no attention of resigning. Instead, Berman was investigating Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, and maybe Trump, and he wanted to assure the public his investigations would continue. In other words, Barr lied.
I learned in a press release from the Attorney General tonight that I was ‘stepping down’ as United States Attorney.  I have not resigned, and have no intention of resigning, my position, to which I was appointed by the Judges of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.  I will step down when a presidentially appointed nominee is confirmed by the Senate.  Until then, our investigations will move forward without delay or interruption.  I cherish every day that I work with the men and women of this Office to pursue justice without fear or favor – and intend to ensure that this Office’s important cases continue unimpeded. 
Barr wanted to replace Berman with SEC Chair Jay Clayton. But there were a couple of problems there. First, it's not Barr's job to replace Berman. Instead, there's a chain of succession until Congress approves a replacement. Berman held out until that chain of succession held out, leaving Clayton to wait. Second, there's a bigger problem. The SDNY is investigating Deutsche Bank -- remember, this very bank had been subpoenaed for Trump's tax records -- while Clayton has served as an attorney for the bank. 

Tying the bow: the guy investigating Trump was removed so that the guy who defended Trump's bank could replace him.

It's a lot lately. The other night, Trump told his small Tulsa audience that he'd actually discouraged government efforts to expand coronavirus testing because it made the numbers look bad. Rapidly Trump spokespeople rushed to explain that Trump didn't mean what he'd plainly said. He was just joking! But today Trump insisted: Yes, I meant what I said.

"I don't kid, let me just tell you, let me make it clear."

Faced with America's greatest public health crisis, the occupant of the White House has zero interest in mitigating the harm. All he cares about is optics. With the United States by far the world's leader in coronavirus outbreaks, and with cases rising in blue states, it's become apparent that Trump isn't failing to contain the virus. He's not even trying.

He told the Christian Broadcasting Network,
but I think we put ourselves at a disadvantage, I told my people. I said, "We've gotten so good at testing ... We test much more than any other nation," so you hear about all these cases.
Also,
By having more tests we have more cases...We did 25 million tests therefore the tests are gonna have more cases. By having more cases it sounds bad...Testing is a double edged sword....
 
But hey, Trump knows what's going on. Tuesday night he told an Arizona crowd.... Wait, stop. Isn't Arizona among our hottest coronavirus outbreaks? Not even trying. But having called the virus the "Kung Flu," the Racist in Chief told them: "COVID, COVID-19, COVID, I said what’s the 19. COVID-19, some people can’t explain the 19."

Some people can't explain the 19. Sweet Baby Moses.
 

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Secret Nazi Handshake?

The white right loves trolling, performing some racist (or sexist or homophobic) action to elicit protests, but maintaining just enough deniability to laugh off the whole thing. The technique works by attracting attention, by entertaining the racist base, and by sending coded hate speech.

This week Donald Trump's political campaign ran ads featuring an inverted red triangle, a symbol the Nazis used to designate political prisoners. Is this a coded Nazi message?
I hate putting myself in a conspiracy-mongering mode, but there are lots of reasons to be suspicious in this case. To begin, this kind of communication is standard on the racist right. But let's establish a broader context.
  • Earlier this week I wrote about the signs that Trump plans to go all-in on racism as a reelection strategy. I chose not to advertise the post, but now it's all the more relevant.
  • Isn't it odd that Trump chooses to go after Antifa, when the evidence for Antifa involvement in recent national protests is scant? Antifa means "anti-fascist," and plenty of experts identify fascist tendencies on Trump's part.
  • During his election campaign Trump and since his inauguration, it's been frequently pointed out that Trump uses symbols, metaphors, and social media posts that originate in Nazi-adjacent circles. Trump also tweeted content he'd received from Russian media, as national security expert Clint Watts told Congress.
  • The Jerusalem Post just noticed that Trump referred to the Secret Service as the "S.S." Maybe Trump was just saving characters?
  • Recently Trump told Ford employees their company had "good bloodlines." Henry Ford conducted business with Nazis during World War II, was a noted anti-Semite, and was very much into eugenics. So was Donald Trump, Senior.
  • Trump issued a 2020 campaign logo that clearly depended on an image developed in fascist circles.
  • Calling protesters "thugs," a racially coded term if ever there was one, Trump tweeted, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts." The quote comes from a segregationist Miami police chief in 1967 and was picked up by George Wallace. 
  • Trump tweeted that four Democratic Congresswomen, all persons of color, "should go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came." All of them are US citizens, and three were born in this country.
  • Don't forget that Ivana Trump said her ex-husband kept of book of Hitler's speeches by the bed. One clear reason to be suspicious: there's little evidence Trump would read anything.
We could go on, but that's a whole lot of potential racist trolling. The level of trolling we're talking about requires some effort and sophistication. Neo-Nazis and the like are fond of high-level symbolism. For example, it's common to find the number 1488 among such groups. The number refers to literature produces by the white supremacist David Lane. You can look it up here.

It's entirely possible Donald Trump doesn't come up with this stuff on his own. He's either a willing or an unwitting vehicle of it. One of his chief political and communications strategists, Stephen Miller, has a known affinity for white supremacist literature and--get this--has been tasked with writing Trump's planned speech on race.

In addition to coded communication, white supremacists are extremely fond of symbolic allusions, particularly to dates. A guy like Stephen Miller, with support from a whole world of racists, could certainly come up with a plan for Trump to hold a rally during a period of heightened racial tension on Juneteenth, the day we celebrate the end of the Confederacy and the freedom of enslaved persons, and in Tulsa, site of the greatest massacre of black Americans. Sure he could.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Theological Disinformation

When we disagree with people, we generally give them the benefit of the doubt. We assume they mean well. We assume they may have something to teach us. (The Buddhists remind us that everything has something to teach us. Dammit.) Among Christians, it's all the more painful to write someone off as unworthy of engagement.

We're there with Eric Metaxas, who has used Dietrich Bonhoeffer to argue that electing Donald Trump is a Christian duty, and who now wedges Bonhoeffer against Black Lives Matter. 
In Metaxas we're dealing not with error but with disinformation. Metaxas authored a bestselling biography of Bonhoeffer. I'm no Bonhoeffer expert, but I know some things, and I read it with interest. About halfway in I began to smell something funky -- not good funky, either. As I continued on, Metaxas basically equated the Nazis with theological liberals and turned Bonhoeffer into a right-wing culture warrior.

Now, don't get me wrong. Bonhoeffer was no American progressive. He's hard to pin down on most anything. But as time moved forward, every review of Metaxas' book by an actual Bonhoeffer expert confirmed my suspicions, and in spades. It's awful.

Charles Marsh, a Bonhoeffer scholar whose work I greatly admire, devoted a lengthy Twitter thread to demonstrate just how misleading is Metaxas' take on Bonhoeffer and Black Lives Matter. The content didn't hold together as a single thread on Twitter, so I asked Charles' permission to represent it there. It's public content, so I'm sharing it here as well. You'll see just how devastating this thread is: an expert assessing a hack. Charles' words appear in italics.

Indulge me a long thread (my first, fingers crossed) in which I show readers the absurdity of this tweet. A more lively response (imho) can be found in my book, “Strange Glory. A Life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer” (Knopf, 2014)

Bonhoeffer’s life-changing encounters with the American organizing tradition initially came through two largely forgotten teachers at Union, Harry Ward and Charles Webb. (First of a dozen or so,) 

Methodist minister, professor of practical theology Christian socialist, Webber was known to friends & foes alike as the chaplain of organized labor. Bonhoeffer loved his book, “A History of the Development of Social Education in the United Neighborhood Houses of New York”. 

Bonhoeffer wrote, “I paid a visit almost every week to settlements, Y.M.C.A., co-operative houses, playgrounds, children’s courts, night schools, socialist schools, asylums, youth organizations, Association for advance of coloured people [sic]…. It is immensely impressive!”

In Webber’s courses DB went deep with the National Women’s Trade Union & the Workers Education Bureau of America and wrote reports on labor, selective buying campaigns, civil rights, “restriction of profits,” juvenile delinquency, “the activity of the churches in these fields. 

Webber introduced DB to the Southern Tenants Farmers Union, the Delta Cooperative, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the British cooperative movement. The last he visited a few years later while praying and making plans for the illegal seminary at Finkenwalde. 

Then there was Harry Ward, the Methodist activist and social reformer.

For an extraordinary portrait of Ward’s life and thought, I highly recommend this book by my friend and fellow Baptist boy. RIP, David.
Ward combined an old-time Methodist zeal for righteous action with a crusading Marxist critique of economic inequality. 

Bonhoeffer took Ward’s popular class, “Ethical Interpretations” (jointly taught with Reinhold Niebuhr), on developing the ethical and theological skills needed to interpret/evaluate “current events in light of the principles of Christian ethics.”

Bonhoeffer and his classmates were required to read and analyze newspaper articles, political journals, government reports, and various legal documents—all from the perspective of “the Jesus of the proletariat.”

Bonhoeffer said he listened closely as Ward enunciated his singular version of Pascal’s wager: Christians had the world to gain from living “as if” there existed an ethical God weighing every human action in the balance. This meant, at least for Ward, a socialist revolution. 

Next let’s meet Bonhoeffer’s classmate and interlocutor James Dombrowski and consider that DB read and admired his Columbia dissertation, “The Early Days of Christian Socialism in America.” 

Over the next three decades, Dombrowski would direct the Southern Conference for Human Welfare, serve as executive director of the Southern Conference Educational Fund and work behind the scenes with key figures in the 1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott. (Six or seven more). 

One of Bonhoeffer’s most trusted classmates was a seminarian from Tennessee named Myles Horton, who called himself “the token hillbilly” at Union.

After he finished Union, Miles Horton returned to Tennessee and founded the Highlander Folk School-“specializing in education for fundamental social change.” In the 1930s/ ’40s, Highlander  emerged as a training centers for the Christian Left. 


In the 1950s, Highlander would shift focus from labor to  civil rights and help train the generation of church-based organizers that included Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr. and Ella Baker, pictured here.
These activist/theologians blew Bonhoeffer’s mind and illuminated a way of doing theology closer to the ground. 

And we haven’t even spoken about Bonhoeffer’s deep immersion in African-American Christianity and culture. Or explored the implications of his parting observation, “I heard the gospel preached (only) in the church if the outcasts of America.”

His cousin, fellow conspirator said the American year set his “entire thinking on a track from which it has not yet deviated and never will.” Progressive protestant ethics (he first rejected for its lack of doctrinal rigor) made Bonhoeffer into a theologian of the concrete. 

A straight line runs from the progressive American organizing tradition in white and black through the civil rights movement to Black Lives Matter. 

Had Metaxas bothered to look at the two large bankers boxes in the Berlin public library containing files, notes and clippings of the academic year 1930-31, he would have seen this evidence. And ignored it. 

Back in Berlin, Bonhoeffer listened with new purpose as his brother Klaus -murdered for his role in July ‘44 - explained: “People are flirting with fascism. If the radical wave of right-wing sentiment captures even the educated classes it will soon be over for the nation.”

Notice that Marsh doesn't attribute Metaxas' mischaracterization of Bonhoeffer to ignorance or even to poor research. Had Metaxas seen the evidence, Marsh writes, he would have ignored it.

Metaxas reflects a larger problem in Christian right politics, one I've been screaming about for awhile now: outright disinformation. Perhaps the most prominent case is David Barton, the high school math teacher and Christian school principal who styles himself as a historian. Barton is massively influential in Christian nationalist politics and in the churches that support it.

In 2012 Barton published The Jefferson Lies with the evangelical house Thomas Nelson. Note that I don't link it. Barton's entire project is to argue that the United States was founded as a Christian nation and that its "Founding Fathers" were motivated by Christian conviction. Like Metaxas, Barton received immediate panning from actual historians, many of them conservative evangelicals. The response was so devastating that Thomas Nelson recalled the book.

Let me repeat that: Barton's own publisher lost faith in the book and recalled it.

So where is Barton today? You'd think he might be sitting in his basement, hiding from public scrutiny while counting his money. But no. His popularity on the Christian right has scarcely waned. He's still proclaimed an expert, still on TV, still commanding speaking fees, still providing disinformation. He's big with the Museum of the Bible people. (You'll find a short version of his story in Katherine Stewart's The Power Worshippers.)

Barton and Metaxas are popular not for their wisdom but because they say the things powerful people want them to say. They're agents of disinformation, and richly rewarded for it. There's a strong stream in American evangelicalism devoted precisely to that effort.

Friday, June 12, 2020

Storm Clouds

Yesterday Donald Trump want to Dallas, partially to raise money but also to discuss "race relations" with a "roundtable" of law enforcement officials. Trump took the time to preview his great speech on race relations. Of the effort to overcome bigotry and prejudice, Trump said, "It'll go quickly and it'll go very easily."

We might recall that Trump said it would be easy to fix health care and that the coronavirus was under control. Very easy. 

I see storm clouds. Trump will continue to use racism to amp up his base, and things will get worse before they get better.

What are we to make of the fact that Trump is planning a rally in Tulsa, the site of America's greatest massacre of black citizens, on June 19--or Juneteenth, the commemoration of emancipation? I don't know, but I do see conservative never Trump political strategist S.E. Cupp pointing out the obvious: 
1. Trump likely has no clue what the significance of Juneteenth and Tulsa are.
2. But Stephen Miller does.
And trying to claw his way back into civilization, Anthony Scaramucci calls the rally "a wink at his racist supporters." I buy that too.
 
It's never been a question whether Trump is racist. Trump is planning to deliver a major speech on race in the near future, but Washington Post opinion writer Dana Milbank points out that we already have enough words from Trump on the subject. Moreover, Milbank points out, Stephen Miller will be writing the speech, and we have strong public evidence of Miller's white nationalist views.

We've crossed a line. Trump will continue to use racist, sometimes overt, and sometimes subtle, to arouse his base. He'll continue to defend Confederate monuments and military base names. He'll keep using black spokespeople to counter others who actually represent popular opinion: in the White House today somebody named Raynard Jackson accused Joy Reid, Don Lemon, and Roland Martin of, well, here's what he said:
So you got radical liberal journalists like Joy Reid from MSNBC, Don Lemon from CNN, Roland Martin, who are putting more poison into the black community than any drug dealer — who are killing more black folks than any white person with a sheet over their face.
And Trump will continue to sound like he's grieved over the death of George Floyd while (a) expressing zero concern about police racism and (b) using Floyd as a propaganda prop.

It's gonna get worse and worse. With public opinion continuing to take the coronavirus threat seriously and to show increasing support for Black Lives Matter, Trump will surely escalate.

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Ain't Always Complicated

It ain't always complicated, you know. Maybe you've met somebody, then you notice you're the one who always texts first. I've heard that happens. Don't know anything about it.

Today we're getting toward simple. Donald Trump is acting like a wannabe Putin. He hasn't thrown anybody out the window yet, we hope. Then again, has anyone seen Anthony Fauci this month?

But here's what he has done. A recent CNN poll has Biden leading Trump 55-41. That's a lot. Little Vladdy Wannabe's campaign literally sent a cease and desist letter, insisting that CNN retract and apologize for the poll.

Even in the era of Trump, this seems abnormal, no?

You may recall that the William Barr Department of Justice requested that a federal court dismiss the charges against retired General Michael Flynn. Facing charges of functioning as a foreign agent without registering, Flynn plead guilty to lying to the FBI about conversations he held with Russian foreign minister Sergei Kislyak.

May I simply note that Trump's first National Security Director was a known Turkish agent who received checks from the Kremlin? 

Prior to Flynn's sentencing, the DOJ intervened. Prosecutors for the case all removed themselves from the case. Smelling rotten fish, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan knew he'd need backup, so he assigned retired judge John Gleeson to research the case and issue a report. 

The Government’s ostensible grounds for seeking dismissal are conclusively disproven by its own briefs filed earlier in this very proceeding. They contradict and ignore this Court’s prior orders, which constitute law of the case. They are riddled with inexplicable and elementary errors of law and fact. And they depart from positions that the Government has taken in other cases.
He literally called the DOJ's move to drop the case "corrupt" and "highly irregular conduct to benefit a political ally of the President."

Again, this isn't normal. A retired federal judge, brought in to referee a case, is telling us Trump's Department of Justice is corrupt. 

Then there's Trump's propaganda level from yesterday, which reached the level of Animal Farm's Napoleon. Video shows Buffalo police shoving Black Lives Matter protestor Martin Gugino to the ground. Gugino's head hit the sidewalk, yet police simply passed by as he was bleeding. The event sparked national outrage.

But the One America News Network identified Gugino as an Antifa activist. The reporter previously worked for the Russian Sputnik network--

--you cannot make this shit up.

With no evidence, Trump repeated the Kremlin/Sputnik/OneAmerica line via Twitter.
Buffalo protester shoved by Police could be an ANTIFA provocateur. 75 year old Martin Gugino was pushed away after appearing to scan police communications in order to black out the equipment. @OANN I watched, he fell harder than was pushed. Was aiming scanner. Could be a set up?
There's also no evidence the main was trying to disrupt police technology, though I guess that's possible.

But there's a problem. Rather than being an Antifa activist committed to using violence against fascists, it turns out Gugino is a Catholic Worker. He may be politically radical, but he's a pacifist.

As of this morning Gugino remained hospitalized and in a good deal of pain a full week after suffering his head injury, but a friend of his reports that he had a "good chuckle" at Trump's expense.

So here's the sum of it: Trump is trying to suppress a mainstream opinion poll, his Department of Justice has been declared corrupt in a report commissioned by a US District Court, and Trump is accusing Catholic Workers of being terrorists.

Oh. One additional bit of news. Trump says the US is unilaterally withdrawing troops from Germany. I suppose this is because (a) Germany is a functioning democracy that is now openly critical of Trump and (b) this will make Putin very damn happy. Over twenty House Republicans have asked Trump not to do it.

Turns out, Germany has asked for clarification but is receiving no reply from its former #1 ally. Per retired General Mark Hertling, who served as Commanding General of U.S. Army Europe and the Seventh Army, Germany reports:
Silence towards host country.
 No answer is also an answer...despite requests from various diplomatic channels, the (GE) government has received no response from US regarding reports of troop withdrawal

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Police State

Two things to know about Donald Trump: (1) he wants to be a dictator, which he's said himself, and (2) he's down about 8 points to Joe Biden in national polls, per Real Clear Politics' aggregate poll. Put those two items together, and you have a desperate coward who might just exploit a national emergency to consolidate power. 

(Ok, I added coward. But of course Trump is a coward.)

You have to take Trump at his word--except when you shouldn't. Because sometimes he tells the absolute truth about himself. This is what Trump told Playboy after China's Tienanmen Square massacre. 
When the students poured into Tiananmen Square, the Chinese government almost blew it. Then they were vicious, they were horrible, but they put it down with strength. That shows you the power of strength. Our country is right now perceived as weak.
Trump was pro-communist in 1990.

We have countless reasons for concern regarding the state of policing in the United States, the repeated violence against black people top among them. But we need to stop and think about what we know. The FBI has been warning us about the presence of white supremacists on police forces since--wait for it--2006.

I'm not confident enough to say more. But let's try out a theory. Supposing a certain percentage of local police officers are indeed white supremacists. If that's the case, they're also pro-Trump--because show me a white supremacist who's staffing the phone bank for Biden. So supposing this theory, what would we be seeing right now?

We'd be seeing police escalating the violence at the nation-wide protests against police violence against African Americans. 

I began to wonder about this when I was participating in a driving protest here in Lancaster, PA. The protest was entirely peaceful, thought the police were fielding some protests and heckling. Then for no justifiable reason, the police released pepper spray. Why?

Certainly many police officers have done better, as have some departments. But Donald Trump needs chaos in order to win the election. Or postpone it. Otherwise, Americans have generally seen who he is and are united in opposition to him.

Let's survey the news.

First, police are targeting reporters and photographers in the United States, Trump's "enemy of the people." I recommend you listen in to the journalists describing their own experiences.
Multiple officers broke off and came specifically over to us and started shooting at us. They had rubber bullets, tear gas. And then they had these canisters of pepper spray that they were spraying in people's eyes from, you know, less than an arm's length away.
As of June 1, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, a project of the Committee to Protect Journalists, shared this.
To put some perspective on the unprecedented nature of the weekend's attacks on journalists: 

At @USPressTracker, we've documented 100-150 press freedom violations in the US per year, for the last 3 years. 

We are currently investigating *over 100* FROM JUST THE LAST 3 DAYS.
Today the tally reads:
OUR LATEST DATA:
*233+ total press freedom incidents*

41+ arrests/detainments
153 assaults (125 by police, 27 by others)
39 equipment/newsroom damage

Assault category breakdown:
53 physical attacks (33 by police)
35 tear gassings
21 pepper sprayings
55 rubber bullet/projectiles
Observe that the assaults and phsyical attacks are far more likely to come from police than from others.

The New York Times editorial board implied the obvious question.  
Just a few weeks ago, the police demonstrated remarkable forbearance as heavily armed groups turned out in several state capitals to oppose coronavirus-related public heath measures. Now the police are demonstrating an equally remarkable intolerance to protests against their own behavior.
And the evidence is everywhere. Please forgive the frequent appeal to Twitter links. 
Beyond the attacks on reporters, there's direct aggression against ordinary protestors.
Doesn't this photo from Long Beach, shared by @richardgrant88, say it all?

Maybe it won't work, but we should be vigilant. There are signs of cracks in Trump's support.

But never fear. Trump is going all Nazi, and he has plenty of Goebbels wanna-bes. When Episcopal bishop Marian Budde expressed outrage that Trump used a church as a political prop, White House spox Jenna Ellis replied, "The bishop is obviously a pawn of the leftist media that thrives on the destruction of all that is moral and just."

Trump doesn't care about the coronavirus pandemic, only in using it to grab power. As least as of June 1, Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN's Jim Sciutto that "he has not spoken or met with President in 2 weeks & his contact w/Trump has become much less frequent. Their last interaction was May 18, during teleconference with the nation’s governors."

The big picture: we should expect things to get far worse before they get better. Trump is desperate and can't afford to lose. He'll do anything to keep that from happening. He wants the police and the military on his side.

Oh, and Jim Mattis just denounced Trump as a threat to the Constitution. I also recommend the piece by Admiral Mike Mullen, former Joint Chiefs chair. Democracy is at stake.

Monday, June 1, 2020

Bunker Mentality

The past few days have been hard for many of us, hell for many as well. The George Lloyd killing, the continuing protests, and the clear signs that people who need to hear those protests will never listen, all these things grind the spirit. 

We've also realized that the coronavirus and police violence share something in common: they both reveal the pervasive racism that shapes our society. Both pandemics disproportionately kill black people.

We also saw something else. Donald Trump is full of bluster, with racism dripping through his threats to respond to looting with bullets and his reference to thugs. But when protesters closed in on the White House, what'd he do? He literally turned off the lights and hid in his bunker. 

Donald Trump is a coward.
@tencents77/Twitter
But he's a corrupt coward. And while we were looking at other things this week, waves of evidence reminded us that there's something very wrong with Donald Trump's relationship with Russia.

First, thinking he was doing Trump some kind of favor (???), new DNI John Ratcliffe released the transcripts of Michael Flynn's pre-inauguration call with Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak--and guess what, it was collusion indeed. As Republican and Democratic lawmakers together were gearing up to punish Russia for its interference in the 2016 election, and before Trump was in the White House, Flynn was trying to smooth things out. The transcripts also confirmed that Flynn was guilty of precisely the crimes to which he plead guilty--lying to the FBI. 

Isn't it remarkable that Trump, who once said Flynn lied to him and to Mike Pence, now says Flynn is getting a raw deal?

Further purging anyone even close to the Russia investigation, the Trump administration also fired Dana Boente, the FBI's top lawyer. Boente, of course, has been cleared of any wrongdoing in the investigation by the FBI's inspector general, but we all know how Trump feels about watchdogs.

Violating the top rule of blogging, I've saved the biggest thing for last because it pulls so many things together. Trump called for an in-person G7 meeting at Camp David. Right away Angela Merkel said no thanks, I'm not coming to the United States in person during this pandemic. 

If there was ever proof that the United States no longer leads the world, that should do it.

But it got worse: Trump publicly said he'd like to invite Vladimir Putin. Putin got kicked out when the Russians invaded Crimea in 2014, and they're still there. But Trump wants to give his boss a seat at the meeting. 

Something is still wrong with Trump and Russia. According to Molly McKew, in two days Trump gained 400,000 Twitter followers. 

Right away, the UK and Canada both said: no way we're allowing Putin back into the G7. Besides Crimea, Russia is still undermining every major democracy. 

And this is where we are. Donald Trump is a coward, there's still something very wrong with Trump and Russia, and the United States no longer leads the free world.

Friday, May 29, 2020

(Not) Out of Control

Back in the day I provided education to domestic violence offenders. I learned lots of things then that have stuck with me: abusers are not "out of control." They're perfectly capable of controlling themselves in contexts where they may be held to account. They exercise rage when they find it safe to do so. Maybe they feel out of control, but that's not the real problem. 

Donald Trump's recent messaging may seem out of control. It certainly feels that way, as his daily outbursts escalate in intensity. He's behind in the polls, six months remain, and we wonder: will Donald Trump take society over the edge?

He might. But he's not out of control. His apparently crazy tweets indicate effort and diligent research. I doubt Trump is doing it himself, but who knows? 

This week I tracked the signs that Trump's racist attacks against Stacey Abrams were carefully designed. During a single tweetstorm Trump repeatedly retweeted a guy named John K. Stahl, whose timeline is filled with race-baiting material. On inspection it becomes clear that Trump didn't retweet something he ran across accidentally. Trump picked the race-baiting tweets he could get away with, at once signalling his real message to hard-core racists who know the language and maintaining a lingerie-thin level of deniability. 

As Minneapolis burns we have new tweeting from the Racist in Chief. Trump retweeted a group called Cowboys for Trump, in which the head cowboy proclaims, "The only good Democrat is a dead Democrat." Trump's retweet, "Thank you Cowboys. See you in New Mexico," has been called out, but it remains active.

(The speaker, who holds public office in New Mexico, did say he didn't mean it literally. Awesome.)

Then there's the aftermath of George Floyd's killing at the hands of Minneapolis police. Classic Trump: after Joe Biden spoke out, Trump finally promised justice for Floyd and his family. Trump did not, of course, mention Floyd's race. Then, when violence broke out in Minneapolis: Trump issued this:
These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen. Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way. Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thank you!
So the rioters, not the police officers, are "thugs," and Trump will order the military to shoot civilians for property crimes. (Kent State went great didn't it?) As happens with Trump, the racial worm has turned. 

Thank God for historian John Fea, Fea uncovered the racist backstory to Trump's tweet. "When the rioting starts, the shooting starts" goes back to a Miami police chief, Walter Headley, who threatened to shoot looters during 1967 race riots. The full Miami Herald excerpt provided by Fea makes clear the racist undertones. I'll save the selections for below.

How did Trump manage to echo language from a racist police chief in 1967? Maybe the phrase stuck in his memory. More likely, someone very evil dug up this phrase and kept it handy for an opportune moment. 

Donald Trump isn't out of control. But our country is very close.

Selections:
  • "Community relations and all that sort of thins has failed. We have done everything we could, sending speakers out and meeting with Negro leaders. But it has amounted to nothing."
  • "We haven’t had any serious problems with civil uprisings and looting because I’ve let the word filter down that when the looting starts, the shooting starts."
  • He said the major group his “get tough” policy is aimed at is young Negro males, from 15 to 21.
  • “Ninety per cent of our Negro population is law abiding and wants to eliminate our crime problems. But 10 per cent are young hoodlums who have taken advantage of the civil rights campaign.”

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

"You're Being Ugly"

I grew up in Alabama, and I'm old enough to remember acting when acting bratty would earn the rebuke, "You're being ugly."

Folks, Donald Trump is getting bad polling news, and he's acting ugly. We can count on it getting worse. 

Trump is losing support where it counts. Older voters, particularly women, and independents are turning against him. A recent FoxNews poll has Biden ahead of Trump by 13 points among independents and--hold your pants--17 among seniors. Trump won both groups in 2016. Even white evangelical support is crumbling, a possible explanation for Trump's insistence that churches be allowed to open on Memorial Day weekend.

Of course, Trump was on the golf course Sunday, not in church or worshiping online.

When the going gets tough, Trump whines louder, especially on Twitter.
  • He repeated his conspiracy theory/accusation that TV critic Joe Scarborough committed murder while he was a member of Congress. Accusations like these damage democracy, but they also hurt real people. The widower of the Scarborough staffer who died in 2001 issued a request that Twitter delete Trump's tweets on the grounds that they are so harmful to him.
  • Trump even attacked Democratic member of Congress Conor Lamb, a Marine vet, as "an American fraud," misspelling Lamb's name on Twitter. He labeled Lamb "a puppet for Lazy Nancy Pelosi," even though Lamb was one of few House members to vote against Pelosi's speakership.
  • He retweeted several offerings from a GOP activist who can only be labeled a racist. One RT called called Hillary Clinton a "skank." Another called Nancy Pelosi "PolyGrip." A third went all the way in, combining the race card and portraying Stacey Abrams as fat.
This series of tweets was especially revealing, especially concerning Trump's racism. It indicates that Trump didn't come upon those tweets by accident but was scrolling through the troll's feed. (The account is John K. Stahl.) The guy is racist as hell, though he actually denies it in one tweet. That's what they do. In the same batch of tweets Trump was scrolling, Stahl referred to Abrams as Shamu and to Elizabeth Warren by Trump's nickname, Pocahontas. (What color is Shamu?)

In short, Donald Trump knows what kind of material he's retweeting and spends time in racist accounts.






Abominations and Atrocities, 4/16/2025

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