We experienced a turbulent year in 2022, and so we might feel inclined to say:
Pragmatic politics focused on the public interest for those uncomfortable with America's two-party system and its way of doing politics. Considering the interface of politics with psychology, cognitive biology, social behavior, morality and history.
Etiquette
Saturday, December 31, 2022
Simply 2023 Question
Friday, December 30, 2022
News bits: Oops, $240 million is missing from Trumplandia, etc.
Don Jr admits he doesn’t know where $240m Trump fundraised tofight election results went in Jan 6 transcriptsDonald Trump Jr said that he did not know where the $240 million raised to fight his father’s 2020 presidential election loss went, according to transcripts released by the House select committee investigating the January 6 riot at the US Capitol.
Trump — who broke with a decades-long tradition of presidential candidates and presidents by refusing to make his tax returns public — has for years falsely claimed that he could not release them while under “routine audit” by the IRS.
Last week, the Ways and Means Committee revealed that the IRS did not audit Trump’s returns during his first two years in office, despite a rule mandating such reviews, and never completed any audits while he served.
.... pandemic fraud across three major relief programs could reach the $250 billion to $560 billion range (though no one really knows because the exact amount is difficult to estimate). The federal government approved about $5 trillion in total pandemic relief money ....All of the above makes for a messy picture of political culpability. Republicans can’t frame this as a purely Democratic scandal when Trump signed the bill and was president while much of the theft happened. Democrats, for their part, helped craft the initial relief bill and extended it further under Biden. So that’s an incentive for both parties not to look too closely at what might have gone wrong.Among Democrats, there’s likely a generalized fear that making too much about any fraud in government benefits will be used to discredit the use of government benefits to help people generally (harking back to the “welfare queen” attack from Ronald Reagan).One would think, though, that it would be anti-spending Republicans who would typically make a big stink about an issue like this. And yet with the GOP increasingly fixated on the domestic culture war, the specifics of the pandemic relief fraud (money stolen by foreign hackers) don’t seem to fit too well with their current message.
This is evident in an amusing recent exchange on the pages of the Wall Street Journal. Rep. James Comer (R-KY), the incoming chair of the House Oversight Committee, wrote an op-ed on pandemic relief fraud, along with five other issues he plans to investigate. But his most specific concern was that some states and localities used pandemic relief funds for “electric buses and controversial ideologies.” In an earlier press release, his office claimed to find evidence that pandemic relief money funded “woke initiatives.”
American Enterprise Institute fellow Matt Weidinger responded to Comer’s op-ed with a letter to the Journal urging him to focus on the bigger fraud picture so it could be stopped from happening again. “Criminal gangs, including some based in Russia and China, used stolen identities to seize U.S. tax dollars on an industrial scale,” Weidinger wrote. This could be read as saying: Focus on the real issue, please, not just the culture war crap. We will see next year whether the GOP House majority listens.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
News bits: Deep cynicism and mendacity, etc.
Republican attempts to minimize far-right violence hampers government efforts to combat the threat, extremism analysts sayDrawing inspiration from a far-right shooter in New Zealand, the gunman who killed 10 Black shoppers at a Buffalo supermarket in the spring used racist, dehumanizing language in his writings, singling out Jews as the real problem to be “dealt with in time.”
Nevertheless, at a congressional hearing this month on the threat of violent white supremacy, two Republican lawmakers cherry-picked a word in the Buffalo killer’s screed — “socialist” — to cast him as a radical leftist. They did not note that the shooter was referring to National Socialism, the ideology of the German Nazi Party, as Democrats and witnesses on the panel pointedly clarified.
“Any sober look” at the Buffalo shooter’s hate-filled manifesto, Oren Segal of the Anti-Defamation League told the lawmakers, “would recognize that attack as clearly a white-supremacist attack.”
But “far right” also is an imperfect term, analysts say, and does not capture the complex ideologies, including some that overlap with the anarchist left, that have fueled recent attacks.
That fuzziness leaves room for bad-faith arguments and misinformation, miring an urgent threat in partisan point-scoring. Terrorism researchers said they had hoped that rising political violence culminating in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol would jolt leaders into action. Instead, they say, efforts to address violent extremism have stalled over semantics and an eagerness to blame “the other side.”
Also this month, as first reported by Roll Call, lawmakers who wrote the final defense authorization bill “deleted or diluted” all seven House-passed provisions related to extremism in the U.S. military or broader society.
The emperor has no clothes — or to be more precise the Supreme Court has no consistency. The latest kick to the gut of the Court’s legitimacy came yesterday via the shadow docket — because of course. In Arizona et al. v. Alejandro Mayorkas et al., the Court held in a 5-4 decision that Title 42, a Trump era public health policy that allowed migrants to be expelled quickly from the country during the COVID-19 crisis, could not be lifted during the appeal of a lower court’s decision to end the policy.The math’s not mathing. That is until you see the through line is current conservative political goals, not any sort of jurisprudential theory.The Court has become what conservatives long-claimed to hate policymakers in robes. And even the majority’s nod toward separation of powers doesn’t hold much water.
Ronna McDaniel’s quest for a fourth term atop the Republican National Committee has triggered an ugly intraparty fight between the right and the farther right.
Ms. McDaniel, who was handpicked by Mr. Trump in late 2016 to run the party and whom he enlisted in a scheme to draft fake electors to perpetuate his presidency, could be considered a Trump proxy by Republicans eager to begin to eradicate what many consider to be the party’s pre-eminent problem: the former president’s influence over the G.O.P.
But Ms. McDaniel is not facing moderation-minded challengers. Her rivals are from the Trumpist right. They include the pillow salesman Mike Lindell, who continues to spin out fanciful election conspiracies, and — more worrying for Ms. McDaniel — a Trump loyalist from California, Harmeet Dhillon, who is backed by some of Mr. Trump’s fiercest defenders, including the Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, a youthful group of pro-Trump rightists.“It’s been a very vitriolic campaign,” Ms. McDaniel said in an interview, adding: “I’m all for scorched earth against Democrats. I don’t think it’s the right thing to do against other Republicans.”
The candidacy of Mr. Lindell, the MyPillow chief executive who exemplifies the conspiracy-driven fringe, has put still more right-wing pressure on Ms. McDaniel, who refuses to say Joseph R. Biden Jr. was fairly elected in 2020. (Mr. Lindell’s latest conspiracy theory is that Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, Mr. Trump’s biggest rival so far for the 2024 presidential nomination, unfairly won re-election in November.)
- The Republican Party is just fine with scorched earth, no-compromise politics and propaganda against Democrats, which constitutes rock solid evidence of the GOP’s Christofascist radical authoritarianism
- The NYT, and by proxy, the rest of the mainstream still do not understand the nature or seriousness of what has happened to the old Republican Party, i.e., old-fashioned pro-democracy conservatism has morphed into anti-democracy, government- and regulation-hating Christofascism — this is about a bitter intraparty dispute between a radical right faction and a hyper-radical right faction, with regular old-fashioned pro-democracy conservatism is nowhere to be seen
- Mike Lindell does not spin out fanciful election conspiracies — he tells blatant lies and slanders people, which again indicates that mainstream media still do not understand the nature or seriousness of what is going on
A sharp contrast of how Canadians view news
Hello all, and happy New Year (coming up). Hopefully the new year will bring more joy to all of our lives but I am not holding my breath.
Between the antics of the Republican Party, the ongoing war in Ukraine, sabre rattling by China, more and more climate disasters, it seems there will be more and more reasons to continue to feel anxieties over the future of America and the planet.
I hope the regulars here will excuse a few thoughts then by this American citizen who is now living in Canada.
My observations are strictly mine, just to be clear.
Turning on ANY American news network, or reading up on any American news online, we are usually treated to more angst about the fate of Democracy, the antics of Trump, the failures (or successes) of Biden, election conspiracy theories, and lots and lots of stories about the Border "Crisis", and Inflation.
I have noticed a different tone on Canadian media outlets. More about international news and events. More about climate. More about sporting events. More common interest stories.
Here are just some examples, this morning on CBC online:
Or CTV online:
Mind you, Canadians don't have to deal with Trumpism, election denialism, though even Canadians have their fare share of Rightwing extremists and White Nationalists - but they seldom make the headlines.
Even one of most Rightwing publications in Canada is pretty tame compared to Fox and the like in the U.S.
And Canadians have access to some of best analytical and well researched material with outlets like:
https://theconversation.com/ca
Why am I bringing this all up? Am I, now that I am living in Canada, putting my head into the sand? Have I by being less invested in American news, dismissing the real dangers of the world? OR am I finding that being exposed to Canadian news I am getting more balance in my life and seeing more of the world than what I got from American news?
Is the way American news outlets handle news, complete with a lot of hyperbole and a lot of partisan commentary, a better way of presenting the dangers Americans are facing? Or does the way they present the news only cause MORE angst, anxiety, and yup, division?
AND of course many of you will remind me, that the U.S. is in crisis, that the Ukraine war could turn nuclear, and that we have to be fearful of China, and that we need to FOCUS on those dangers. And you may be right, I am NOT saying we should be all singing Kumbaya and ignoring the real dangers.
BUT at the same time it is nice to be able to turn on the news and not be hit in the face 24/7 with the same stories over and over and over again. I have to admit it: it's a nice diversion.
Should American outlets offer more than 24/7 anxiety ridden news? Whatcha all think?

