Wednesday, April 06, 2022

DEPLOY MORE FAINTING COUCHES!

I've complained endlessly about the Democratic Party's weak messaging and frequent kind words about Republicans, but I approve of this from the chairman of the Democratic National committee, Jaime Harrison:


In case you don't know that story, here it is, from a 2016 Frank Bruni column:
In early 2014, after decades of government and nonprofit work that reflected a passion for public service, Cassandra Butts got a reward — or so she thought. She was nominated by President Obama to be the next United States ambassador to the Bahamas....

The Senate held a hearing about her nomination in May 2014, and then ... nothing. Summer came and went. So did fall. A new year arrived. Then another new year after that.

When I met her last month, she’d been waiting more than 820 days to be confirmed. She died suddenly two weeks later, still waiting. She was 50 years old....

At one point Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, had a “hold” on all political nominees for State Department positions, partly as a way of punishing President Obama for the Iran nuclear deal.

At another point Senator Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican, put a hold specifically on Butts and on nominees for the ambassadorships to Sweden and Norway. He had a legitimate gripe with the Obama administration over a Secret Service leak of private information about a fellow member of Congress, and he was trying to pressure Obama to take punitive action. But that issue was unrelated to Butts and the Bahamas.

Cotton eventually released the two other holds, but not the one on Butts. She told me that she once went to see him about it, and he explained that he knew that she was a close friend of Obama’s ... and that blocking her was a way to inflict special pain on the president.

Cotton’s spokeswoman did not dispute Butts’s characterization of that meeting....
Kraushaar's response to this is not that Harrison has a point, even though he clearly does. Kraushaar's response is pure concern trollery.



Let's take a look at some recent messaging from the Republican National Committee:



None of this sends Josh Kraushaar to the fainting couch.

Meanwhile, FoxNews.com has an important scoop:
Hillary Clinton tweets approval of DNC chair's claim Republicans 'don’t deserve to be in power'
Yes, there's a Hillary connection to all this!
Failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton agreed with the Democrat National Committee chair's blistering description of the Republican Party on Twitter Wednesday.

"It is a party built on fraud, fear and fascism," Jaime Harrison said of the GOP on Wednesday's "Morning Joe" on MSNBC. "They don’t deserve to be in power."

"Sums it up!" Clinton tweeted in agreement after Josh Kraushaar, "Against the Grain" columnist at National Journal, quoted Harrison's remarks.
This was the lead story at the Fox site a couple of hours ago. Most important news of the moment!


I want to give Jaime Harrison a round of applause. More like this, please:

MARKET-SEGMENTED DEMONIZATION

Many observers have noted that the right's current habit of referring to critics of its anti-LGBT legislation as "groomers" is an attempt to modify and mainstream the QAnon theory that the world is run by a cabal of liberal pedophiles, which until now has been seen as a crackpottery even by many committed liberal-bashers. Yesterday Jonathan Chait explained precisely how the mainstreaming is meant to work, using the example of Florida governor Ron DeSantis's "Don't Say Gay" bill, whoe critics were accused of being "groomers" by the governor's press secretary, and subsequently by nearly everyone else on the right:
Whether DeSantis and his supporters believe any of this is beside the point. Conspiracy theories often operate on multiple levels. In the 1950s, Joseph McCarthy famously accused Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and ultimately Dwight Eisenhower of allowing a network of Communist spies to operate inside their administration. Right-wingers like Robert Welch, who were even more deranged than McCarthy, claimed these presidents were all dedicated members of a Communist conspiracy operating hand in glove with Moscow. Meanwhile, right-wingers who were less extreme than McCarthy, like Richard Nixon, could claim these presidents merely did too little to contain Communist expansion.

Nixon didn’t need to go as far as McCarthy, and McCarthy didn’t need to go as far as Welch, in order to profitably inject their charges into the public mind. Even when liberals succeeded in fending off the charge of their being secret allies of Joseph Stalin, it made it harder to rebut the notion they were soft on Communism.

Likewise, the pedophilia conspiracy theory can simultaneously charge Democrats with being pedophiles themselves and with being merely the unwitting allies of pedophilia, shifting from one accusation to the other.
Once you understand this tactic, you see it everywhere. Remember Adam Serwer's 2011 taxonomy of birtherism?
Birtherism: The fictional belief that the president was not born in the United States....

Post-birtherism: Any rhetorical construction that acknowledges the president claims he was born in the United States, but leaves open the possibility that he's lying about it....

Ironic Post-birtherism: Making humorous or ironic references to the idea that the president was not born in the United States as an attempt to signal solidarity with or otherwise placate those who genuinely believe the president was not born in the United States....

Pseudo-birtherism: An umbrella term that encompasses all the various modes of belief that involve embracing fictional elements of the president's background, from the belief that he is a secret Muslim to the idea that he was raised in Kenya. Includes highbrow forms of birtherism like the "Kenyan anti-colonialism" thesis and theories that his name was legally changed to "Barry Soetero," as well as the idea that Obama's "real father" was one of the handful of random black celebrities you can name off the top of your head....
After publishing this, Serwer added a few additional categories, including this one:
Birther Curious: The belief that, despite widespread availability of the president's birth certificate, that there are "lingering questions" that could be answered by him releasing the "long-form" version.... The birther-curious may acknowledge as a rhetorical concession that they "believe" the president was born in the U.S., but nevertheless argue that it's the president's fault that garden-variety birthers continue to exist.
Right-wing rhetoric on the 2020 election works this way, too. Nutjobs will talk about fraudulent bamboo-paper ballots from China or trunks full of fake ballots being slipped into a vote counting site. More "respectable" Republicans will claim that, yes, Democrats stole the election, but they did it by changing the rules of voting (which obviously happened, but only in order to make voting safe during a deadly pandemic). Or they'll say Big Tech rigged the election for Democrats by funding election infrastructure, or by suppressing the story of Hunter Biden's laptop. So you can be a believer in the Big Lie without believing all the absurd things Ginni Thomas and Mike Lindell believe.

Democrats can't seem to do any effective messaging, while Republicans have so much skill that they message in multiple ways simultaneously. When they domesticate a lie (birtherism, 2020 election theft) or a McCarthyite slander (Democrats are communists, Democrats enable pedophilia), it's truly dangerous.

Tuesday, April 05, 2022

GEORGIA'S THREE TOP GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATES RELEASED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- GUESS WHICH ONE IS CONTROVERSIAL?

Here are some headlines:

So what's the big news? From AP:
When Democrat Stacey Abrams first ran for Georgia governor in 2018, her lackluster personal finances and a hefty bill from the IRS gave Republicans fodder to question how she could manage a state budget when she struggled with her own debts.

As she launches a second bid this year, that’s no longer an issue.

Abrams now says she’s worth $3.17 million, according to state disclosures filed in March. That’s compared with a net worth of $109,000 when she first ran four years ago.

Her rapid ascent into millionaire status corresponds with her rise in national politics. Since her 2018 defeat to Republican Brian Kemp, Abrams has become a leading voting rights activist. She was considered as a potential running mate to President Joe Biden and is widely credited with organizing voters in Georgia to help him become the first Democrat to carry the state in the presidential vote in 28 years.
So that's how she made money? If you've read this far, you'd think so. But in fact:
Along the way, she has earned $6 million, mostly driven by $5 million in payments for books and speeches.
Right. Her 2021 novel, While Justice Sleeps, was a #1 New York Times bestseller. (Years ago she was a romance novelist, using the pen name Selena Montgomery, so she knows how to write publishable fiction.) Her 2020 nonfiction book Our Time Is Now was also a Times bestseller. If people buy your books, there's nothing suspicious or underhanded about an increase in your income.

This is, for some reason, a national news story. This, on the other hand, seems to be a news story only in Georgia:
Gov. Brian Kemp’s latest financial report reveals his wealth has grown by more than $3 million since he took office in 2019, thanks partly to a string of real estate holdings and business investments that appreciated in value.

The Republican filed paperwork Thursday that showed a net worth of roughly $8.6 million that included more than $4.6 million in various properties and a roughly $420,000 stake in a stone supply firm. In his 2018 disclosure, Kemp reported a worth of $5.2 million.
Oh -- so Kemp also had a large increase in his net worth, only his came during his time in public service. Also, he's still worth a couple mil more than Abrams is.

Though his principal rival for the Republican nomination, the Trump-endorsed David Perdue, is even richer:
Abrams’ other Republican rival, former U.S. Sen. David Perdue, reported Wednesday a net worth of roughly $50 million in his financial disclosure....

Perdue’s fortune included roughly $17 million in cash on hand, a Sea Island estate valued at $2.4 million and an additional $21 million in investments....

He reported earning about $6 million from investments in his last four years in the U.S. Senate.
The New York Times reported in 2020:
Early this year, Senator David Perdue, Republican of Georgia, sold more than $1 million worth of stock in the financial company Cardlytics, where he once served on the board. Six weeks later, its share price tumbled when the company’s founder announced he would step down as chief executive and the firm said its future sales would be worse than expected.

After the company’s stock price bottomed out in March at $29, Mr. Perdue bought back a substantial portion of the shares that he had sold. They are now trading at around $120 per share....

Investigators found that Cardlytics’ chief executive at the time, Scott Grimes, sent Mr. Perdue a personal email two days before the senator’s stock sale that made a vague mention of “upcoming changes.” The timing of the message prompted additional scrutiny from investigators in both Washington and Atlanta. But ultimately they concluded the exchange contained no meaningful nonpublic information and declined to pursue charges, closing the case this summer.
Also that year:
Senator David Perdue ... began making large and ultimately profitable purchases of shares in a Navy contractor in 2018 just before taking over as chair of a Senate subcommittee overseeing the Navy fleet....

Mr. Perdue, a millionaire and formerly a prolific trader of individual stocks, announced in May that he would divest from his large individual stock holdings after questions were raised about his well-timed purchases of Pfizer stock in February, after senators were briefed on the coronavirus threat.
So these guys have been doing quite nicely for themselves, even while holding public office. Yet the Abrams disclosure is the biggest story, even though she seems to have made her money from her own labor.

To sum up: Republicans' investments are, ultimately, not to be questioned. Writing books people want to read? Awfully suspicious!

THEY HATE US, PART LXXVIII

J.D. Vance's Senate campaign has just released a new ad, which he's spending a million bucks to air statewide:


In the ad, Vance says:
Are you a racist? Do you hate Mexicans? The media calls us racist for wanting to build Trump's wall. They censor us, but it doesn't change the truth. Joe Biden's open border is killing Ohioans with more illegal drugs and more Democrat voters pouring into this country. This issue is personal. I nearly lost my mother to the poison coming across our border. No child should grow up an orphan. I'm J.D. Vance and I approve this message because whatever they call us, we will put America first.
This is the standard Republican line on the border and drug, with a personal twist -- but note the other familiar Republican talking point in the ad: the notion that undocumented immigrants automatically become "Democrat voters." This is one of the lies undergirding Donald Trump's so-called Big Lie. Trump talks about fake ballots and other forms of nonexistent election skulduggery, but he finds a receptive audience because Republican politicians and pundits have been telling the base for years that every "illegal" who crosses the border is instantly signed up as a voter by the "Democrat Party," with stolen elections as an inevitable consequence.There's never any evidence presented for this assertion, but every rank-and-file Republican voter "knows" it's true.

And notice what's "killing Ohioans": two things -- "illegal drugs" and "Democrat voters." Who nearly killed J.D. Vance's mother? You did, hippie.

In fact, overdose deaths in all four years of the Trump presidency exceeded those in previous years:


Facts don't matter. They hate us. They think we're murderers.

Monday, April 04, 2022

WE'RE SORTING OURSELVES INTO TWO AMERICAS, ONE OF WHICH (GUESS WHICH ONE) IS MORE TROUBLING

In The New York Times, Shawn Hubler and Jill Cowan tell us that polarization is sorting us into two nations, state by state.
As Republican activists aggressively pursue conservative social policies in state legislatures across the country, liberal states are taking defensive actions. Spurred by a U.S. Supreme Court that is expected to soon upend an array of longstanding rights, including the constitutional right to abortion, left-leaning lawmakers from Washington to Vermont have begun to expand access to abortion, bolster voting rights and denounce laws in conservative states targeting L.G.B.T.Q. minors.

The flurry of action, particularly in the West, is intensifying already marked differences between life in liberal- and conservative-led parts of the country. And it’s a sign of the consequences when state governments are controlled increasingly by single parties. Control of legislative chambers is split between parties now in two states — Minnesota and Virginia — compared with 15 states 30 years ago.
Hubler and Cowan fail to note that some of the "conservative-led" states they describe aren't truly conservative. Georgia and Arizona voted for Joe Biden and have two Democratic U.S. senators each -- but they have Republican governors and Republicans control their legislatures. Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin also voted for Biden, but they're all one gubernatorial election away from total GOP control. There's no state where Democrats have control despite a Republican-leaning electorate.

Republicans are doing some seriously partisan things, Hubler and Cowan tell us.
With some 30 legislatures in Republican hands, conservative lawmakers, working in many cases with shared legislative language, have begun to enact a tsunami of restrictions that for years were blocked by Democrats and moderate Republicans at the federal level. A recent wave of anti-abortion bills, for instance, has been the largest since the landmark 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade.

Similar moves have recently been aimed at L.G.B.T.Q. protections and voting rights. In Florida and Texas, teams of “election police” have been created to crack down on the rare crime of voter fraud, fallout from former President Donald J. Trump’s specious claims after he lost the 2020 presidential election.

Carrying concealed guns without a permit is now legal in nearly half of the country. “Bounty” laws — enforced not by governments, which can be sued in federal court, but by rewards to private citizens for filing lawsuits — have proliferated on issues from classroom speech to vaccination since the U.S. Supreme Court declined to strike down the legal tactic in Texas.
Sounds bad. But Hubler and Cowan assure us that a lot of this is probably theater, so I guess we should all just stop worrying.
The moves, in an election year, have raised questions about the extent to which they are performative, as opposed to substantial. Some Republican bills are bold at first glance but vaguely worded. Some appear designed largely to energize base voters.
The link on the phrase "vaguely worded" goes to a story about Florida's "Don't Say Gay" bill, which seems extremely dangerous to children, teachers, and counselors. The vague wording is part of the danger, because it's not clear what words or deeds that are supportive of LGBT youth could get a school in serious trouble. But the implication here is that the law is vague, so it can't be that bad.

Hubler and Cowan contrast Florida and other red states with California, which seeks to protect abortion and to use the threat of lawsuits to strengthen state bans on assault weapons and ghost guns. We're assured that this is also theater.
Dan Schnur, a former Republican strategist who teaches political science now at the University of Southern California and the University of California, Berkeley, said that without strong Republican opposition, [Governor Gavin] Newsom has been using the governors of Texas and Florida as straw men.

“It’s an effective way of strengthening himself at home and elevating his name in Democratic presidential conversations,” Mr. Schnur said.
And we're also told that Newsom is being unpleasantly non-centrist:
Conservatives in and outside California have criticized the governor for stoking division.

A spokeswoman for Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, who is a Republican presidential contender, noted in an email that Disneyland was closed three times longer than Disney World during the pandemic, and that hundreds of thousands of Americans moved to Florida between April 2020 and July 2021 while hundreds of thousands left California. Mr. Newsom, she wrote, “is doing a better job as a U-Haul salesman.”

“Politicians in California do not have veto power over legislation passed in Florida,” the spokeswoman, Christina Pushaw, added. “Gov. Newsom should focus on solving the problems in his own state.”

The office of Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas — who, in 2018, ran on the slogan “Don’t California My Texas” — did not respond to emails and calls requesting comment.
(Newsom is quoted in the story criticizing right-wing policy in Texas and Florida, but no one is quoted accusing Florida or Texas officials of "stoking division," which, I guess, is a bad thing only Democrats do.)

Also, California has high housing costs, therefore what Newsom is doing is bad.
“In a world in which the federal government has abdicated some of its core responsibility, states like California have to figure out what their responsibilities are,” said [Jon] Michaels, [a] U.C.L.A. professor. “The hard question is: Where does it end?”

For example, he noted, the fallout could mean that federal rights that generations have taken for granted could become available only to those who can afford to uproot their lives and move to the states that guarantee them.

“It’s easy for Governor Newsom to tell struggling Alabamians, ‘I feel your pain,’ but then what? ‘Come rent a studio apartment in San Francisco for $4,000 a month?’”
So I guess if you're a governor and real estate prices surpass a certain level in your state, you're not allowed to take a position on cultural issues.

We end with the mother of a trans child from Dallas who raised $23,000 on GoFundMe to get her kid the hell out of Texas. She recently visited Los Angeles.
“The city itself just felt like a safe haven,” Ms. Augustine said. But, she added, her $60,000 salary, which allows her to rent a house in Texas, would scarcely cover a California apartment: “We’re going to have to downsize.”
The money aspect of this sucks. But it also sucks that she's terrified for her kid if she stays in Texas, even in a liberal city. Maybe that should be what's emphasized here?

NO, LINDSEY GRAHAM DIDN'T BLURT OUT THE TRUTH ABOUT HOW A GOP SENATE WILL TREAT BIDEN JUDICIAL NOMINEES

A couple of hours ago, Politico reporter Marianne LeVine tweeted some clickbait about Lindsey Graham and the Senate Judiciary Committee:


With no further information, I interpreted LeVine's tweet to mean that Graham had openly acknowledged that President Biden's judicial appointees will be blockaded if, as is likely, Republicans retake the Senate in the midterms. I'm certain that's what Republicans will do, but that's not what Graham said:


What Graham wants us to believe -- for all I know, he actually believes it -- is that a suitably moderate nominee would have been given a fair hearing, but not a dangerous radical like the fire-breathing extremist Ketanji Brown Jackson. (The fact that only Republicans regard Jackson as a fire-breathing extremist doesn't matter to Graham or any other GOP senator because Republicans don't care about winning any votes other than Republican votes.)

Graham seems to be harking back to a moment before President Biden announced his choice of Jackson, a time when there was a lot of talk about another possible nominee, Michelle Childs, a moderate and fellow South Carolinian. Graham has lavished praise on Childs and has insisted more than once that she would have won 60 votes, including his vote and the vote of fellow South Carolinian Tim Scott. (This is also not true. If Childs had been the nominee, Republicans would have concocted reasons to call her a radical, just as they did with Jackson. Graham and Scott would probably have had sudden changes of heart, professing themselves shocked, shocked at her newly discovered extremism.)

Democrats have handled the filling of this Court vacancy reasonably well. It was probably shrewd to contrast Jackson with the more moderate Childs and the more progressive Leondra Kruger -- Jackson was presented as a middle-ground choice. But it probably wasn't helpful that Congressman Jim Clyburn -- another South Carolinian -- publicly pressed Biden to appoint Childs, arguing that she'd win many Republican votes. (By the way, what's up with all this South Carolina chauvinism? Critics of Biden's selection process said he shouldn't have limited his choices to Black women, but it's good for America to treat certain picks as uniquely qualified largely because they're from your home state?)

Clyburn's cheerleading for Childs had a few unfortunate effects: It was one more example of Democrats making the case that their approach to governance isn't really valid unless it has Republican buy-in, it made party leaders appear momentarily at odds with one another, and it helped the GOP argue that Jackson was an extreme, deliberately polarizing choice, a message that, fortunately, has caught on only with Republicans so far.

In the clip above, Graham is imagining a scenario like the one that took place in 1988, when, after Robert Bork's Supreme Court nomination failed and Douglas Ginsburg withdrew, President Reagan sought Democrats' advice on who could get through a Senate their party controlled; Anthony Kennedy was suggested (by then-Senator Joe Biden, the story goes), and he was nominated and confirmed. Maybe Graham believes that's what will happen if President Biden gets another Supreme Court pick and Republicans control the Senate. But no one who lived through the blockade of Merrick Garland in 2008 should be under any illusions that Democrats could get a hearing even for a centrist appointee. I can't tell if Graham is lying to us or to himself, but he should know better, and no one should be fooled by what he says.

Sunday, April 03, 2022

AN NBC REPORTER WRITES IT UP JUST THE WAY DeSANTIS LIKES IT

Former Politico reporter Marc Caputo has a story to tell us about Florida governor and future presidential candidate Ron DeSantis, and he's dishing it up to DeSantis's exact specifications:
One of Florida’s biggest political players, The Walt Disney Co. is known here in the state capital for getting what it wants as it showers candidates and parties with cash.

But Disney’s biggest campaign contribution to Gov. Ron DeSantis this cycle might not be money but rather the company’s decision to denounce the law he signed that prohibits “classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity” in the state’s public schools.
Is this a good law? Is it a bad law? Don't worry your pretty little head about that -- it's a win for DeSantis! That's not an opinion -- this is a straight news story, so it's a fact!
For months, DeSantis has steadily increased his rhetoric denouncing “the rise of corporate wokeness,” but he didn’t have a clear target until Disney announced its opposition to the measure, which critics have called the "Don’t Say Gay" bill, on March 9. Since then, the company — Florida’s largest employer — has been a singular focus for the governor as he runs for re-election and eyes a 2024 presidential bid. As a vestige of Florida's old business-aligned GOP, Disney provided DeSantis a perfect foil to highlight the revolution in Republican politics as it de-emphasizes talk about free markets in favor of culture war attacks on “wokeness.”
Did I mention "wokeness" in this paragraph? Maybe I should say "wokeness" again!

Besides using the word "wokeness" alomst as much as DeSantis and other Republican politicians do, Caputo tells us that we should say goodbye to "Florida's old business-aligned GOP" because there's a new sheriff in town who "de-emphasizes talk about free markets." In fact, Caputo is mischaracterizing both the pre-DeSantis GOP and the current GOP. The GOP has never favored free markets -- it likes providing huge tax giveaways to big corporations. That's still true in DeSantis's Florida, as that radical-left magazine Forbes tells us:
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) continued to go after Disney on Friday over its opposition to the state’s Parental Rights In Education Act (known to critics as the “Don’t Say Gay” law), saying he’s “receptive” to the state legislature revoking special privileges the company’s received—but he refused to go after the corporate tax breaks Disney gets from the state government.

DeSantis was asked at a press conference Friday about corporate tax breaks Disney receives from the state, including what the Orlando Sentinel reports could be up to $570 million in tax breaks for a new office complex the company is opening, as well as corporate tax refunds that the state is set to issue to companies in May.

DeSantis said that while he’s in favor of the state taking away privileges that are unique to Disney, those tax breaks are ones “that any business would be eligible for,” and insisted there are “no special tax breaks that are Disney-specific that we would contemplate” taking away.

Democratic lawmakers in Florida have suggested DeSantis and their Republican colleagues should go after Disney’s tax breaks—and the state’s corporate tax refunds as a whole—if they’re serious about cracking down on Disney’s benefits from the state.
But there's no evidence that the Republicans who control the legislature have any plan to do so, or even to follow through on DeSantis's Disney-specific threats.

Caputo doesn't care. Caputo just wants us to know that what DeSantis is doing is very, very excellent politics. (Notice that whenever a Republican politician does something controversial and brazen it's described by the mainstream media as extremely savvy, but when Democrats embrace controversial ideas, or even widely popular ones -- backing Ukraine, making gun background checks universal -- every story is about how risky and potentially offputting what they're doing is likely to be?)

If you're wondering just how excellent DeSantis's political instincts are, let Caputo tell you, at great length:
DeSantis on Thursday parlayed Disney’s opposition to the law into a fundraising pitch, casting himself as a family-values David fighting what he said was a “radical” corporate Goliath....

He’s earned conservative accolades from Fox News appearances criticizing Disney for doing business in China yet remaining silent about the Uyghur genocide, and for sending Disney cruises to the Caribbean island of Dominica, where homosexuality is criminalized.
(DeSantis has a press secretary, but Caputo thinks he needs to retransmit all of the governor's talking points on this issue.)
"This is right in DeSantis’ wheelhouse,” said José Oliva, a DeSantis ally who was the Florida House speaker in 2019 and 2020, during the governor’s first two years in office. “Disney’s woke capitalism is exactly what DeSantis calls out.” ...

“His appeal is he fights back, he stands up regardless of where the stampede is going,” Oliva said. “Disney perhaps thought that, as a large corporation, that it was above these things. Now it realizes it’s going to be treated like everyone else.”
Does Caputo quote any opposing opinions in this news story? Yes, twelve paragraphs in:
“DeSantis’ national small-dollar donors, the QAnon extreme-right crowd is who he plays to. It’s not Floridians,” said Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, which sued the state Thursday over the law Disney denounced.
Caputo quotes a top executive at this human rights organization only to portray the group as suspect in the following paragraph:
DeSantis’ office reacted to the Equality Florida lawsuit by questioning whether Disney was underwriting the suit.
"Smith said the lawyers are working pro-bono," Caputo tells us. And then he's right back to being a fanboy:
DeSantis' Disney feud is a continuation of his fight-all-comers political style that turned him into a national GOP figure during the pandemic, when experts criticized his laissez-faire approach to Covid. The criticism and negative media coverage prompted fiery responses from DeSantis, and the Republican base loved the politics as well as the policy.
Near the end of the story, we finally get a paragraph telling us what the law is all about -- but the paragraph is built on DeSantis bullet points.
The legislation, which is titled the Parental Rights in Education bill, does not contain the words "don't say gay," though legal experts and opponents point out the bill's language is vague, leaving room for interpretation. It generally prohibits teachers from instructing kids about gender identity and sexual orientation in kindergarten through third grade.
It "generally" does a lot more than that, as critics have pointed out:
... a close read of the text shows it to be an overly broad piece of legislation that requires school mental-health counselors to “out” LGBTQ+ children to their parents and makes any discussion of LGBTQ+ issues or identities practically forbidden because parents could start a state investigation and sue for damages any time they feel aggrieved....

The bill’s broad language not only says “classroom instruction ... on sexual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3,” but it also bans such instruction “in a manner that is not age appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards.” What does that mean? No one knows, but because the bill empowers parents to sue whenever they perceive a slight, anything is fair game.

Moreover, the preamble to the bill advocates “prohibiting classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity in certain grade levels or in a specified manner” (emphasis added). “Discussion” is much broader than “classroom instruction.” ...

The provisions governing school counseling are even worse. The bill requires school boards to “adopt procedures for notifying a student’s parent if there is a change in the student’s services or monitoring related to the student’s mental, emotional, or physical health or well-being and the school’s ability to provide a safe and supportive learning environment for the student.” And no district could “prohibit school district personnel from notifying a parent about his or her student’s mental, emotional, or physical health or well-being.”

The principle here is that it is a parent’s absolute right to know such things about their children, but the consequences would be that counselors would have to violate confidentiality and out kids to their parents even if it would cause them to be rejected or thrown out of their homes. This is a massive, terrifying inversion of the responsibilities of a counselor.
None of this matters to Caputo. All that matters is whether the bill is a political winner for DeSantis. DeSantis says it is. Caputo believes him -- and seems delighted. This article is a disgrace.

Saturday, April 02, 2022

RUY TEIXEIRA'S FOX AUDITION REEL

Twenty years ago, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira published a book called The Energing Democratic Majority, which led a generation of Democrats to believe that Democratic dominance of American politics would soon just happen, as a result of demographic changes and generational turnover. The promised Democratic majority never emerged, and now Teixeira is most often seen castigating Democrats in emails sent to Thomas Edsall, who publishes them in his New York Times columns.

Now Teixeira has taken his I'm-a-Democrat-scolding-Democrats act to National Review, in an essay that's the magazine's current cover story -- because, really, what could be better for a party struggling to survive a challenging midterm cycle than thousands of words of criticism from a Democratic-leaning thinker in the pages of Republicans' most widely respected magazine? I'm sure the essay will result in several Teixeira appearances on Fox News, or at least many references to his essay on the channel, because there's nothing Fox likes more than to say, Even the liberal [insert name of prominent Democrat here] thinks what Democrats are doing is nuts.

(As if to send a signal to Fox that he's available, Teixeira says Democrats believe in the “Fox News fallacy,” which he defines as "the idea that, if Fox News and the like are criticizing the Democrats on an issue, the criticism must be unsound and the disputed policy should be defended at all costs." I'd say that more often the Democrats are inclined to overcorrect when they notice attacks from Fox. But Fox will like Teixeira's assessment of the situation.)

Teixeira might be right about some things -- but he ignores many of the reasons for the Democrats' struggles, and he invents problems where they don't exist.

He writes:
Democrats have failed to develop a party brand capable of unifying a dominant majority of Americans behind their political project. Indeed, the current Democratic brand suffers from several deficiencies that make it somewhere between uncompelling and toxic to many American voters who might otherwise be the party’s allies. I locate these deficiencies in three key areas: culture, economics, and patriotism.
He's right about Democrats failing to develop a party brand. I'd say it's because they're terrible at messaging, and because they overpromise and underdeliver -- on affordable health insurance and child care, student loans, climate change, voting rights, gun violence, and many other issues. But Teixeira thinks it's those evil lefties doing all the damage:
The cultural Left has managed to associate the Democratic Party with a series of views — on crime, immigration, policing, free speech, and, of course, race and gender — that are far from those of the median voter. That’s a success for the cultural Left but an electoral liability for the Democratic Party. From time to time, Democratic politicians, like Biden in his State of the Union address on March 1, try to dissociate themselves from unpopular ideas such as defunding the police, but the cultural Left within the party is still more deferred to than opposed or ignored.
"Defund the Police" is, of course, one of Teixeira's top concerns. But when the Democratic president of the United States says he wants to increase police funding in a State of the Union address and that isn't seen as the party's main message, when (as Teixeira writes later) "Democratic politicians are running as fast as they can away from any hint of 'defund the police,'" when London Breed, the Democratic mayor of San Francisco, says (as Teixeira also notes) that “It’s time the reign of criminals who are destroying our city, it is time for it to come to an end. And it comes to an end when we take the steps to be more aggressive with law enforcement, more aggressive with the changes in our policies, and less tolerant of all the bullsh** that has destroyed our city,” then you have to ask why it's widely assumed that Democrats are tolerant of crime. I'd argue that there's a brutally efficient right-wing propaganda machine that seizes on anything that might upset Mr. and Mrs. Suburban America and amplifies it relentlessly, while Democrats lack a message machine of their own and are always playing defense, and doing so inadequately. But Teixeira says it's because we're all in thrall to the academic left, not just on "Defund the Police" but on race and gender and patriotism -- and, bizarrely, technology. (I'll get to that.)

Teixeira writes,
The Democrats have paid a considerable price for their militant identity politics, which lends the impression that the party is distracted by, or even focused on, issues of little relevance to most voters’ lives.
No -- what's led to this impression in many cases is Republicans' obsession with culture war issues. It's Republicans, for instance, who are fixated on the issue of trans females in sports, even though, as the Republican governor of Utah wrote when he vetoed a bill banning trans youths from participating in school sports,
● 75,000 high school kids participating in high school sports in Utah.

● 4 transgender kids playing high school sports in Utah.

● 1 transgender student playing girls sports.

● 86% of trans youth reporting suicidality.

● 56% of trans youth having attempted suicide

Four kids and only one of them playing girls sports. That’s what all of this is about. Four kids who aren’t dominating or winning trophies or taking scholarships. Four kids who are just trying to find some friends and feel like they are a part of something. Four kids trying to get through each day. Rarely has so much fear and anger been directed at so few.
(The Utah legislature overrode his veto.)

Teixeira thinks Critical Race Theory is a problem for Democrats, of course.
The standard Democratic comeback to criticism about CRT in the schools is to say that any voters, including parents, who worry about CRT are manipulated by right-wing media into opposing proper teaching about the history of slavery, Jim Crow, redlining, and so on.

Voters’ worries about CRT cannot be bludgeoned away so easily. Parents are far more worried that their child is taught — no matter the name of the theory — to see everything through a racial lens than they are concerned that she is learning about historical instances and practices of racism.
Teixeira cites no statistics to back up this assertion. He overlooks data suggesting that the people most worked up about CRT in the schools aren't parents of school-age children. A Wall Street Journal poll he cites twice, noting poor marks for Democrats on crime and border security, actually shows Democrats favored over Republicans on the issue of education.

And then, near the end, we get a bizarre digression from Teixeira on the subject of economics and technology.

First, he asserts that Build Back Better, the Democrats' centerpiece economic bill, "would have supported useful expansions of the notably stingy American welfare system, and ... would have supported useful public investments," but
None of that ... would have led to more productivity, higher growth, and an American economy less unequal across regions.
Teixeira offers no evidence to support this claim. In rebuttal, I've found a report titled "The Build Back Better Agenda Boosts Productivity and Long-Term Economic Growth in Numerous Ways," which was published by the Center for American Progress, where one of the Senior Fellows is ... Ruy Teixeira.

From there we're told that
much of the Democratic Left still regards with suspicion the goal of more and faster economic growth, preferring to focus on the unfairness of the current distribution of wealth.... The latter view has, on the left, led to the vogue for the idea of “degrowth.”
This is such a culturally salient "vogue" that I'd never heard of it before, but apparently it had a massive impact on the discussions D.C. Democrats were having in 2021.
Given such views, it is not surprising that growth does not rank high on the Democratic Left’s list of economic objectives. We saw that in the endless debate around Build Back Better, which was driven by the House’s Progressive Caucus. Almost none of the debate was about how well the bill, at whatever level of funding and with whatever programmatic commitments, would promote growth. That was dismissed as something only conservatives would care about.
I thought the primary concern of the Progressive Caucus was getting at least some decent policy past Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, but maybe I was misinformed.

And now we come to the Teixeira's nutty talk about technology.
Closely related to Democrats’ relative indifference to economic growth is their lack of optimism that a rapid advance and application of technology can produce an abundant future. More common is fear that a dystopian future might await us thanks to AI and other technologies. This is odd, given that almost everything ordinary people like about the modern world, including relatively high living standards, is traceable to technological advances and the knowledge embedded in them. From smartphones, flat-screen TVs, and the Internet to air and auto travel to central heating and air-conditioning to the medical devices and drugs that cure disease and extend life to electric lights and the mundane flush toilet, technology has dramatically transformed people’s lives for the better....

Doesn’t the Left want to make people happy? One has to wonder. They show more interest in figuring out what people should stop doing and consuming than in figuring out how people can have more to do and consume. They rarely discuss the idea of abundance, except to disparage it.
No, he's not finished.
If there is to be an abundant clean-energy future, not a degrowth one, it will depend on our ability to develop energy technologies beyond wind and solar. The same could be said about a wide range of other technological challenges that could underpin a future of abundance: AI and machine learning, CRISPR and mRNA biotechnology, advanced robotics and the Internet of things.
I'm just a humble blogger, and maybe I'm no expert on why Republicans are leading Democrats in midterm polling, but I'm pretty sure it's not because the GOP talks a lot about artificial intelligence, CRISPR, and smart toasters.

The GOP doesn't talk about these things, or about any agenda other than pure revenge. The GOP mostly talks about how evil Democrats are, frequently portraying the words and deeds of radicals who aren't even Democrats (people who destroy property during lefty protests, for instance) as the responsibility of all Democrats, while Democrats don't portray the words and deeds of radical, offputting members of the Republican Party as representative of the party as a whole. Teixeira may be right that many ordinary Americans are put off by aspects of the left, but we'll never have a proper test about right-wing excesses because Democrats seem allegric to the notion of drawing attention to them. And that, along with the plutocracy's ability to use all Republicans and some Democrats to block good legislation that would help people, is the real reason the Democratic Party is in trouble.

Friday, April 01, 2022

HEY REPUBLICANS, IF YOU WANT TO STOP HERSCHEL WALKER, YOU'RE DOING IT WRONG

Politico tells us this today about the favorite in the Georgia Senate election:


And in a remarkable coincidence, here's a story about Walker at CNN:
For years, Herschel Walker has told the same inspiring story: that he graduated in the top 1% of his class at the University of Georgia. He's told the story, according to a review of his speeches by CNN's KFile, during motivational speeches over the years and as recently as 2017. The only problem: it's not true.

Walker, who is a candidate in the Republican primary race for US Senate in Georgia, acknowledged in December that he did not graduate from Georgia after the Atlanta-Journal Constitution first reported that the false claim was listed on his campaign website.

But a CNN KFile review found that Walker himself has been repeating the claim for years. Walker's comments in 2017, and others made over the years, show the former football star repeatedly misrepresented his academic credentials.

"And all of sudden I started going to the library, getting books, standing in front of a mirror reading to myself," Walker said in a 2017 motivational speech. "So that Herschel that all the kids said was retarded become valedictorian of his class. Graduated University of Georgia in the top 1% of his class."
Do the anti-Walker Republicans who (I assume) spoon-fed this story to CNN seriously believe that being less educated than he's claimed to be will hurt Walker? Really? In America? We sometimes display respect for education in this country, but mostly we don't trust it. We think well-educated people are soft-bellied oddballs. So I can't see how this could possibly hurt him.

But this is clearly a minor attack compared to what Walker's primary opponents hope will really bring him down, as Politico reports:
In the eight weeks running up to the May 24 primary, two super PACs supporting Walker’s GOP rivals plan to drop millions of dollars in ads attacking Walker, according to people familiar with their spending plans....

Walker is still expected to finish first in the primary. But his opponents intend to drive his support under 50 percent and force him into a June runoff, when the second-place finisher will be able to focus attention on what many Georgia Republicans contend is Walker’s unique vulnerability to Democratic attack: his history of alleged domestic abuse....

At a meeting of the Putnam County Republican Party on Monday night, Walker’s leading challenger, state Agriculture Commissioner Gary Black, closed his stump speech with an impassioned appeal for the crowd to do their research on Walker.

“Folks, he can’t win in November,” Black said, raising his voice as he spoke. “The baggage is too heavy. It’ll never happen.”

“Let the Democrats pour $140 million on top of domestic violence and threatening shootouts with police,” he added. “Let that happen. That discussion is going to be had right now. I’m pretty passionate about that.”

Black was referring to police reports documenting Walker’s past run-ins with law enforcement and instances of alleged domestic violence. Walker has publicly discussed his long history with mental illness.
I don't know how much Georgia Republicans know about this, but it's been widely discussed in the national press and still Walker has a 60-point lead over Black in the Real Clear Politics average. Also, he leads the Democratic incumbent, Raphael Warnock, by 1 in general election polls.

Voters in Alabama turned against Roy Moore in the 2017 Senate election, but that's because his misdeeds involved underage girls. I'm convinced that a disturbing large percentage of Americans believe that violence against your wife is just a normal event in a marriage, and that people who worry about such violence are disproportionately man-hating liberal feminists. Other voters, I'm sure, will accept that Walker had mental health problems that are under control now, as he regularly insists, or will assume that the stories are fake news. In a country where the sexually violent Eric Greitens is at or near the lead in every poll in the Missouri GOP Senate primary, and is leading in most general election polls (and where the seemingly disgraced groper Andrew Cuomo trails the governor who replaced him by only single digits in Democratic primary polling), I have trouble imagining voters doing the right thing and rejecting an abuser.

Some of you will argue that there'll be a double standard -- Greitens and Cuomo are white, but Walker is Black. (Walker's principal challenger, Gary Black, is white.) I'd believe that except that Walker's lead in the polls is overwhelming -- 66.0 to Black's 6.3 in the RCP average. Walker was a college football star, and he's a Trump fan from way back. It's hard to beat that combination in the South. I think he'll be the kind of Black person Republicans like to wave in Democrats' faces to show that they're not racist.

Several paragraphs into the Politico story, we read this:
... a memo sent March 18 to Black’s donors, obtained by POLITICO, says Black’s campaign hired Meeting Street Insights to conduct internal polling in late February and found Walker’s support dropped to 38 percent after Republican primary voters were informed about past allegations and his support for granting a pathway to citizenship to some immigrants living in the country illegally.
I think that immigration position is a huge vulnerability for Walker in a Republican primary. If I were running against him, I'd seriously consider spending more money talking about that than about domestic abuse. Last fall, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported:
[Walker] told USA Today in August 2015 that he supports Trump’s idea of building a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico but disagreed with his plan to deport millions of immigrants living in the country illegally. He also said then that he’d back a proposal that enables such immigrants to earn citizenship.

In a statement to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Walker’s campaign didn’t disavow his previous comments about opposing Trump’s deportation policy or his endorsement of an immigration overhaul that would grant a path to citizenship for millions.
Gary Black's campaign was on it:
Black’s campaign on Monday sharply critical of Walker’s immigration approach.

“Herschel Walker’s immigration policy is like an illegitimate love child of Mitt Romney and Nancy Pelosi,” said spokesman Dan McLagan, invoking two politicians reviled by many Georgia Republicans. “Republicans are going to throw up in their mouths a little when they hear about it.”
More of that will work. I suspect it will be more effective in the Republican primary than calling Walker a domestic abuser.

CAITLYN JENNER DOESN'T SEEM TO BE THE TRANS TRAITOR FOX WANTED

When I read that Fox News had hired Caitlyn Jenner as a commentator, the reason seemed obvious to me:


I still think that was the plan -- but judging from her first Fox segment, on Sean Hannity's show last night, Fox didn't quite get what it wanted.



Hannity opens with precisely the LGBT-panic monologue you'd expect:
HANNITY: All right. Tonight, with so many crises here at home and abroad, and many woke Democrats obsessed with vilifying, unfairly, Florida governor Ron DeSantis and that new law that bans teachers from having inappropropriate sexual gender theory conversations with kids in pre-K through third grade, four, five, six, seven, and eight, okay. Eager to jump on any left-wing bandwagon, Texas Democrat Beto -- Boto -- Bozo O'Rourke is out there posting this creepy picture of himself wearing a T-shirt that says, "Don't mess with trans kids." Meanwhile, the Disney Corporation and their woke employees and leaders have been, well, absolutely out of their minds over this new law. Some recently staged a walkout in protest, and Disney is now banning gender terms like "boy" and "girl." Like "Ladies and gentlemen, boy and girls, children of all" -- can't say that anymore. Governor DeSantis is fighting back, threatening to remove many of Disney's special privileges that they get from the Sunshine State because of their woke political theatrics.
And so on. Seems like the perfect setup for a Caitlyn Jenner segment in which she -- yes, a trans person! -- joins Hannity in the LGBT-bashing.

However, it's as if Fox hired Jenner for her marquee value and conservative leanings but didn't fully establish with her that her job on the show was to take the side of the right against LGBT people and their allies, or at least against what Fox regards as LGBT "wokeness." I assume that Fox is trying to position itself as tolerant of LGBT people because it likes the ones who are conservative, which is the approach it takes to Black people (Owens, Clarence Thomas, Ben Carson, Tim Scott, Larry Elder, and the like are all good people, according to Fox, while any Black person on the left is evil). It appears that Jenner was brought on to respond to this Hannity monologue but wasn't prepared to say what Fox and Hannity wanted her to say, so in the ensuing discussion she and the host mostly talked in generalities, and never directly addressed what Hannity said at the outset.
HANNITY: ... One thing you said to me when I heard -- and we've known each other for many, many years, we go back decades -- you said, you know, I did all this stuff on reality TV, I enjoyed it, I had fun doing it, and all your obvious accomplishments in athletics -- "I'm over that part of my life. This country's in deep trouble." That's where your head is at. That's where your focus is.

JENNER: It certainly is. That's one of the reasons I ran for governor, is -- we have to stand up. America has to have a stand-up mentality. Yes, I have done a lot in my life, going all the way back to the Olympics. I had a lot of talks, actually, even with you, Sean, and other people at Fox from when we were negotiating this deal, as you know. As you might know, I am trans, but I'm not a trans activist. That's just one part of my life. There's so much more to me. But I think in the next -- in the midterms coming up, LGBT issues are going to be very big issues, and I'm looking forward to covering those. But there's so much more to me than that. Obviously in 1976 -- I think was the best Olympics of all time. It was our bicentennial, our country was two hundred years old, patriotism was at its height. I have been a patriot my whole life.
And we're completely off the subject. We get a shout-out to Jenner's mom, and to her late father who fought in World War II, and to the flag.

I suspect we're hearing some of what was hashed out in Jenner's negotiations with Fox -- she didn't want to be primarily the LGBT correspondent, which is what Fox wanted her to be, but they made a deal and now she's being asked to do what she insisted she didn't want to do. Hannity is acceding to her wishes by not demanding culture war from her right away.

Hannity tries to steer her back to the subject, gingerly:
HANNITY: Let me ask you this, 'cause -- and you can talk about a variety of subjects. You know, the case of Florida, first of all, the word "gay" is not in the bill, you know, so it's ridiculous. You're talking about kids pre-K through third grade. Now, most of our kids can't graduate with a reading level that is proficient. We're not proficient in math, science, English -- you know, the important core issues. How about we teach the kids that, and then if parents and schools, if they want to have all these woke classes after school, the parents can opt their kids in, let's do it that way, but let's educate our kids with the basics first. Good idea or bad idea?
Jenner shrugs and says "Great," as if she's saying, Yeah, whatever you want me to agree to, I'll agree to, Sean. Let's just get this over with.

I'll cue that moment up for you. It's priceless:



She's not the traitor they want. She wants to be a mid-twentieth-century country-club Republican talking in vague generalities about patriotism and they want her to be the LGBT opponent of LGBT rights. I'm sure eventually Fox will give up on her and hire Herschel Walker's gay right-wing son, or rehabilitate Milo Yiannopoulos. I expect Jenner to make very few appearances on Fox, and to be phased out relatively soon.

Thursday, March 31, 2022

IF FEAR OF THE LOSS OF WHITE DOMINANCE ISN'T ENOUGH, REPUBLICANS HAVE PLENTY OF OTHER WAYS TO STOKE YOUR RAGE

John Stoehr of The Editorial Board believes Republican politics is very simple:
Guns, abortion, immigration – what binds these “hot button” issues together in the Republican mind? Well, white supremacy, obviously.

I say “obviously” because there was a long period when I thought the defense of whiteness at society’s center, which is clear when you bother looking, couldn’t be right. It was just too simple.

But then I learned, thanks to effort, study and the influence of people who knew better, that white supremacy is no simple thing at all. It can’t be, as it’s the principle organizing the whole of our society.
I'm guessing that many of you agree with this. I'm not so sure. White supremacy might be the main component of GOP politics, but is it everything to Republicans? Don't Republicans hate a lot of other people in addition to non-whites?

Stoehr writes:
Guns

America’s first Black president was reelected more than a month before the Sandy Hook massacre during which 20 first-grade kids were shot to pieces down the road from where I live in New Haven.

The Republicans had a choice to make. They could turn away from a seditionary interpretation of the Second Amendment and toward good and sensible gun legislation to prevent other kids dying in cold blood.

Or they could lean into a seditionary interpretation of the Second Amendment on account of democracy having yielded another term for the first Black president who signaled the end of “our way of life.”

Do the right thing – let kids live? Do the wrong thing – let kids die? You know the answer. The Republicans and their white supporters would rather die, literally, than be replaced at the center of power. It was a fateful choice. The land is soaked by the blood of legions.

Dead kids were the price for protecting whiteness.
Really? The price for protecting whiteness was ... letting a mostly white group of very young children die?


You'll say, "Well, those kids were from Connecticut, which is liberal. Republicans didn't care if they died." Parkland, Florida, where there was another mass slaughter of mostly white young people, was also fairly liberal. But the right doesn't care even when there's a mass slaughter of churchgoing white Texans. Here's a tweet that was posted yesterday by wingnutty Kentucky congressman Thomas Massie:


Willeford did end this mass shooting, but only after 26 people died and 22 were wounded.

This group of victims was mostly white as well:


Wouldn't a party whose prime directive is taking care of white people want to keep people like this from dying? But I'd argue that the Republican Party isn't primarily concerned with taking care of white people. It's primarily concerned with stirring up any culture war outrage that will induce white people -- and non-white people, if possible -- to vote Republican so Republicans can continue winning elections and cutting taxes and regulations for rich people and giant corporations.

Very, very frequently, those culture war outrages have a racist component. But Republicans will use anything that works. They also like to make their voters hate advocates of gun control, whom they portray as either lily-livered, Prius-driving, soy-latte-swilling pajama boys or people of other gender identities who ally themselves with these half-men. Many of these demonized opponents of gun violence are white, but they're still the enemy to the GOP.

Stoehr moves on to abortion:
The Republicans are sacrificing the lives of children on the altar of whiteness while appearing oh-so-concerned about unborn children. But the pro-life movement doesn’t fear for all kids, just white ones.

Pro-life means pro-white.
Um ... I guess it is, although the GOP propaganda machine deploys people like Candace Owens to bewail the fact that Blacks can legally get abortions.


I know that this is meant to appeal to white people (See? Liberals are the real racists!), but Republicans also want to increase their share of the non-white vote (which they did in 2020).

And even if you buy Stoehr's notion that anger about abortion is anger about the loss of white babies -- rather than just another way to make GOP voters hate liberal Democrats, by painting them as depraved and evil -- why don't Republicans support any policies that actually help white people to raise children? Republicans supported aid to families during the first year of the pandemic when Donald Trump needed to dole out largesse in an election year, but they're very much opposed to such aid in general. They don't support paid family leave or universal health care. They support budgets that shift the tax burden from wealthy people to ordinary people, not the other way around. They talk a lot about "globalist" companies shippping jobs overseas, but they never want to punish them for doing so. They rail against undocumented immigrants, arguing that these workers hold down wages for native-born Americans, but they never crack down on the companies that hire these immigrants. You'd almost think they're lying when they refer to their party as the party of the working class.

I know that the obvious response to this is that Republicans don't want to support programs that benefit working-class whites because those programs will also aid Those People. But by definition, any such program will help more white people, simply because, in America, there are more white people. Other right-populist countries find ways to help the Volk -- in Hungary, for instance, some aid is expressly intended to improve the birthrate (though it's not working) -- but in America, when Republicans run the country, the message is "Let them eat the culture war." Republicans simply don't bother to aid their voters.

And just as Republicans tolerate the mass slaughter (of whites and others) that's the inevitable by-product of their gun culture, they also tolerate an approach to the COVID pandemic that now kills Republicans at a faster rate than Democrats -- and their voters are fine with that, because the ones who haven't died yet would rather be angry than safe.

Stoehr says that the Republican Party "has mainstreamed ‘the great replacement’" theory. He's right, but that doesn't mean the GOP actually wants to preserve the white race. It just wants to make enough people angry -- about increasing multiculturalism, but also about a hundred other alleged outrages -- to keep winning every election forever.

GAIL COLLINS GOES GREEN LANTERNIST ON GUNS

We're seeing a rise in the use of "ghost guns" -- guns with no serial numbers that are made from kits or printed on 3D printers -- and Gail Collins concludes that this is all President Biden's fault:
Mark this on your April calendar: Joe Biden does something about ghost guns.

OK, just sort of. But let’s be thankful for a start.
April is when we've been told to expect a new rule on ghost guns from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. Collins blames Biden for the fact that this is taking so long, and barely acknowledges the other responsible parties.
And how’s Biden, who clearly sees himself as a champion of gun safety regulation, doing? “It depends on what your expectations were,” [Connecticut senator Richard] Blumenthal said, carefully. While many anti-gun activists say they’ve been disappointed, Blumenthal still has a lot of hope. “He’s more passionate and determined than any president in my memory,” the senator said....

Biden’s been consistent, if not always successful. His first attempt to name a director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives imploded when the Second Amendment lobby managed to torpedo the nomination of gun control activist David Chipman last year. “Either this was impossible to win or the strategy failed,” Chipman said afterward — an analysis that could be used for many, many administration encounters with the United States Senate.
Maybe Biden shouldn't have imagined that he could win approval for an ATF director who works for the Giffords gun control organization -- but let's not overlook the automatic opposition of every Republican in the Senate, which Collins implies is somehow Biden's fault. And let's also put some of the blame on members of the Senate Democratic caucus:
... several Democrats from states with high gun ownership signaled to the White House they were uncomfortable with Chipman serving as the nation’s top weapons regulator.

Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Jon Tester of Montana, and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona were undecided on Chipman. At the same time, Maine’s Angus King, an independent who votes with the Democrats, told the White House he was a likely “no.”
The gun lobby also played dirty, as usual:
Mr. Chipman placed most of the blame for his defeat on the gun lobby, in particular the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry trade group that lobbied Mr. King and others.

And he singled out Lawrence G. Keane, a top executive at the group, for posting a picture on its website showing a federal agent — falsely identified in a tabloid article as a young Mr. Chipman — standing in the smoldering debris of the Branch Davidian compound in 1993, which he said prompted a spate of online threats.

“Larry Keane put up a photo of me that he knew was false, trying to get me killed,” said Mr. Chipman, who arrived in Waco, Texas, to assist in the investigation long after the A.T.F. had begun an assault that eventually resulted in the deaths of 82 civilians and four federal agents.
Keane feels terrible about this unfortunate mistake.
Mr. Keane, in a phone interview, called the accusation “categorically false,” adding that “the moment we found out that it was in fact not him, we pulled it from our website. If I had known it wasn’t him, we would never have used the photograph.”
Although Keene also blames the victim for all the death threats, because how dare Chipman show his face in public when he believes what he believes about guns.
He acknowledged that Mr. Chipman was the subject of death threats, which he called “extremely unfortunate and uncalled-for.” But he said Mr. Biden never should have nominated someone as belligerent to gun owners, manufacturers and dealers as Mr. Chipman.
Did the Biden administration handle this well? Okay, not really.
Mr. Chipman lauded the dedication of the Justice Department team, but said his attempts to get them to send reporters documents debunking the Waco claim failed — and he finally had to give journalists the information himself after concluding “no one’s defending me.”

Administration officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, said that they quietly countered negative stories about Mr. Chipman, but believed the under-the-radar media strategy was the wisest course.
This is the classic Biden administration mistake -- believing that quiet diplomacy works with radical zealots -- but at least some of the blame ought to fall on the radical zealots themselves.

Collins continues:
But Biden, who’s still without a permanent A.T.F. director, did direct the Department of Justice to help stop ghost gun proliferation. That was a year ago. The department complied rather quickly, opening the new rules for comment last May. Public comment closed in August and then ....

Well, here we are. Waiting for word.

Biden also requested a ton of money for the A.T.F. in his budget — presuming the budget gets passed and there’s a new director who’ll know how to spend it.
May I point out here that losing a battle to get an ATF head approved is not a uniquely Bidenesque failure?
For the most part, the bureau has been operating under acting directors since Congress changed the position into an executive branch appointment that requires Senate approval in 2006.

The Senate has confirmed only one ATF director, approving Barack Obama’s acting director, B. Todd Jones, in a 53-42 vote in 2013.

President Donald Trump was forced to withdraw his ATF nominee, former Fraternal Order of Police President Chuck Canterbury, after GOP senators refused to provide the votes to advance him out of committee. Republicans cited concerns that Canterbury’s support of the Second Amendment was weak.
Collins concludes, glibly:
So how’s the president doing? Feel free to vote:

A. Ghost guns! Hey, he’s got a start.

B. Ghost guns! Good grief, is that all he’s done?

C. Well, as long as he delivers before the Easter Egg Roll.
Biden has struggled. He's made strategic miscalculations. There's no question about that.

But the belief that Biden could have turned all this around if he'd just set his mind to it is pure Green Lanternism -- "the belief that the president can achieve any political or policy objective if only he tries hard enough or uses the right tactics." The gun lobby has near-total control over firearms policy in America. It acts in a singularly thuggish way. Its wishes are every Republican's command --yes, even the "good" ones -- and it has a few Democrats on a short leash as well. If we couldn't change the balance of power against these sleazebags after Sandy Hook and Parkland, then we have a lot of gall expecting Joe Biden to do significantly better.