Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass.

Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.

Saturday, April 30, 2022

Preacher: Teachers “grooming” kids should be beheaded on live TV

 After falsely calling LGBTQ-accepting teachers “groomers,” Jason Graber called for their executions

A fundamentalist Christian preacher is calling for LGBTQ-accepting teachers to be shot in the head or beheaded on live television because he believes the conservative lie that they’re “grooming” kids.

New Independent Fundamentalist Baptist preacher Jason Graber of Sure Foundation Baptist Church in Spokane, Washington made the comments last week during a weeknight service. It’s not clear from the video how many people were in the church that night.

Still, for a guy who’s previously called for the execution of gay people, it’s a sign that he’s taking his fundamentalism in an even more extreme direction.

https://twitter.com/hemantmehta/status/1518564439263531008?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1518564439263531008%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fonlysky.media%2Fhemant-mehta%2Fpreacher-teachers-grooming-kids-should-be-beheaded-on-live-tv%2F

… And apparently… states back East, you know, they’re having all kinds of… this grooming stuff going on in schools today

… Apparently in schools today, they’re literally grooming the kids to… be just ready to be taken advantage of…

… Any teacher that would… show this type of lewd… I mean, basically what I’ve heard is that
they’re… basically, they’re showing pornographic images to children. To young children. Which is against the law—I’m pretty sure it’s… I think it’s a felony—but, you know what? Preachers need to get up and say… well, teachers that do this, they should be put to death. They need to be taken out and shot in the back of the head. Because they’re… they’re pedophiles!

Any teacher that’s gonna show pornographic images to young children, they are a predator! And the reason that they’re doing that is because they want to take advantage of young children…

… And these teachers, they’re showing these pornographic images to these young children, and literally grooming them, those teachers need to have the fear of God put in them. And you know what? That’s what the government is for. In Romans 13, the Bible talks about that the government’s job is to execute judgment with the sword, okay? So maybe… we need to put aside the guns and we need to get the sword back out. And we need to make these executions public. We need to find these teachers that are showing pornographic images and grooming children, we need to find them, try them, get the television out, we need to get FOX News, CNN, every YouTube channel out there, put it on television. We need to show them being publicly beheaded.

That’s what needs to happen to these people. Because you know what? Otherwise our nation is gonna turn into a literal Sodom and Gomorrah.

He went from the claim that teachers are showing pornographic images to kids (which is a lie), to saying they must be pedophiles (a lie), to saying they should be executed with a gun to the head (WTF…), to saying we should publicly behead those teachers on live television (WTF²).

Somewhere in there, he tried to mitigate his violent fever dreams by saying the government ought to do this, not that vigilantes in the congregation should take it upon themselves, but it doesn’t make this any better. The end result is that he wants liberal teachers, including LGBTQ teachers and their allies, to be murdered by someone… because he blindly accepts the right-wing conspiracy theory that teaching tolerance, inclusion, kindness, and non-whitewashed U.S. history amounts to predatory behavior.

How long will it take before someone in that congregation decides he should take the law into his own hands and make Jesus proud?

https://onlysky.media/hemant-mehta/preacher-teachers-grooming-kids-should-be-beheaded-on-live-tv/?__vfz=medium%3Dstandalone_content_recirculation_with_ads

White Replacement Theory and the erosion of democracy

A warning sign on the street


Context
After the ex-president won the 2016 election, with Putin's probably necessary help, theories about what happened started circulating. One prominent early theory held that many people hated Hillary and/or were miffed at economic stagnation. Also in the mix was an argument that rural folk were indignant over arrogant urban elites looking down their noses at rural bumpkins. They believed the hated urban elites disrespected them and their way of life. Another was that low information voters were being deceived and manipulated by divisive partisan echo chambers like Faux News. Other theories postulated growing acceptance of crackpot, divisive conspiracy theories, e.g., Democrats are lizard people, Democrats want to outlaw all guns, make Christianity illegal and then convert Christians to atheists in re-education camps, etc. 

There was some truth in all of those theories. For example, data indicated that some people really did hate the real and/or Republican propaganda version of Hillary*** and would not vote for her, so they voted for no one or for the ex-president. But researchers probing the mystery of 2016, started to identify a different reason as the possible most important source of support for the ex-president. It was a combination of (i) unease among White people, especially Christian men, about their and privileges rights being subordinated to racial and ethnic minorities, and (ii) unease about a perception of America's weakening place in the world. Theis idea came to be called White Replacement Theory or some variant that gets at the concept such as ethnic antagonism. It is discussed in this interview that NPR broadcast in 2021 with an expert, Kathleen Belew. Republican propaganda played on White fear to help the GOP to create unwarranted distrust, unwarranted intolerance, irrational false beliefs in lies, slanders and nonsense, intractable division and polarization, etc.

*** The GOP propaganda version of Hillary included Pizzagate pedophile, Benghazi murderer and email server traitor. Who could ever vote for that horror?


Unhappy White folks


Some of the research
In a 2018 paperStatus threat, not economic hardship, explains the 2016 presidential vote, Researcher Diana Mutz wrote this:
This study evaluates evidence pertaining to popular narratives explaining the American public’s support for Donald J. Trump in the 2016 presidential election. First, using unique representative probability samples of the American public, tracking the same individuals from 2012 to 2016, I examine the “left behind” thesis (that is, the theory that those who lost jobs or experienced stagnant wages due to the loss of manufacturing jobs punished the incumbent party for their economic misfortunes). Second, I consider the possibility that status threat felt by the dwindling proportion of traditionally high-status Americans (i.e., Whites, Christians, and men) as well as by those who perceive America’s global dominance as threatened combined to increase support for the candidate who emphasized reestablishing status hierarchies of the past. Results do not support an interpretation of the election based on pocketbook economic concerns. .... Candidate preferences in 2016 reflected increasing anxiety among high-status groups rather than complaints about past treatment among low-status groups. Both growing domestic racial diversity and globalization contributed to a sense that White Americans are under siege by these engines of change. 
For the first time since Europeans arrived in this country, White Americans are being told that they will soon be a minority race. The declining White share of the national population is unlikely to change white Americans’ status as the most economically well-off racial group, but symbolically, it threatens some Whites’ sense of dominance over social and political priorities. Furthermore, when confronted with evidence of racial progress, whites feel threatened and experience lower levels of self-worth relative to a control group. They also perceive greater anti-White bias as a means of regaining those lost feelings of self-worth.
Some recent posts here have emphasized (for about the 40th time) the nearly complete loyalty shift among Republican politicians and elites from nobler ideals such as respect for democracy, the Constitution and truth to more base impulses, e.g., (i) urges to neo-fascism, (ii) acceptance of harsh rule by a corrupt, cynical strong man and elites, and (iii) heavy reliance on bitterly divisive propaganda-fueled mendacity, slanders and crackpottery. Fear of White replacement appears to be linked to the Republican Party shift away from democracy. A 2020 research paper by Larry Bartels, Ethnic antagonism erodes Republicans’ commitment to democracy, comments:
Growing partisan polarization and democratic “backsliding” in various parts of the world have raised concerns about the attachment of ordinary Americans to democratic institutions and procedures. I find that substantial numbers of Republicans endorse statements contemplating violations of key democratic norms, including respect for the law and for the outcomes of elections and eschewing the use of force in pursuit of political ends. The strongest predictor by far of these antidemocratic attitudes is ethnic antagonism—especially concerns about the political power and claims on government resources of immigrants, African-Americans, and Latinos. The strong tendency of ethnocentric Republicans to countenance violence and lawlessness, even prospectively and hypothetically, underlines the significance of ethnic conflict in contemporary US politics.

Most Republicans in a January 2020 survey agreed that “the traditional American way of life is disappearing so fast that we may have to use force to save it.” More than 40% agreed that “a time will come when patriotic Americans have to take the law into their own hands.” (In both cases, most of the rest said they were unsure; only one in four or five disagreed.) I use 127 survey items to measure six potential bases of these and other antidemocratic sentiments: partisan affect, enthusiasm for President Trump, political cynicism, economic conservatism, cultural conservatism, and ethnic antagonism. The strongest predictor by far, for the Republican rank-and-file as a whole and for a variety of subgroups defined by education, locale, sex, and political attitudes, is ethnic antagonism—especially concerns about the political power and claims on government resources of immigrants, African-Americans, and Latinos. The corrosive impact of ethnic antagonism on Republicans’ commitment to democracy underlines the significance of ethnic conflict in contemporary US politics. 
The support expressed by many Republicans for violations of a variety of crucial democratic norms is primarily attributable not to partisan affect, enthusiasm for President Trump, political cynicism, economic conservatism, or general cultural conservatism, but to what I have termed ethnic antagonism. 
The single survey item with the highest average correlation with antidemocratic sentiments is not a measure of attitudes toward Trump, but an item inviting respondents to agree that  “discrimination against whites is as big a problem today as discrimination against blacks and other minorities.”

White replacement and illegal immigration already is and will be   
a major focus of Republican propaganda in the 2022 elections

Inflation and this issue will probably be key factors in the Democrats 
losing the House and Senate in 2022, assuming they lose  

Friday, April 29, 2022

Lawsuit over corporate lies about recycling plastics

As discussed here before, it is no secret that the oil and chemical industries tricked the American people into accepting single use plastics as harmless conveniences. The corporate public relations propaganda in the 1970s was that plastics are mostly recyclable. If fact most plastics were not and still are not recyclable. 

To date, about 9% of all plastics ever made have been recycled. About 91% is in landfills, laying on the ground, in fresh waters and in the oceans. In other words, this is a public relations lie:

Symbols of deceit - ~90% of it isn't recyclable, 
making the recycling assertion 100% a lie


In an odd lawsuit, California is suing over the recycling lie. NPR writes:
Accusing the country's largest oil and gas companies of "a half-century campaign of deception," California's attorney general opened an investigation Thursday into the possible role the companies played promoting the idea that plastics could be recycled, in an effort to manipulate the public to buy more of it.

Attorney General Rob Bonta said the fossil fuel industry benefited financially from the industry's misleading statements which he said go back decades. Bonta has so far subpoenaed ExxonMobil seeking information and documents.

"For more than half a century, the plastics industry has engaged in an aggressive campaign to deceive the public, perpetuating a myth that recycling can solve the plastics crisis," Bonta said. "The truth is: The vast majority of plastic cannot be recycled."

The announcement cited NPR and the PBS series Frontline's 2020 investigation into the oil and gas industry which uncovered documents showing top officials knew that recycling plastic was unlikely to work but spent tens of millions of dollars telling the public the opposite. Starting in the 1980s, the industry launched dozens of ads, nonprofits, and campaigns touting the benefits of recycling plastic – and placing the responsibility on consumers – even as their own documents warned that recycling was "infeasible" and that there was "serious doubt" that plastic recycling "can ever be made viable on an economic basis," the investigation found.  
In a statement, ExxonMobil said it rejects the allegations made by the California attorney general, and highlighted that it is the first company to use what it referred to as an "advanced recycling technology" to recycle used plastic.

"We are focused on solutions and meritless allegations like these distract from the important collaborative work that is underway to enhance waste management and improve circularity," the statement said.

The industry group, the American Chemistry Council, said in a statement it is committed to keeping plastic out of the environment and has "proposed comprehensive and bold actions at the state, federal, and international levels."
One can imagine that once this lawsuit reaches our beloved neo-fascist, Christian nationalist, laissez-faire capitalist, Republican Supreme Court, the lawsuit will very likely be dismissed for obvious reasons. A snowball's chance in hell comes to mind. The rationale is simple: Lying to and deceiving the public is legal. Corporations have almost unlimited power not only to lie and deceive, but also to privatize and trickle profits up, while socializing damage, risk and costs including environmental damage. That's just laissez-faire capitalism doing its usual thing.

The theory explained: Sparrows pick through the horse packaging  
to find a few oats that might pass through and fall onto the ground

  
As a matter of fact, the corporations and their propagandists are lying when they say they are focused on solutions. What a load of crap. The allegations are not meritless. 

It is also a lie for the corporations to say that this lawsuit distracts from collaborative work that is underway to enhance waste management and improve circularity. That is meaningless blither. The lawsuit in no way, shape or form distracts from any corporate effort to recycle or "improve circularity." 

That reasoning is so ridiculous that it openly insults the public. ExxonMobil might as well also claim that the lawsuit has caused toilets at corporate worksites to get blocked up and that is causing emotional distress among workers. Hell, ExxonMobil might as well also claim that the lawsuit caused Russia to invade Ukraine and the Democrats to steal the 2020 election.

This is just routine corporate public relations in action. Stupid as it is, it will work with millions of people. It will definitely work with all or nearly all Republicans in congress. That sad fact reminds me of these fun observations by two social scientists in 2016:
“. . . . the typical citizen drops down to a lower level of mental performance as soon as he enters the political field. He argues and analyzes in a way which he would readily recognize as infantile within the sphere of his real interests. . . . cherished ideas and judgments we bring to politics are stereotypes and simplifications with little room for adjustment as the facts change. . . . . the real environment is altogether too big, too complex, and too fleeting for direct acquaintance. We are not equipped to deal with so much subtlety, so much variety, so many permutations and combinations. Although we have to act in that environment, we have to reconstruct it on a simpler model before we can manage it.”

The Christian nationalist Supreme Court supports corporate emotional abuse

Activist Republican judges weigh in 


Supreme Court: No emotional harm awards in some discrimination suits

The Supreme Court split along ideological lines Thursday in dismissing a discrimination lawsuit filed by a deaf and legally blind woman who wanted to sue a physical therapy business for emotional distress.

The court ruled 6 to 3, with conservatives in the majority, saying facilities that receive federal funds under laws such as the Affordable Care Act cannot be held liable when the harm alleged is emotional rather than a financial loss.

A district judge dismissed the suit because it said Cummings could not pursue damages based on emotional harm, and a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit agreed.

So did Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the majority. He said the general rule is that damages for emotional distress are available only in “highly unusual” contracts, and there was no reason to believe it covered the kind of agreements such facilities enter into regarding federal funds.
It is not just the case that Republican federal judges are merely Christian nationalist theocrats. They are also laissez-faire capitalists and neo-fascist judicial activists. One can look forward to a continuing stream of decisions that take power from consumers, one after another after another, and gives that taken power to companies. The power flows to both for-profit and non-profit human beings called corporations. This is just one example of how the power shift from human people to corporate people is going to play out. 

If you want to give companies more power taken from real humans, vote neo-fascist, vote Republican! If not, go pound sand.

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Nuclear war scenarios



Princeton's Science and Global Security (SGS) does nuclear Armageddon simulations. Their 2019 Plan A comments:
SGS developed a new simulation for a plausible escalating war between the United States and Russia using realistic nuclear force postures, targets and fatality estimates. It is estimated that there would be more than 90 million people dead and injured within the first few hours of the conflict.

This project is motivated by the need to highlight the potentially catastrophic consequences of current US and Russian nuclear war plans. The risk of nuclear war has increased dramatically in the past two years as the United States and Russia have abandoned long-standing nuclear arms control treaties, started to develop new kinds of nuclear weapons and expanded the circumstances in which they might use nuclear weapons.

This four-minute audio-visual piece is based on independent assessments of current U.S. and Russian force postures, nuclear war plans, and nuclear weapons targets. It uses extensive data sets of the nuclear weapons currently deployed, weapon yields, and possible targets for particular weapons, as well as the order of battle estimating which weapons go to which targets in which order in which phase of the war to show the evolution of the nuclear conflict from tactical, to strategic to city-targeting phases.

The resulting immediate fatalities and casualties that would occur in each phase of the conflict are determined using data from NUKEMAP. All fatality estimates are limited to acute deaths from nuclear explosions and would be significantly increased by deaths occurring from nuclear fallout and other long-term effects.




In the months after nuclear war, fatalities from fallout and other long-term effects like lethal radiation exposure, coupled with untreated skin piercing injuries would far surpass deaths from immediate nuclear blasts. The scale of human suffering and death would dwarf everything in prior human history. That includes Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined and multiplied 10-fold. Human deaths would be billions, not just tens of millions.


Acknowledgement: Thanks to PD for bringing Nuclear Princeton and Princeton's SGS effort to my attention.




Tuesday, April 26, 2022

The Left Hand of (Supposed) Darkness

 On ‘sinister,’ ‘dexterity,’ ‘gauche,’ and ‘adroit’

Faux News is the neo-fascist propaganda arm of the neo-fascist Republican Party

CNN on Monday published a slew of text messages between Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and prominent Republican lawmakers and conservative figures — including Hannity. The Jan. 6 committee has already released several texts exchanged between Meadows and Hannity, but the ones released Monday are particularly striking, demonstrating just how firmly the White House had Hannity secured under its thumb.

“Hey. NC gonna be ok?” Hannity wrote Meadows last Nov. 3, asking whether Meadows’ home state of North Carolina was going to go to Trump.

“Stress every vote matters,” Meadows replied. “Get out and vote. On radio.”

“Yes sir,” Hannity wrote. “On it. Any place in particular we need a push”

Meadows pointed to Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Nevada, in addition to North Carolina. “Got it,” Hannity responded. “Everywhere.”  
Twitter user @acyn responded to CNN’s report by pointing out that Hannity has in the past claimed he is “not told what to say” and that “we have always been independent and follow our on path on this show.”  
We now have pretty hard evidence that Hannity’s highly rated show was basically state-run television while the former president was in office.



That speaks for itself.  

Monday, April 25, 2022

When core moral values clash and the question of culpability

Republicans understand moral psychology. Democrats don’t. Republicans have long understood that the elephant is in charge of political behavior, not the rider, and they know how elephants work. Their slogans, political commercials and speeches go straight for the gut . . . . Republicans don’t just aim to cause fear, as some Democrats charge. They trigger the full range of intuitions described by Moral Foundations Theory.” -- Johnathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion, 2012 (the elephant is the very powerful, disciplined unconscious mind and the rider is the very weak, lazy conscious mind - powerful and weak refer to relative data processing bandwidth capacity, ~11 million bits/sec for unconsciousness and up to ~500 bits/sec for consciousness)

Moral Foundations Theory (Wikipdeia): "a social psychological theory intended to explain the origins of and variation in human moral reasoning on the basis of innate, modular foundations. It was first proposed by psychologists Jonathan Haidt, Craig Joseph and Jesse Graham, .... and subsequently developed by a diverse group of collaborators, and popularized in Haidt's book The Righteous Mind. The theory proposes six foundations: Care/Harm, Fairness/Cheating, Loyalty/Betrayal, Authority/Subversion, Sanctity/Degradation, and Liberty/Oppression; while its authors remain open to the addition, subtraction or modification of the set of foundations."



An NPR program Hidden Brain, When Doing Right Feels Wrong, discusses what goes on in our minds when core moral values clash. This goes straight to the heart of what makes ruthless and even crackpot propaganda so effective in the hands of talented demagogues. Using mostly two examples, the program highlights the clash between the normal innate human impulses to be both (1) loyal to family, group, tribe, etc., and (2) fair or honest with oneself and people generally. 

Edward Snowden: The broadcast started with citing Edward Snowden and his leaking of thousands of secret surveillance documents produced by the US National Security Agency and the Five Eyes Intelligence Alliance.[1] The leaked documents embarrassed the US and possibly endangered some American citizens abroad. People polarized into two mindsets about what Snowden did. Snowden fled to Russia and Putin accepted him. Some American firmly believed that Snowden was a traitor who was disloyal to the US, while others firmly believed he was being honest by warning us about US government intrusions into private lives of all kinds of people.

The police officer: The other example cited was by a young Detroit police officer who was offered an illegal way to make a lot of money by breaking into the house of a bookie who kept a lot of cash in a safe in his home. The officer was torn between loyalty to fellow officers and honesty about the law and justice. He chose honesty but he mentally struggled about his betrayal of his fellow officers who he felt close to and trusted with his life. He also felt the sting of criticism and many death threats from people who felt he was a dirty rat. His girlfriend and her child were firebombed (but not hurt) to in an attempt to kill the whistleblower cop. He called the decision to be a whistleblower against his fellow officers "gut wrenching." The reason for that is because the gut is involved in emotional feelings. This officer retired earlier this year.

A key point here is that loyalty is not more or less moral than honesty. They are simply two different innate moral impulses and they can come in conflict. They can be, and routinely are, forced into conflict by demagogues, propagandists and marketers who are acutely aware of these impulses in normal people (not sociopaths, narcissists, etc.). They fully understand much trouble normal people have in resolving moral conflicts. The rider (the conscious mind) did not evolve to question what the moral elephant decides and wants to do. The weak, lazy rider evolved to make up post hoc justifications, not to do critical moral or empirical analysis of what the elephant wants to do or why or even whether it makes any sense at all. 

Often what the elephant wants to do is blithering nonsense dressed up to feel like it makes sense by a political and/or religious demagogue or a special interest. Demagogues, propagandists and marketers know how to make people react emotionally and feel it.
  

The title of Haidt's book, Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion gets right to the point. These conflicts arise and they divide people. Each side of the moral divide sees the other as needing their heads examined. The human mind does not like to hold incompatible beliefs at the same time. What Snowden did was empirically both disloyal and honest, but few people are comfortable with that unstable mental state. Normal cognitive dissonance forces minds into one of two belief states, either disloyal traitor or honest whistleblower. There is little or no room for mutual understanding, but lots of room for distrust, animosity, resentment and false beliefs that support those negative feelings.

The 53 minute broadcast is here for those interested. It is very good. It brings the loyalty vs. honesty moral conflict into clear, sharp focus.


Where does culpability lie?
Republican Party propaganda routinely slanders Democrats and liberals as liars, crooks, evil, tyrannical, and often pedophiles, communists and/or something(s) else bad. Most rank and file Republicans sincerely believe most of these falsehoods. Their minds are trapped in a nasty moral cage. That propaganda is relentless and ruthless. Inconvenient fact, truth and reasoning are almost completely swept away and replaced mostly with lies, slanders, irrational emotional manipulation and/or flawed motivated reasoning. Republican elites and their propaganda forces such as Faux News, know exactly what they are doing. They have successfully played on the loyalty moral value to the extent that honesty has now been swept almost completely away.

Think about it. Why has decades of Republican propaganda relentlessly attacked the credibility and honesty of the free press, Democrats, democracy, inconvenient facts and truths, e.g., climate science, experts bearing inconvenient messages, and expertise itself. That is done to build and maintain a clash between loyalty to the GOP and its tribe-cult against inconvenient truth and honesty. Republican lies and crimes are denied and/or acceptable, while the same by Democrats are vilified as horrors. Why did the ex-president elevate loyalty to himself as a core moral value over loyalty to the Constitution, inconvenient truth, democracy and the rule of law? The GOP has successfully built a social norm and tribe/cult where loyalty routinely trumps honesty. 

The ex-president, like all other professional Republican propagandists are fully aware of the moral foundations of humans doing politics, religion and ideology generally. They get it. Or, as Haidt put it, Republicans understand moral psychology. Democrats don’t.” 


Question: Who or what is more culpable for false beliefs and bad, anti-democratic behavior, demagogic Republican elites spewing toxic propaganda, or the deceived, manipulated  and betrayed rank and file? In other words, is propaganda is irrelevant and adults are responsible for their own beliefs and behaviors, true, false, good, bad, smart, stupid, neutral or ambiguous?[2]



Footnotes: 
1. Wikipedia comments on Snowden: A subject of controversy, Snowden has been variously called a traitor,[7] a hero,[8] a whistleblower,[9] a dissident,[10] a coward,[11] and a patriot.[12] U.S. officials condemned his actions as having done "grave damage" to the U.S. intelligence capabilities.[13] Snowden has defended his leaks as an effort "to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them."[14] His disclosures have fueled debates over mass surveillance, government secrecy, and the balance between national security and information privacy, something that he has said he intended to do in retrospective interviews.[15]

2. Or, as Tom Nichols once put it, “. . . . there is only one group of people who must bear the ultimate responsibility for this state of affairs, and only they can change any of it: the citizens of the United States of America.” That raises a question: How can deceived and manipulated citizens change a state of affairs or problem they are unaware of because they have been deceived and manipulated? 

What is the plan to secure peace in Ukraine and Europe? Roundtable Discussion with Fareed Zakaria

 

Yesterday Fareed Zakaria was joined by David Milliband, Anne-Marie Slaughter and former diplomat, Kashore Mahbubani to discuss and attempt to answer the questions, in Zakaria's own terms, A)"What is the West's long game plan to secure peace in Ukraine and Europe?[and] B) What should it be?" I have included a link to the approx. 7 min. video at CNN's website, but have also selected excerpts from the discussion here. Note on names: AMS = Anne-Marie Slaughter; DM = David Milliband and Kishore Mahbubani. FZ is, of course, the host, Fareed Zakaria.

FZ: Anne-Marie, what should the long game be?

AMS: So the first part of that game has to be simply to stop the fighting. We're going to see the complete destruction of eastern and southern Ukraine. And if you look at what happened after 2014 when they took over part of eastern Ukraine and Crimea, it can just go forever, the fighting. So we have to stop the fighting.

Second, however, we actually need a geopolitical configuration that is not Russia and China, Europe and the United States, and the rest of the world. And if you look at what happened with the human rights vote, you saw India, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, Egypt, Indonesia all abstained. That is not a good geopolitical configuration.

So the United States actually wants not to isolate Russia and push it closer to China for the long term. And then longest of all, the United States needs to think about what is a European security architecture that makes Europe actually whole and free and safe? I don't think we get there with Putin in power. But Putin's not going to be in power forever and we actually have to think about the next couple of decades where we can protect Ukraine but Russia is once again integrated into Europe.

 DM: I think Anne-Marie is absolutely right to herald or to point out that while the West is more united than it was before, the world is equally divided and the votes that she's referred to at the U.N. should be fundamental. I'm sure Kishore will come in on this. But from my point of view, the strategy has to be about more than a Europe whole and free, it has to be a world that has some rules to govern the way in which it's run. 

 FZ: Kishore, let's get to precisely this issue, why is it that, you know, when people think about democracy versus autocracy, the problem with that formulation, as David very well put it, is some of the world's largest democracies are at best sitting on the fence? India, Indonesia, Brazil, even Mexico. What do you think is going on from your perspective?

KM: Well, I think, as you know, when Russia invaded Ukraine, most of the world was horrified. It was terrible. And there was a great global consensus against it. But now I share the concerns of Anne-Marie and David that clearly the West, as you know, represents 12 percent of the world's population, 88 percent lives outside the West. 

And if the perception of the 88 percent has shifted in the last three months at all, and what they see now is on the one hand, and I agree with David, that the legal moral dimension here that Russia is wrong but the rest of the world can also see that this is a geopolitical game where the West is trying to weaken Russia and not really searching for peace in Russia. And that's why the rest of the world saying, OK, if that's going to be your game in Ukraine, if you want to weaken Russia, you want to weaken Putin, that's your agenda, that's not our agenda.

Our agenda is to create a better world of rules and predictability, and that's what the rest of the world will want to see, some kind of a fair idea of where are we going with all of these, you know, moves in Ukraine? What's the destination?

ZM: But, Kishore, it's Putin who doesn't want to negotiate and until the Russians feel that they are forced to the negotiating table, you're not going to get a peace deal. Zelenskyy has from day one offered to negotiate and has offered major concessions publicly, like Ukrainian neutrality and no NATO. It is Putin who is not doing it because it appears he wants greater control over Ukraine. What do you do then?  

MB: Well, you know, I was a diplomat for 33 years, Fareed, as you know. And in diplomacy it's not what people say publicly that is their position, it's what they're prepared to negotiate privately. And as you know, our good friend Henry Kissinger suggested a formula in 2013 in this "Washington Post" article* and I truly do believe that what Henry Kissinger proposed in 2014, of course it's got to be amended because we're in 2022, the basic outlines where Ukraine is free to choose its own destiny, free to join the European Union but not join  NATO clearly and explicitly,  and also work out some kind of compromise between the eastern and western sections of the country-- don't ban Russia from the country, for example. So there are ways and means of achieving a diplomatic settlement, and that's the tragedy of Ukraine. Because the outline of a settlement was given by Henry Kissinger 8 years ago.

 
ZF: David Miliband, you know, again, it feels to me like Zelenskyy has proposed variations of what Kishore is talking about.  

DM: I think you're right. Remember George Kennan said 50 or 60 years ago, Russia's tragedy is that it can only see Ukraine either as a vassel or an enemy**. And what he said then is actually Russia's crime today because what they've done is invade and they bring state. And the challenge that you're laying down I think is absolutely right, the Ukrainians are not the aggressors here.

The unspeakable scenes that we're seeing in Mariupol that I fear are going to be repeated in other parts of the east of the country, whether it's more besiegement to come. What we have here is a classic scissors effect, where the greater and greater misery within Ukraine is going to find ripple effects around the world because remember the impact on food prices, the impact on energy prices, the impact on -- at a time of a global debt crisis that's looming for too many emerging economies. Those are forces that have been unleashed by this invasion***.

But it's not an invasion that has been precipitated by any actions on the part of the Ukrainians. And that's why I come back down to this question, but the choice lies in Moscow. If it insists on seeing a vassal or enemy next door in Ukraine, it's a recipe for the kind of pulverization obliteration that's going on at the moment.

FZ:Anne-Marie, the point David was making about the agency of the Ukrainian people, they have a voice, they have a vote. Well, now you have the Swedes and Finns saying they want to be part of NATO. Not for sure but they seem to be moving along that track. What should NATO do in that circumstance?

AMS: NATO should take its time above all. There's a real opportunity here to think much more creatively about European security architectures and Western security architectures that do not simply expand NATO ever further to the Russian border, which honestly, it's not at all clear that NATO will accept, that the American people will accept; but more importantly you can have the United States, Canada, Germany, Britain, with a guarantee, a security guarantee for Finland and Sweden, for really the Nords.

You can think about a security architecture that works but then allows, again, over the course of decades for a far more flexible set of European security architectures that eventually would include Russia.
Russia is part of Europe, right? Russia is part of Europe. If you think about Western literature, music, art, math, all of that, that is the Russian people.

And we're not going to have security in this century, nor are we going to be able to work on the global problems that menace all of us unless we can at least imagine a security architecture that includes Russia. This moment of possibility expansion of NATO should be a trigger for rethinking, not for simply, mildly expanding.

(The conversation then turns to the Marine Le Pen/Emmanuel Macron runoff that took place yesterday, and which Macron won).

****************************************************************************

Notes and Remarks:

* Kissinger's 2014 article on peace in Ukraine can be read here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/henry-kissinger-to-settle-the-ukraine-crisis-start-at-the-end/2014/03/05/46dad868-a496-11e3-8466-d34c451760b9_story.htm

**David Milliband here misquotes George Kennan, and takes the inexact quote out of its original context. As Fareed Zakaria writes of the original quote in a NYT article: "In 1944, having dinner with the Polish prime minister, who had received encouraging words of support from the Russians for the country’s independence, Kennan was sure that no matter what anyone said, the Poles would end up badly. “The jealous and intolerant eye of the Kremlin can distinguish, in the end, only vassals and enemies, and the neighbors of Russia, if they do not wish to be one, must reconcile themselves to being the other.”  https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/23/books/review/the-kennan-diaries-by-george-f-kennan.html

The "jealous and intolerant eye of the Kremlin" Kennan was referring to is, of course, that of Joseph Stalin who then had an iron grip on the Soviet State, and had shown this "jealousy and intolerance" in the then-recent Molotov-Ribbontrop Pact Stalin made with Hitler. In that pact (later broken by Hitler thus plunging the USSR into the 2nd World War) the two tyrants agreed to maintain peaceful relations with one another. The treaty also contained a "secret protocol" that carved German and Soviet spheres of influence up across Eastern Europe including Poland, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, Finland and Bessarabia (where "Transnistria" in Moldova is today).  Kennan's "jealous and intolerant eye... seeing only vassals and enemies" in its neighborhood had nothing to do with post-Soviet Russia. When asked in a PBS interview if he agreed with Henry Kissinger's assessment of Russians as being "by historical nature expansionist and imperialistic," Kennan said, "No. That's a dangerous formulation, and a dangerous way of thinking," adding that "our differences in the Cold War were with the Soviet regime" and not Russian "National Character"  conceived in terms of an imperialistic stereotype. (see: https://www.scribd.com/audiobook/375659791/George-Kennan-At-A-Century-s-Ending )

It is not surprising that Milliband, a "third way" New Labour man and avid interventionist ala Tony Blair, would-- perhaps accidentally-- confuse Stalin's Kremlin of 1944 with Russia in the 20th and 21st centuries.

*** It is, of course, true that the Russian invasion of Ukraine has not only devastated the people and land of Ukraine, but as DM says, had an "impact on food prices [and] energy prices...at a time of a global debt crisis that's looming for too many emerging economies." What he doesn't mention is the manner in which those impacts are greatly amplified by an unprecedented sanctions regime whose effects are shouldered disproportionately by the so-called "Global South"-- basically the poorer countries. The Biden Admin has responded to their reluctance to get on board with the sanctions with moralistic  pressure and threats. In a speech just before the IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Washington last week, Treasury Sec.  Jessica Yellin warned all countries that any attempt to "undercut sanctions" would be met with "serious consequences." From the speech:

"Let me now say a few words to those countries that are currently sitting on the fence, perhaps seeing an opportunity to gain by preserving their relationship with Russia and backfilling the void left
by others. Such motivations are shortsighted,” she said at the Atlantic Council. “And let’s be clear, the unified coalition of sanctioning countries will not be indifferent to actions that undermine the sanctions we’ve put in place." 
https://www.wsj.com/articles/yellen-warns-nations-staying-neutral-in-russias-war-with-ukraine-11649879113?mod=saved_content

Press Sec. Jen Psaki added the following: 

"In this moment where you have a dictator invading another country targeting civilians, you have to contemplate what side of history you want to be on. And that is true for any country around the world."(ibid) 

What none of these people address is the unmet needs (e.g. food, energy and medical supplies) that sanctions disrupt in these already significantly impoverished nations (if you use, say GDP per capita as an indicator). Yes, the war itself is will cause, as Zelensky warns, a global food crisis with humanitarian effects if the fighting doesn't stop-- if Ukranians can't sow and reap. But the sanctions augment such problems greatly. 

Just to take one of many examples-- one country in Africa, and not even the poorest one-- Egypt. Russia and Ukraine account for about 30% of the world's global wheat exports. Before the war, the 2 countries supplied more than 80% of Egypt's wheat needs, according to the USDA.  Not only has the war made agriculture in Ukraine all but impossible, but the sanctions have disrupted supply chains by cutting off access to affordable wheat from the Black Sea. To ship most of these commodities, they have to pass through Odessa and other  ports on the Black Sea that have been closed to commercial use since many European countries imposed sanctions on Russia over its invasion. In addition, the rise in oil prices caused by sanctions has driven shipping costs up. The inflation gets passed on to the people who want to buy bread in Egypt (and many other African countries that will are expected to undergo severe food shortages this summer). Zelensky has emphasized this consequence of the war (potential famines), but has not emphasized the role of sanctions in accentuating the problem. I understand why, and I understand the purpose of the sanctions regime. But the collateral damage of this economic warfare falls, as usual, disproportionately on the shoulders of poor nations rather than those like Switzerland, UK,  Canada , Japan and the like, who at least have a better chance of braving the coming storm of austerity due to sanctions.   

This is just one example of the collateral damage that will result in many countries from the prolonged use of unprecedented sanctions designed to force Putin "to the bargaining table." As, Zakaria and his guests acknowledge, there's no clear "long game plan" for a peace agreement even if the Russians were driven by sanctions to try diplomacy in earnest. Some political economists sympathetic to the emergency need to use sanctions to stop the fighting have proposed more precise ways of conducting this "economic warfare" that considers the kind of collateral damage I mention, and aims to minimize it. Right now sanctions are broad and sweeping and cause unpredictable and unintended consequences of great magnitude across the globe. Since it seems clear that this approach to warfare will be used not only in the months ahead, but in conflicts down the road in the world, there need to be rules, just as there are international legal standards for humanitarian treatment in military war. Here's  political economist, Kaushik Basu's preliminary sketch of such a framework https://www.livemint.com/opinion/online-views/the-new-art-of-economic-warfare-and-the-global-need-to-regulate-it-11648659394026.html  Basu was chief economist for the World Bank from 2012-16 and is a professor of International Studies and Economics at Cornell U.

************************************************************


Here is a link to FZ's discussion with the 3 guests at CNN (thank you, Birdman, for bringing this CNN segment to my attention) :  https://www.cnn.com/videos/tv/2022/04/24/exp-gps-0424-panel-the-west-and-ukraine.cnn

Here is a link to the transcript of the show: https://transcripts.cnn.com/show/fzgps/date/2022-04-24/segment/01

 

 

Sunday, April 24, 2022

What happens when years of propaganda cause pro-democratic norms to collapse

The New York Times writes:
Yet when the House Republican leader, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, was shown to have lied about his response to the deadliest assault on the Capitol in centuries and President Donald J. Trump’s culpability for it, there was little expectation that the consequences would be swift or severe — or that there would be any at all.

Dissembling is not a crime, but doing so to conceal a wholesale reversal on a matter as serious as an attack on the citadel of democracy and the possible resignation of a president would once have been considered career-ending for a politician, particularly one who aspires to the highest position in the House.

Not so for a Republican in the age of Trump, when Mr. McCarthy’s brand of lie was nothing particularly new; maybe it was just a Thursday. On Friday, another House member, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Georgia, said under oath at an administrative law hearing in Atlanta that she could “not recall” having advocated Mr. Trump imposing martial law to stop the transfer of power to Joseph R. Biden Jr., a position that would seem difficult to forget.

“It’s a tragic indictment of the political process these days — and the Republican Party of late — that truth doesn’t matter, words don’t matter, everybody can be elastic in areas that were once viewed as concrete,” said Mark Sanford, a former Republican governor of South Carolina who lied to the public about his whereabouts when he was pursuing an extramarital affair in South America and was censured by the State House of Representatives. “You cross lines now, and there are no longer consequences.”

Mr. Sanford’s political comeback as a Republican member of the House ended when he crossed the one line that does still matter in his party: He condemned Mr. Trump as intolerant and untrustworthy. Mr. Trump called him “nothing but trouble,” and Mr. Sanford was defeated in a primary in 2018.

It was Mr. Trump himself who showed just how few consequences there could be for transgressions that once seemed beyond the pale for the nation’s leaders in 2016, when he survived the release of leaked audio in which he boasted of sexually assaulting women — then went on to win the presidency. In the years afterward, he survived two impeachment trials, on charges of pressuring Ukraine for his own political gain and of inciting the Capitol riot, and he continues to spread the lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him. (emphasis added)
That speaks for itself. What is happening right now is the rise of neo-fascism in the Republican Party, the poisoning of society with distrust in democracy and fellow citizens, belief in falsehoods, moral rot, etc. This is just a brief consideration of some of the evidence.

Saturday, April 23, 2022

How a morally rotted Republican in congress answers questions under oath

Fourteenth Amendment 

  • Section 3

    No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.


A lawsuit has been filed to prevent Marjorie Taylor Greene from running for re-election to the House. The lawsuit accuses Greene of supporting the 1/6 coup attempt and is thus constitutionally barred from running for re-election. She is asked questions under oath and her responses frequently are:
    • I don't recall
    • I don't remember
    • I did not support the insurrection
    • I didn't plan 1/6
In other words, Greene relies on standard Republican deceit tactics of lying, denying and keeping her mouth shut in the face of questions she does not want to answer.

That she claims no recollection of asking the president to impose martial law is for me in my opinion ample evidence that she is a shameless, bald faced liar and a traitor. Anyone speaking to a sitting president would remember whether they asked for martial law. To the extent there is such a thing as common sense (maybe there isn't because it is an essentially contested concept), common sense tells us that Greene is a liar. 

Obviously, that is not a holding in a court of law. But it is a defensible opinion in the court of public opinion. If the rule of law meant anything any more, Greene would be prosecuted for treason and sentenced to death if convicted. Sadly, the rule of law has mostly rotted away for the rich and powerful. She will be found to have not supported 1/6 and allowed to run for re-election. Then, the fine people of the state of GA will re-elect her. 

As we all know, the fine people of GA simply cannot vote for an evil socialist, communist, fascist, atheist, pedophilic Democratic tyrant. As all good Republicans know, all Democrats are hell bent on (1) making Christianity illegal, (2) putting Christians in re-education camps to turn them into Godless atheist pedophiles, (3) taking away all guns and Bibles, and (4) doing some other horrible, terrible, awful things, like trying to do something about climate change.

That is how morally degenerate, reality-detached and neo-fascist the Republican Party cult has become.


Question:  In situations where there is room for doubt, are members of the American public justified and doing the right thing to not give the benefit of any doubt to a Republican in congress when they talk about much of anything, especially when they say nothing or are defending themselves against allegations of bad behavior?

See why Republicans rely so heavily on the keep your mouth shut tactic when faced with inconvenient questions? It is so easy to get caught in a lie, like Greene did here.
 

Friday, April 22, 2022

The moral rot in the Republican Party leadership

Lie of omission: (legal definition) an intentional failure to tell the truth in a situation requiring disclosure; (lay definition) also known as a continuing misrepresentation or quote mining (quoting out of context), occurs when an important fact is left out in order to foster a misconception. Lying by omission includes the failure to correct pre-existing misconceptions


The New York Times writes:
In the days after the attack, Representative Kevin McCarthy planned to tell Mr. Trump to resign. Senator Mitch McConnell told allies impeachment was warranted. But their fury faded fast. 
In the days after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol building, the two top Republicans in Congress, Representative Kevin McCarthy and Senator Mitch McConnell, told associates they believed President Trump was responsible for inciting the deadly riot and vowed to drive him from politics.

Mr. McCarthy went so far as to say he would push Mr. Trump to resign immediately: “I’ve had it with this guy,” he told a group of Republican leaders, according to an audio recording of the conversation obtained by The New York Times.

But within weeks both men backed off an all-out fight with Mr. Trump because they feared retribution from him and his political movement. Their drive to act faded fast as it became clear it would mean difficult votes that would put them at odds with most of their colleagues.

“I didn’t get to be leader by voting with five people in the conference,” Mr. McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, told a friend.  
Mr. McConnell’s office declined to comment. In a statement on Twitter early Thursday, Mr. McCarthy called the reporting “totally false and wrong.” His spokesman, Mark Bednar, denied that the Republican leader told colleagues he would urge Mr. Trump to leave office. “McCarthy never said he’d call Trump to say he should resign,” Mr. Bednar said.

But the recording tells a different story.
Screenshot of the recorded McCarthy phone call
Mr. McCarthy did not immediately respond to a request for comment after The Times published the audio clip on Thursday night.  
Mr. McCarthy said he would tell Mr. Trump of the impeachment resolution: “I think this will pass, and it would be my recommendation you should resign,” he said, according to the recording of the call, which runs just over an hour. The Times has reviewed the full recording of the conversation.

He acknowledged it was unlikely Mr. Trump would follow that suggestion.

“What he did is unacceptable. Nobody can defend that and nobody should defend it,” he told the group.   
But in a brief window after the storming of the Capitol, Mr. McCarthy contemplated a total break with Mr. Trump and his most extreme supporters.

During the same Jan. 10 conversation when he said he would call on Mr. Trump to resign, Mr. McCarthy told other G.O.P. leaders he wished the big tech companies would strip some Republican lawmakers of their social media accounts, as Twitter and Facebook had done with Mr. Trump. Members such as Lauren Boebert of Colorado had done so much to stoke paranoia about the 2020 election and made offensive comments online about the Capitol attack.

“We can’t put up with that,” Mr. McCarthy said, adding, “Can’t they take their Twitter accounts away, too?” (emphasis added)

Neo-fascist Republican power rests on a foundation of lies, deceit and treason
The recording mentioned in the article is a 1:35 phone call that the NYT obtained and inserted in the article. In accord with the now standard Republican KYMS propaganda tactic in the face of bad news, neither McConnell nor McCarthy would comment. No surprise there. 

KYMS = keep your mouth shut; in politics, usually a form of a lie(s) of omission 
when in the face of political bad news or politically inconvenient fact or truth

The McConnell comment, “I didn’t get to be leader by voting with five people in the conference” shows that he is more interested in personal power than defending either truth or democracy. That is pure moral rot in the Republican Party political leadership.

McCarthy denial that he discussed asking the ex-president to resign is a lie. He did discuss it and the recorded phone is proof. McCarthy also shows that he is more interested in personal power than defending either truth or democracy. That is more moral rot in the Republican Party political leadership. 

Hence, the American people get an insulting, arrogant KYMS response from both morally rotted GOP congressional leaders. The entire GOP leadership is solidly neo-fascist, not pro-democracy. 

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Anonymous Kremlin Insiders Express Grave Concerns About Putin's War To Bloomberg News

On Wednesday, Bloomberg News published the following story  If those who spoke to Bloomberg did so sincerely  (i.e. not as part of a disinformation strategy), and if their knowledge is as complete and accurate as it appears in the article, then it offers important new insights into the war. Its architects appear to be an even smaller group than previously thought, and they no longer treat alternative views within the Kremlin as valid. This comes at a time when  we are  beginning to hear calls for NATO to take the fight directly to the Russians in Ukraine from within the Senate, and a few military and political figures here and in Europe.

Significantly, majority member of the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Chris Coons, made the case for possibly deploying troops in a  media appearance, and in two extended policy discussions with Secretary of State Antony Blinken (one on 4/14  and the other on 4/18) held by The Ford School.  He also discussed this on CBS' Sunday morning show, Face The Nation, on 4/17. As the Washington Post points out, this is significant because of his close ties with the administration as well as his influential position in the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. He is one of the 10 majority members of that influential committee, and one of Biden's close friends. Though the White House respectfully pushed back against Coons, and Coons subsequently tweeted that he is not explicitly calling for troop deployments right now (which is accurate), the fact that he is urging the Biden administration to consider such an action in the near future reveals the extent to which the possibility of WW3 (NATO vs. Russia) looms on the horizon. 

One may expect that as information like that in the Bloomberg article emerges,  there will be more emphataic calls for NATO intervention. Already, Anders Aslund, economist and author of Putin's Crony Capitalism, responded to the article by tweeting the following: "Russia has declared war on NATO and what are we doing? Nothing. My Humble advice...3) Bomb relevant Russian cities preventively to make sure Putin does not use chemical weapons or nukes. Wake up! We are at this stage."   https://twitter.com/anders_aslund/status/1516970288679948291   As Mark Galeotti, the well known British security affairs analyst and historian of Russia  tweeted in response, "Good grief it's not only that #3 is insane--starting a war to prevent escalation-- it's also that this kind of lunatic talk gets picked up by the ultra-hawks in Russia as 'proof' that NATO is  a hostile, aggressive force such that Russia likewise ought to strike first." https://twitter.com/MarkGaleotti/status/1517064912362778626 I share that concern. Responses to articles like the following will be just as important as the information (however reliable) contained within it.

Bloomberg News/ 4/20/22 

Almost eight weeks after Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine, with military losses mounting and Russia facing unprecedented international isolation, a small but growing number of senior Kremlin insiders are quietly questioning his decision to go to war. 

The ranks of the critics at the pinnacle of power remain limited, spread across high-level posts in government and state-run business. They believe the invasion was a catastrophic mistake that will set the country back for years, according to ten people with direct knowledge of the situation. All spoke on condition of anonymity, too fearful of retribution to comment publicly. 

 So far, these people see no chance the Russian president will change course and no prospect of any challenge to him at home. More and more reliant on a narrowing circle of hardline advisers, Putin has dismissed attempts by other officials to warn him of the crippling economic and political cost, they said.

Some said they increasingly share the fear voiced by U.S. intelligence officials that Putin could turn to a limited use of nuclear weapons if faced with failure in a campaign he views as his historic mission. 

To be sure, support for Putin’s war remains deep across much of Russia’s elite, with many insiders embracing in public and in private the Kremlin’s narrative that conflict with the West is inevitable and that the economy will adapt to the sweeping sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its allies. And public backing remains strong as the initial shock and disruption from sanctions has given way to a kind of surreal stability in Russia.

Still, more and more top insiders have come to believe that Putin’s commitment to continue the invasion will doom Russia to years of isolation and heightened tension that will leave its economy crippled, its security compromised and its global influence gutted. A few business tycoons have made veiled statements questioning the Kremlin’s strategy, but many powerful players are too fearful of the widening crackdown on dissent to voice their concerns in public.

The skeptics were surprised by the speed and breadth of the response by the U.S. and its allies, with sanctions freezing half of the central bank’s $640 billion in reserves and foreign companies ditching decades of investment to shut down operations almost overnight, as well as the steadily expanding military support for Kyiv that’s helping its forces to blunt the Russian advance.

Senior officials have tried to explain to the president that the economic impact of the sanctions will be devastating, erasing the two decades of growth and higher living standards that Putin had delivered during his rule, according to people familiar with the situation.

Putin brushed off the warnings, saying that while Russia would pay a huge cost, the West had left him no alternative but to wage war, the people said. Publicly, Putin says the “economic Blitzkrieg” has failed and the economy will adapt.

The president remains confident that the public is behind him, with Russians ready to endure years of sacrifice for his vision of national greatness, they said. With the help of tough capital controls, the ruble has recovered most of its initial losses and while inflation has spiked, economic disruption remains relatively limited so far.

Putin is determined to push on with the fight, even if the Kremlin has had to reduce its ambitions from a quick, sweeping takeover of much of the country to a grueling battle for the Donbas region in the east. Settling for less would leave Russia hopelessly vulnerable and weak in the face of the threat seen from the U.S. and its allies, according to this view.

In the weeks since the invasion started, Putin’s circle of advisers and contacts has narrowed even further from the limited group of hardliners he’d regularly consulted before, according to two people. The decision to invade was made by Putin and just a handful of hawks including Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, General Staff chief Valery Gerasimov, and Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of Russia’s Security Council, these people said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment for this article. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov didn’t give a direct answer to repeated questions about whether Russia might use nuclear weapons in Ukraine in an interview released Tuesday.

The critics see no sign that Putin is yet ready to consider cutting short the invasion given the losses or making the serious concessions needed to reach a cease-fire. Given his total domination of the political system, alternative views take root only in private. 

Limited information contributed to the Kremlin’s miscalculation in the early days of the offensive, betting on broader support among Ukrainian troops and officials, as well as quicker military progress, the people with knowledge of the matter said. The Russian leader also underestimated his Ukrainian counterpart, initially perceiving him as weak.

Roman Abramovich, the billionaire who has helped broker the so-far-unsuccessful peace talks, had to disabuse Putin of his conviction that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, a former comedy actor, would flee the country once the invasion began, according to people familiar with the conversations. 

Inside the main successor to the KGB, the Federal Security Service, frustration with the failure of the invasion so far is growing, according to Andrei Soldatov, an expert on the Russian security services. Others there had expected the fighting would last no more than a few weeks, according to people familiar with the situation. 

Broke Oligarch Says Sanctioned Billionaires Have No Sway Over Putin

Only one senior official has so far broken publicly with the Kremlin over the invasion: Anatoly Chubais, the unpopular architect of the 1990s privatizations and the Kremlin’s climate envoy. He left the country and Putin removed him from his post. 

Others who sought to quit — including central bank chief Elvira Nabiullina — were told they had to stay on to help manage the economic fallout, according to people familiar with the situation. Some lower-profile officials asked to be transferred to jobs not related to policy making, the people said.

Senior officials have denounced those who left the country as “traitors.”

Among business tycoons, many of whom saw yachts, properties and other holdings seized under sanctions imposed by the U.S. and its allies, a few have been critical of the war — though without mentioning Putin.

Metals tycoon Oleg Deripaska called the war “insanity” in late March, saying it could have ended “three weeks ago through reasonable negotiation.” He warned fighting could continue for “several more years.” 

Some in the elite have pushed for an even harder line. After Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov defended a prominent TV host who had left the country in the days after the invasion, Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov — whose troops are fighting in Ukraine — blasted him for insufficient patriotism. 

“Putin has built his regime mainly on stoking public support, which has given him the means to control the elite,” said Tatiana Stanovaya of political consultant R.Politik. “There’s no room for disagreement or discussion, everyone must just get on with it and implement the president’s orders and as long as Putin keeps the situation under control, people will follow him.”