Etiquette



DP Etiquette

First rule: Don't be a jackass. Most people are good.

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.

Friday, December 17, 2021

Treason alleged against Republican Representative Jim Jordan

Newsweek writes in an article, 'Jim Jordan Is a Traitor' Over Mark Meadows Texts, Says Fellow Congressman:
Democratic Representative Ruben Gallego has called Republican Representative Jim Jordan a "traitor to the Constitution." This comes after Jordan's office confirmed he sent a text to former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows about rejecting Electoral College votes on January 6.

Gallego, who represents Arizona's 7th congressional district, told MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell on Wednesday that "a slow-moving coup" was still taking place.

Gallego told MSNBC: "Look, Jim Jordan is a traitor. He's a traitor to the Constitution of the United States. He has been a traitor to the Constitution of the United States for quite a while, and now we actually have it in text."

"But we shouldn't be surprised and why is anybody surprised?" he said, saying Jordan had lied on the floor of the House of Representatives about the 2020 election.

"My biggest issue isn't Jim Jordan. My issue is the fact that there's a lot of people out there that are not taking this seriously," Gallego went on. "The fact that there is a slow-moving coup that is happening right now all over this country that are led by the Jim Jordans and other people."

Jordan's full message read: "On January 6, 2021, Vice President Mike Pence, as President of the Senate, should call out all electoral votes that he believes are unconstitutional as no electoral votes at all — in accordance with guidance from founding father Alexander Hamilton and judicial precedence. 'No legislative act,' wrote Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 78, 'contrary to the Constitution, can be valid.' The court in Hubbard v. Lowe reinforced this truth: 'That an unconstitutional statute is not a law at all is a proposition no longer open to discussion.' 226 F. 135, 137 (SDNY 1915), appeal dismissed, 242 U.S. 654 (1916). Following this rationale, an unconstitutionally appointed elector, like an unconstitutionally enacted statute, is no elector at all."
Jordan's legal rationale is nonsense. But these days, that is what the face of American fascist crackpottery looks like. Guidance from founding father Alexander Hamilton is meaningless. What law Jordan believes is invalid isn't stated, so his reference to the Hubbard v. Lowe legal precedent is also meaningless. Why hasn't Jordan or anyone else filed suit to invalidate the allegedly invalid law(s)? The answer is that there is no invalid law(s) to invalidate. 

Jordan is a liar and a Republican traitor. He is respected by the Republican Party leadership. Logically, that makes the Republican Party leadership treasonous to a significant extent. 

Meanwhile, in other Republican Party news, the ex-president is calling for Mitch McConnell's head because, among other bad things, he has something to do with passage of Biden's unfrastructure bill. Newsweek comments
Former President Donald Trump has issued a statement calling for the replacement of Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, blaming the longtime Kentucky senator for helping Democrats with their "unfrastructure" and "Build Back Worse" bills, both key aspects of President Joe Biden's agenda.

"Mitch McConnell has given away the Unfrastucture Bill and will soon be giving away the Build Back Worse Bill, which will change the very fabric of our society," Trump's Wednesday statement began. "This was all made possible by the two-month extension he gave the Democrats, the separation of the two Bills, and, most importantly, his lack of courage in playing the Debt Ceiling Card."

"He has grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory!" Trump's statement continued. "How this guy can stay as Leader is beyond comprehension—this is coming not only from me, but from virtually everyone in the Republican Party. He is a disaster and should be replaced as 'Leader' ASAP!"  
In early October, McConnell gave Democrats a two-month extension to avoid a vote to raise the debt ceiling until December. He gave them the extension, he said, because he wanted Democrats to say the specific figure that they sought for the new debt ceiling. That amount was nearly $30 trillion, largely to pay for budget items approved during the Trump presidency.

McConnell had also said that he would force Democrats to raise the debt ceiling using a process called reconciliation, which would allow Democrats to pass measures through the Senate with a simple majority vote. He and other Republicans said they preferred reconciliation so that Democrats alone would be responsible for whatever consequences the debt increase might pose.  
However, in early December, McConnell changed course. At that point, McConnell said that he would allow Democrats to avoid using reconciliation by finding 10 Senate Republican votes to approve a raising of the debt ceiling by Democrats using a one-time simple majority vote.

Questions: What about voters who keep voting people like Jordan into office, treasonous or not? What about major Republican Party donors? What about the ex-president, mendacious traitor or not?

Thursday, December 16, 2021

QAnon: Not content with just innocent crackpottery, it goes for cruel, vicious fascism

Samara Duplessis

I've posted here before that QAnon hurts people and families. The mindless sadistic QAnon beast could not care less. People still fall for the lies and cruelty it stands for and revels in.

Hurting people, families and society is 100% legal free speech. Republicans in Congress and the courts will defend this evil to the end of the very last shred of human decency and even democracy.

The Washington Post writes on more mindless QAnon savagery and hate in an article, A QAnon con: How the viral Wayfair sex trafficking lie hurt real kids. Apparently variations of Pizzagate crackpottery (pedophile communist Democratic tyrants trafficking children for sex) are alive and well in minds gullible low-information Americans enough to still believe in QAnon:
An Internet mob wanted to rescue a 13-year-old girl. Instead, they terrified her, derailed real trafficking investigations and incited ‘save the children’ violence.

She [13 year old Samara Duplessis] scrolled to the next Instagram post, and the next, and the next, until her phone rang. Her dad’s name was on the screen.

“Something’s going on,” Kevin Duplessis told his daughter.

Within the last 20 minutes, more than a dozen people had called him, frantic about whether Samara was okay. Apparently, thousands of people on the Internet were talking about the same thing.

Samara’s name and face were going viral, along with the names and faces of half a dozen other children.

One tweet circulating her picture showed a screenshot of an old local news article that said Samara Duplessis was missing. The article was never updated when Samara was found safe.

Beside it was a screenshot of a pillow for sale on Wayfair, the online furniture superstore. It was called the “Duplessis” pillow. Its price: $9,999.

The person behind the post was seemingly arguing that because the pillow was marked at a ridiculous price, and because its name matched the last name of a child who appeared to be missing, Wayfair was involved in something sinister.

There were thousands of tweets making similar accusations about cabinets Wayfair was selling. The claims were on Facebook, too. And on Reddit, YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Within 72 hours, the company was trending, with an estimated 1.2 million tweets about Wayfair and trafficking.

In the days to come, every aspect of these claims would be found to be false.

Human trafficking investigators at the Department of Homeland Security, who had to pause active investigations to sort out what was happening with Wayfair, would find no evidence to support any of the allegations. Wayfair’s staff, bombarded with threats, would realize how the pricing anomalies were happening. Anti-trafficking organizations, inundated with callers, would beg the public to stop sharing bogus stories that made their work harder.
The WaPo goes on to describe that social media companies didn't do much. The unfettered Wayfair QAnon conspiracy theory became one of the fastest-spreading disinformation campaigns on the Internet. People sucked in included concerned mothers, TikToking teenagers, racial justice advocates and people all over the political spectrum. QAnon lies and deceit are not just for conservatives. They're for all of us low info and gullible enough to believe it. 

People spreading QAnon garbage didn’t know that they were spreading lies. QAnon’s intent was to to convince the public that President Donald Trump was saving the country from satanic Democratic pedophiles. The QAnon semi-human scum behind this was arguing that because the Wayfair pillow was marked at a ridiculous price and its name matched the last name of an apparently missing child, Wayfair was involved in something evil. That is real crackpottery.





One of Smamra’s friends sent her screenshots with her face on them. She didn’t know anything about algorithms and never heard of QAnon. She saw her face, name and the $9,999 pillow. Her feelings of personal safety faded away. “I started getting real bad anxiety. I started pacing around real heavy. When I get in my head, like real, real deep in my head, I start hyperventilating.” Then she got hives. “My body is just doing whatever it can just to get me to calm down.” Incoherent as it was, Samara’s mother had the feeling that there was a real bounty on her daughter’s head.

Other children were included in QAnon's filth and the damage to families its legal free speech caused real damage in the name of fascism:
One girl from Texas had run away for a few days in 2017, but like 92 percent of all children reported missing, was recovered. Now 19, she posted a TikTok to show everyone she was just fine. Her mother, Katrina Waggoner Phillips, was not. The moment she saw her daughter’s missing poster being shared again as a supposed Wayfair sex trafficking victim, it felt like a mostly healed wound had been ripped open.

“I just started shaking all over,” Phillips recalled. “Everything was bringing back the memories of when that poster was made, when she had run away.”  
Cameron Dziedzic, a 16-year-old boy from Maryland, tried to ignore how many people were sharing a picture from when he had gone to stay with friends for a few weeks without telling his family. He’d since been placed into foster care and was working toward joining the military. 
Hundreds of thousands of people wanted to help these children when they believed they were victims of sex trafficking. When it turned out that they were victims of a viral hoax, the kids and their families were left to face the wreckage alone.
Collateral damage from QAnon's filth included derailing ongoing investigations across the country while the QAnon lie took precedence. At Homeland Security, the QAnon lie affected all 30 Human Trafficking field offices. An official said that the wasted time “could be spent trying to identify victims, and doing the stuff that investigators need to do” to get a prosecution and conviction.

QAnon operates to help the fascist, treasonous Republican Party and its fascist, treasonous ex-president. That makes both partly responsible for the damage that it causes. It also makes both arguably criminal organizations, if not domestic terrorists.


Questions: 
1. Is it reasonable to see QAnon as cruel, vicious and fascist, maybe sadist sociopath, or is that over the top bleeding heart liberal snowflakery?

2. Is it reasonable to see people who fall for QAnon lies and conspiracy crackpottery as gullible and low-information, or is the internet too complex for people who fall for crap like this to be considered significantly culpable?

3. Waddabout the Republican Party -- is it mostly silent or mostly quietly supporting the beast?[1]


Footnote:
1.  Some republicans have condemned QAnon, but it is like the ex-president tenth-heartedly telling people to worry about COVID. 

Headlines: 
17 Republicans decline to condemn QAnon as the House votes to reject its conspiracy theories
QAnon goes to Washington: two supporters win seats in Congress (Marjorie Taylor Greene and Lauren Boebert, both of whom are Republicans)

Fox News: Fascist traitors and lying propagandists in our midst



On 12/13/2021 – It was revealed that several Fox TV personalities texted Trump Chief of staff Mark Meadows to encourage Trump to stop the Capitol Riot, which contradicted their reporting later that evening that Antifa was involved in a false flag operation



It is no secret that Fox News is an anti-democracy, pro-fascism propaganda operation. The damage that Fox alone has done to American society, government, democracy and the rule of law is probably unmatched by any other source, including the Russian government, other radical right news sources, Facebook, Twitter and anything else. Maybe Facebook and Twitter come close. 

Recent revelations from the House committee investigating the 1/6 coup attempt include text messages from Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham to the White House urging the traitor ex-president to stop the violence. Now, Fox is pushing back. The New York Times writes:
Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham vociferously defended themselves for sending text messages on Jan. 6 that urged Mark Meadows, the last White House chief of staff under Donald J. Trump, to persuade the then-president to take action to stop the Capitol attack.

The texts made vivid something that was already not a secret — that key players at the network have acted as informal advisers to Mr. Trump. It is a situation that flouts journalistic ethical norms but does not appear to dissuade Fox viewers. In November, Fox News was the most-watched network not just in cable news but in all of cable television, with an average audience of 1.5 million.

The text messages also suggested that the hosts believed that Mr. Trump — who had delivered a combative speech on the Ellipse near the White House to thousands of his supporters in the hours before the breach — bore some responsibility for what took place that day.

“Mark, the president needs to tell people in the Capitol to go home,” Ms. Ingraham wrote. “This is hurting all of us. He is destroying his legacy.”

Brian Kilmeade, a host of “Fox & Friends,” echoed that concern. “Please, get him on TV,” he wrote in a text to Mr. Meadows. “Destroying everything you have accomplished.”

Mr. Hannity texted: “Can he make a statement? Ask people to leave the Capitol.”

Ann Marie Lipinski, a former editor in chief of The Chicago Tribune who runs the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard, said that the Fox News hosts had violated journalistic norms in sending advice to a White House official as news was unfolding.

“For there to be an ongoing, live violent riot playing out at the Capitol during which anchors are communicating their preferences about what the president should do with the president’s staff is inappropriate in the least, and highly unethical by my lights,” Ms. Lipinski said.

“I think that’s part of the bargain that Fox News offers its viewers — ‘We have a different relationship with the government and a different relationship with the Republican Party,’” she added. “I think viewers in large part go there for it.”
That makes a few things clear. One is that journalistic ethics do not constrain Fox, just like inconvenient facts and truths do not matter to Fox.[1] Another is that Fox was aware of the coup attempt and believed the ex-president bore significant responsibility. Another is that Fox is a propaganda arm of the Republican Party inside and outside of government. Yet another is that most Fox viewers do not care about any of those things and/or do not believe any are true.


Question: Is it reasonable to believe that Fox is mendacious, anti-democratic, pro-authoritarian and treasonous?


Footnote: 
1. Fox is a major global anti-democracy, pro-fascist propaganda presence. For example, many Australians are alarmed at the possibility of Fox doing to Australian society and politics what it has done to America. One source published this on Sept. 1, 2021
Over the past two weeks, the flagship current affairs program of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), Four Corners, ran a two part series under the title “Fox and the Big Lie” investigating how Fox News in the United States became complicit in spreading false and misleading information about the 2020 presidential election. The program’s argument was that Fox News was an influential actor in the events of January 6, when an angry mob stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overturn the election result.

To most observers the program was unremarkable. The transformation of Fox News from a news organization — with a particular political lens — to a propaganda outlet has been quite obvious and well documented by numerous reputable sources. However, to the Australian media outlets owned by News Corp — Fox News’ parent company — the program was instead a demonstration of the ABC overstepping its role as a public broadcaster (to put their hysterics mildly).

News Corp in Australia runs an incessant campaign of belligerence against the ABC. They do this for reasons related to their own business model, as they don’t like having a competitor that is publicly funded, believing this to be an unfair advantage. But they also do this for ideological reasons: They believe that the ABC is a den of left-wing degeneracy, unwelcoming to “conservative” political parties and perspectives.  
But at present these very principles have become a partisan issue. It is no exaggeration to state that liberal democracy is suffering a crisis of confidence. This is occurring globally, but most influentially in the United States. Liberal democratic societies have reached a stage of complexity that is proving difficult for many people to handle. This is leading to a suspicion toward long-standing norms and institutions as now being incapable of providing emotional certainty. Somehow this need for emotional certainty found its expression in the chaotic personality of Donald Trump, and led to the events of January 6.

From the shameless hypocrite files: Republican politicians blast government spending but take credit for the cash

In addition to being corrupt, mendacious authoritarians (fascists IMO), a central marker of the modern Republican politician is shameless hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is now so meaningless to Republicans that it is irrelevant. No Republican is fazed by being a hypocrite. No political blowback against hypocrisy arises. The New York Times describes some of this moral sleaze:
At her annual budget address this month, Gov. Kristi Noem, Republican of South Dakota, blamed President Biden’s economic policies for rising prices, derided the “giant handout” of federal stimulus funds and suggested that she had considered refusing the money over ideological objections.

But like many Republican officials, Ms. Noem has found it hard to say no to her state’s share of the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief aid that Democrats passed along party lines in March.

Ms. Noem explained to fellow legislators how critical those federal funds were to South Dakota and outlined how she would use some of the nearly $1 billion slated for her state to invest in local water projects, make housing more affordable and build new day care centers. [That sounds like socialism - LOCK HER UP!! LOCK HER UP!! LOCK HER UP!!] For those questioning her choice to take the money, Ms. Noem, who has opposed Covid restrictions including shutdowns and mask mandates, said any pandemic-relief funds she rejected would have just gone to other states.

“It would be spent somewhere other than South Dakota,” Ms. Noem said. “The debt would still be incurred by the country, and our people would still suffer the consequences of that spending.” No state has declined the relief money, and if any had it would go back to the Treasury Department, not to other states. [Note: See Ms. Noem’s lie here?]

Republican leaders across the country have been engaged in a similarly awkward dance over the past few months as they accept — and often champion — money from the $350 billion bucket of state and local aid included in the stimulus bill, which passed Congress without a single Republican vote. In some states, like Ohio and Arizona, Republican governors are spending the funds while attempting to undercut the law that allowed the money to flow. Other governors are faulting Congress for not giving their state enough money. [Hm. That sounds like more Republican socialists, LOCK 'EM UP!! LOCK 'EM UP!! LOCK 'EM UP!!]

And, like their counterparts in Congress, many Republicans have blasted Mr. Biden’s stimulus bill for fueling inflation, even as they take the funds, and criticized Democrats for pushing for additional government spending plans.

“I urge President Biden and Democrats in D.C. to turn off the spigot of out-of-control spending and get inflation under control,” said Gov. Greg Gianforte, Republican of Montana, whose state has used some of its $906 million in stimulus money to invest in nursing homes and return-to-work bonuses. [That is more Republican communist socialism or whatever, LOCK HIM UP!! LOCK HIM UP!! LOCK HIM UP!!]

The NYT goes on to report that Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL), complained that the federal allocation of money to states based on their jobless rate penalized Florida for not imposing lockdowns and allowing businesses to remain open during the pandemic. Hypocrite DeSantis snarked: “I think you’d have to acknowledge that we got the short end of the stick compared to these other states.” But in fact, Florida, was allotted $8.8 billion, and so far received ~$3.4 billion. DeSantis is spending that on infrastructure, transportation and work force retention. He justifies keeping the money, arguing that the federal government fueled economic disruption with shutdowns and vaccine and mask mandates that he opposed. 

And, it gets worse in Florida. Despite self-righteous Republican complaints, the federal cash will help Florida accumulate ~$17 billion in reserves by the end of next year. Florida can then pay for priorities that are unrelated to the pandemic such as a gas tax holiday and an $8 million program to remove “unauthorized aliens” from of the state. So here, the snarky, corrupt hypocrite DeSantis is using fungible taxpayer COVID relief dollars to pay for things that will help him get re-elected in part by lambasting Democrats as big-spending, corrupt, socialist-communist tyrants and pedophiles. 

Republican hypocrisy is just staggering. However, hypocrisy is easy, fun, legal and painless, so why not?


Question: Why not be a hypocrite if it (i) helps bamboozle the base and the public generally, and (ii) that helps with election or re-election, while costing the politician or candidate nothing economically, politically, morally, socially or in any other way?