First, some background: Republicans have been telling themselves a useful fiction, namely that racism has vanished, and any attempt to teach about the enduring effects or to remedy enduring discrimination is unfair to White people and is unconstitutional. We see the phenomenon in their contrived war against “critical race theory” in schools (even though it not taught to children).
.... The result [of the Civil Rights movement] was, among other things, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which specifically targeted measures that discriminated against Black voters in the South.
And that brings us to Jackson on Tuesday. Mark Joseph Stern writes for Slate:In a series of extraordinary exchanges with Alabama Solicitor General Edmund LaCour, Jackson explained that the entire point of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments was to provide equal opportunity for formerly enslaved people, using color-conscious remedies whenever necessary to put them on the same plane as whites.Jackson took her colleagues through the history of the Civil War amendments, revisions to the Voting Rights Act in 1982 and even the Report of the Joint Committee on Reconstruction from 1866. Jackson informed her colleagues: “The legislator who introduced [the 14th] amendment said that ‘unless the Constitution should restrain them, those states will all, I fear, keep up this discrimination and crush to death the hated Freedman.’ ” Jackson observed, “That’s not a race-neutral or race-blind idea in terms of the remedy.”The right-wing’s fixation on a “colorblind” society serves to strip Congress of the power under the 14th Amendment to address discrimination. The right-wing justices are so determined to show the Constitution to require their “colorblind” result that they’ve ignored the history, meaning and intent of the document they claim to revere.The court’s six-justice conservative majority has shown repeatedly that it has the votes to achieve the radical, partisan outcomes it desires, so it need not make convincing arguments — or even coherent ones (see it’s ruling overturning abortion rights). That’s what makes Jackson’s remarks so effective. Essentially, she said, “I’m making sure everyone understands what is going on here.”
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 science, social behavior, morality and history.
Etiquette
Thursday, October 6, 2022
Judge Brown's oral argument hearing
News updates
Like many other conservative residents of storm-battered southwest Florida, Pamela Swartz has long been leery of government spending. But as she stood among the smashed boats, gutted homes and overwhelming loss left by Hurricane Ian, Ms. Swartz said that federal aid could not come soon enough.
“This is their time to step in,” said Ms. Swartz, whose garage in Fort Myers Beach had been flooded by Ian’s devastating storm surge. She was already frustrated after trying to file a federal storm claim. “This is what we pay our taxes for.”
“Our governor is the greatest,” said Jay Kimble, a maintenance worker on Fort Myers Beach who lost everything. “I know he’s going to do everything he can to get us back on our feet. I’m not a Biden fan at all.”
In 2016, while the Federal Trade Commission was investigating Uber over an earlier breach of its online systems, Mr. Sullivan learned of a new breach that affected the Uber accounts of more than 57 million riders and drivers.
The jury found Mr. Sullivan guilty on one count of obstructing the F.T.C.’s investigation and one count of misprision, or acting to conceal a felony from authorities.
The case — believed to be the first time a company executive faced criminal prosecution over a hack — could change how security professionals handle data breaches.
A majority of Republican nominees on the ballot this November for the House, Senate and key statewide offices — 299 in all — have denied or questioned the outcome of the last presidential election, according to a Washington Post analysis.
Candidates who have challenged or refused to accept Joe Biden’s victory are running in every region of the country and in nearly every state. Republican voters in four states nominated election deniers in all federal and statewide races The Post examined.
Although some are running in heavily Democratic areas and are expected to lose, most of the election deniers nominated are likely to win: Of the nearly 300 on the ballot, 174 are running for safely Republican seats. Another 51 will appear on the ballot in tightly contested races.
Yet the greatest single measure to protect U.S. democracy lies in Congress. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) voiced his support last week for the Electoral Count Reform Act, which would make it harder for conspiracy theorists to hijack the electoral process and overturn a legitimate vote. It is an essential response to the wave of election deniers likely to take office next year — and, as such, it is the most important legislation federal lawmakers will have considered in recent years.
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
News bits
- Sackett v. EPA is likely to lead to greater land development and loosen requirements on businesses that discharge pollutants into waters (brass knuckles, anti-regulation, pro-pollution, pro-development capitalism)
- In Moore v. Harper, the radical right is asking for state legislatures to have power to rig elections and overturn election results the controlling state party dislikes, where that power is almost absolute and essentially unreviewable by state or federal courts (GOP’s anti-democratic tyranny of the minority)
- In 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis, the radical right wants all businesses to be able to discriminate against anyone in the LGBQT community on the grounds that it burdens religious beliefs or practices (Christian nationalists building Christian Sharia law for Christian Taliban legal standing)
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, focuses primarily on the term “The Big Lie” about Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud that he says cost him the 2020 presidential election to Joe Biden.
Trump’s lawsuit claims “The Big Lie,” a phrase with Nazi connotations, has been used in reference to him more than 7,700 times on CNN since January 2021.
“It is intended to aggravate, scare and trigger people,” he said.
Monday, October 3, 2022
Accelerationism
‘Accelerationism’ is a term used by white supremacists and other extremist groups to refer to “their desire to hasten the collapse of society as we know it”. Generally, acceleration is used in the context of white genocide conspiracy theories, which believes white people are under threat and are being systematically targeted through e.g. immigration and other means.
A collapse of modern societal structures and political systems is seen as the only means through which to stop these perceived injustices against white people. Indeed, many accelerationist groups desire this collapse and call for replacing modern society and governance with one founded on ethnonationalism.
Accelerationism continues to have a growing international audience. Terrorist groups like the Atomwaffen Division, which embrace and promote accelerationism, were founded in the United States but have produced offshoots (e.g. the Sonnenkrieg Division and the Feuerkrieg Division) across Europe and Australia.
Why is it dangerous?
Accelerationism is at its core an encouragement of civil discord that employs an “ends justify the means” approach towards violence. Most white supremacist accelerationists view violence as a necessary means for catalysing societal collapse and implementing new power structures that prioritise the “needs” of white people.
There have already been notable instances of violence affiliated with accelerationist ideology. For example, the perpetrator of the terror attack against the Muslim community of Christchurch in 2019, dedicated an entire section of his “manifesto” to accelerationism. The perpetrator of the Poway synagogue shooting in 2019 similarly expressed accelerationist beliefs, saying he “used a gun for the same reason that [the Christchurch attacker] used a gun… the goal is for the US government to start confiscating guns. People will defend their rights to own a firearm – civil war has just started”.
Accelerationism is therefore not just dangerous because of its potential to encourage violence, but in the fact that violence is seen as the primary means to bring about the desired goal of societal collapse.
Background
Accelerationism comes from an amalgamation of:
Neoreaction, or NRx – a doctrine developed by Nick Land and Curtis Yarvin, which claims democracy doesn’t work nor does it allow for good governance. Neoreaction instead embraces autocracy or authoritarian rule, where a single individual is given full power to lead. Neoreactionaries often liken what they perceive to be valid and effective national leadership to that of corporate governance, where a national ruler should lead a country similarly to how a chief executive officer would his company.
White supremacist beliefs that “‘white identity’ is under attack by multicultural forces using ‘political correctness’ and ‘social justice’ to undermine white people and ‘their’ civilization.” As opposed to neoreactionary belief, which posits democracy as the biggest obstacle to a better future, white supremacists tend to scapegoat Jewish people and other religious and ethnic minorities as the greatest barrier to a future that upholds white dominion.
Siege culture – a violent subculture of white supremacy inspired by James Mason and his neo-Nazi essays, SIEGE. Mason argues that “only the full collapse of American democracy and society will bring conditions sufficient to bring order through Nazism”, and calls for violence to expedite this collapse. More on SIEGE can be found below.
Accelerationism derives from cross-pollination of these ideologies, combining anti-democratic neoreactionary beliefs with white supremacist siege culture to manifest a belief that the “future of the white race is bleak,” and that a better future can be secured through an escalation of social disorder that facilitates the collapse and replacement of existing political and societal structures (referred to by accelerationists as “the System”).
Related Narratives and Terminology
White Genocide
White supremacist accelerationists believe white people are experiencing an ongoing genocide caused by multiculturalism, immigration and deliberate attacks on white people both culturally, through politically correct establishment and individually, through violence committed by minorities. A collapse of modern political and social institutions is seen as the only way to counter this threat and to reimplement structures that prioritise white people. Similar conspiracies like the ‘Great Replacement’, which argues white Europeans and Americans are being “deliberately replaced at an ethnic and cultural level through migration and the growth of minority communities”, are also prominent in accelerationist circles.
Race War and Racist Tropes
The societal collapse desired by accelerationists is often framed in the context of a “race war” that would bring about the end of American democracy and enable the implementation of a white nationalist system of governance. To this end, white supremacist accelerationists propagate racist tropes that treat non-white communities as inferior, physically, emotionally and intellectually, to white people. Further, “race-mixing”, non-white immigration and multiculturalism are all seen as part and parcel of efforts to decimate the white race. Most accelerationists therefore desire racial segregation through the implementation of a white ethnostate.
The Turner Diaries
The Turner Diaries is a foundational text of contemporary white supremacist movements in the US. Written by William Pierce, leader of the neo-Nazi National Alliance until his death in 2002, the fiction novel tells the story of Eric Turner, who, as part of a white supremacist revolutionary army, helps overthrow the US government and implement an Aryan republic. The novel is rife with antisemitism, giving a platform to antisemitic tropes that claim Jewish people are deceitful and that they are “Satan’s
spawn.” Further, violence is a key part of the story, presented as a necessary means through which to achieve white domination not just in the US, but globally.
The novel is affiliated with notable instances of violence, including Timothy McVeigh’s terror attack in Oklahoma City in 1995, which killed 168 and injured over 600. The white supremacist terrorist group, The Order, was founded by an affiliate of Pierce and, inspired by The Turner Diaries, committed assassinations and other crimes in an attempt to incite white revolution.
SIEGE and Siege Culture
SIEGE by James Mason is a compilation of neo-Nazi esssays. The book graphically incites violence against Jewish and Black communities across the US, claiming “civil war, a total revolution” would give these communities the “death they so richly deserve”. The book is so influential in white supremacist circles that it has inspired what is now dubbed ‘siege culture‘, referring to violent accelerationist groups and their forums online.
Antisemitism
Tying in with conspiracies about white genocide are antisemitic beliefs that blame Jewish people for these perceived threats against white people, building on antisemitic tropes that claim Jews control major financial and media institutions around the world.
The Anti-Defamation League reports, for example, an anonymous 8Chan post that reads “‘acceleration’ means… making things worse… [the Christchurch perpetrator] understood that ZOG would double down on censorship, gun grabbing, free speech, etc.,” where ZOG stands for “Zionist Occupied Government”, a conspiracy that claims the US government is controlled by Jews. Here, the user clearly alludes to the accelerationist domino effect, in which the Christchurch terror attack is seen as a catalyst for increased government imposition and censorship, which would inspire those “on the fence” to choose anti-state groups and/or to contribute to civil disorder through violence or otherwise.
Tying in Contemporary Events
Accelerationists leverage contemporary events to recruit and further their agenda to take down “the System.” Among others, accelerationist discourse in the past year has addressed:
Black Lives Matter protests – especially those where there was confrontation with law enforcement, were viewed by some accelerationists as potential catalysts for civil war. White supremacists have also “infilrated” these protests, vandalizing properties to provoke disorder.
COVID-19 – where public confusion spurred by inconsistent government messaging has been exploited by accelerationists to “prove” that existing political structures are incapable of managing crises. COVID-19 conspiracism is also prevalent in accelerationist discourse, where the virus is claimed to be a weapon used by the ‘New World Order‘, the Chinese government and others to decimate the white race.
The Second Amendment – accelerationists rely on increased gun control legislation to catalyse disorder and violence. They hope stricter gun ownership legislation will inspire (violent) backlash and encourage more individuals to take on the accelerationist agenda of societal collapse.
January 6 attack on the Capitol – the insurrection at the US Capitol Building on January 6 2021 was celebrated by many accelerationists as a key catalyst for their desired civil war.
These are a few examples that demonstrate how accelerationists rely on public disorder and violence to further their narratives – accelerationists believe that the more chaos ensues, the more people are likely to abandon moderate views or political stances for the extreme.
Affiliated Movements and Forums
Atomwaffen Division (AWD) is a white supremacist group that “encourages violence to intimidate minority populations in pursuit of its goal of destabilizing society to instigate a race war.” AWD has many off offshoots and similar movements are dotted across Europe and Australia, the biggest of which are the Sonnenkrieg Division, Feuerkrieg Division and Antipodean resistance.
The Base, founded in 2018, is a militant neo-Nazi group that claims a race war is a necessary and desirable means to catalyse societal collapse and implement a white ethnostate. The group recruits online and offline, with related propaganda sited throughout the US and Canada. The group has also been tied with a number of arrests, with charges ranging from drug possession to conspiracy to commit murder.
The Order was a terrorist group active in the 1980s and founded by Robert Jay Matthews, a known affiliate of William Pierce, author of the racist and violent text, “The Turner Diaries”. The Order is responsible for multiple felonies, including assassinations, committed to incite a white supremacist revolution. Although the group is no longer active, their members still celebrated as heroes and martyrs amongst contemporary white supremacists.
Siege-Culture, Fascist Forge and Iron March are part of accelerationism’s significant digital presence, using existing platforms like Telegram, Parler, Discord and others to network. They have also created their own forums, which have served as hotbeds for planning and inciting violence and as directories for extremist propaganda, including Mason’s SIEGE. Iron March, for example, is a now defunct neo-Nazi forum that is “considered to have been key to the formation of [AWD}”, which has been linked to white supremacist violence offline. Fascist Forge is considered a successor to Iron March and similarly emphasizes violence as a means to expedite societal collapse.
The Accelerationist ‘Brand’ – Imagery
White supremacist accelerationist movements generally use logos and imagery that present “grittiness” or “roughness” and militancy. This imagery often integrates neo-Nazi symbolism. This is supplemented with narratives that propagate racist and antisemitic tropes. Terminology found in white supremacist forums embodies the homogeny with which perceived enemies of the white race are viewed (e.g. “the Jew”, intended as a catch-all phase to refer to all Jewish people, or “the System”, referring to existing governance and mainstream institutions and media).
The ‘SS bolts’ (pictured) derive from the Shutzstaffel, a paramilitary organisation operating under Hitler in Nazi Germany. Other symbols co-opted by Nazism and used by white supremacists today include the Sonnenrad and the Wolfsangel.
A link to the source web page is here. This was written by the Institute for Strategic Dialog, which says it is an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to safeguarding human rights and reversing the rising tide of polarization, extremism and disinformation worldwide.Sunday, October 2, 2022
From the fall of democracy files: The radicalized Supreme Court turns up the heat
- The court remains radicalized, anti-democratic, autocratic, Christian fundamentalist theocratic and brass knuckles capitalist. Based on the kinds of cases it chose to hear, it also remains intent on fundamentally transforming secular law into a combination of Christian Sharia and unregulated capitalism.
- The court is also focused on crippling democracy and shifting power from the federal government and individuals to the Republican Party, the Christian church and businesses, especially big businesses.
- Christian nationalist (CN) dogma is heavily biased against racial minorities, women, non-heterosexuals. In accord with that bias, It is also heavily biased against the civil liberties, e.g., voting rights and voter power, that protect their rights and liberties. In one case tghe Supreme Court is going to decide, CN fundamentalists ask for state government to have unfettered power to use gerrymandering to take as much voter power as possible from racial minorities.
- Republican Party, CN and radical right capitalist dogma are all rigidly opposed to a strong federal government. Those radical ideologies are just as opposed to the ability of voters to influence the outcomes of elections, and the federal government's ability to protect voter power. One case the court will decide would give state legislatures virtually unlimited power to reduce elections to a mere farce. That case, Moore v. Harper, if decided according to radical right dogma, will turn elections in red states into something fairly close to the fake elections Putin forced on people in annexed parts of Ukraine. Presidential elections in 2024 and thereafter will be rigged farces.
- If decided according to core CN dogma, another Supreme Court case will curtail or completely obliterate rights to same-sex marriage. At best, states will be able to openly discriminate against same-sex couples in commerce and maybe elsewhere. Next and maybe less likely, states would be left to decide the legality of existing and future same-sex marriages. At worst (most unlikely?), all same-sex marriages will be declared unconstitutional, null and void in all states.
On Monday, the nine justices of the US supreme court will take their seats at the start of a new judicial year, even as the shock waves of the panel’s previous seismic term continue to reverberate across America.
In their first full term that ended in June, the court’s new six-to-three hard-right supermajority astounded the nation by tearing up decades of settled law. They eviscerated the right to an abortion, loosened America’s already lax gun laws, erected roadblocks to combating the climate crisis, and awarded religious groups greater say in public life.
The fallout of the spate of extreme rightwing rulings has shaken public confidence in the political neutrality of the court. A Gallup poll this week found that fewer than half of US adults trust it – a drop of 20 points in just two years and the lowest rating since Gallup began recording the trend in 1972.
Justices have begun to respond to the pressure by sparring openly in public. The Wall Street Journal reported that in recent speeches the liberal justice Elena Kagan has accused her conservative peers of damaging the credibility of the court by embracing Republican causes.
Samuel Alito, who wrote the decision overturning the right to an abortion in Roe v Wade, counter-accused Kagan (whom he did not name) of crossing “an important line” by implying the court was becoming illegitimate.
With so much discord in plain sight, you might have expected the new supermajority created under Trump to opt for a calmer year ahead. No chance.
The choice of cases to be decided in the new term spells full steam ahead. “I see no signs of them slowing down,” said Tara Groves, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin.From fundamental aspects of American democracy to LGBTQ+ equality, and the electoral power of racial minorities to protecting the environment, the conservative justices have selected a whole new slew of targets that fall squarely within Republican priorities. The schedule for the first two days of oral arguments this week tells the story.
On Monday morning, the court will fling itself into the thick of environmental controversy in the latest case threatening the ability of the federal government to counter pollution. Having curtailed in June the ability of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to curb emissions causing planet heating, the court will now hear arguments in Sackett v EPA, which has the potential to whittle down the agency’s powers to uphold clean water standards.Then on Tuesday, the court enters blockbuster territory with Merrill v Milligan. That case could topple the last remaining pillar of the Voting Rights Act, which has safeguarded the democratic rights of African American and other minority citizens for the past 57 years.
As Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice, put it in a briefing this week, the case adds to the court’s upcoming docket “the raw issue of race in America”.
Merrill v Milligan concerns Alabama, where Republican lawmakers want to draw up congressional district maps that would give Black voters the power to send just one African American member to Congress out of a total of seven representatives, even though Black Alabamans make up a quarter of the state’s population.In its brief to the supreme court, Alabama effectively invites the conservative justices to make it virtually impossible to challenge racial gerrymandering. Should the state’s view prevail, challengers would have to show that racial discrimination was the primary intent behind how district lines were drawn. [that standard of evidence of intent will be basically impossible to show]
The Alabama dispute epitomizes two visceral themes that run through several of the blockbuster cases this term: race and democracy.The second major theme of the coming term is democracy. In addition to the Alabama racial gerrymandering case, the court has agreed to take on the highly polarized subject of the role of state legislatures in federal elections.
Moore v Harper could have “monumental implications for American democracy”, Groves believes. At the heart of the case is the debunked “independent state legislature theory”, which has been embraced in recent years by radical Republicans who argue that the constitution gives state legislatures the overriding power to regulate federal elections.
Though legal scholars have largely rejected the doctrine, four of the nine justices – Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Thomas – have paid lip-service to some aspect of it. Should they command the majority, they could give Republican-controlled state legislatures even more firepower to grab what is in effect minority rule through extreme partisan gerrymandering, with very little possible oversight from state courts.
At its most dystopian, an extreme ruling in Moore v Harper could wreak havoc in presidential elections in 2024 and beyond. John Eastman, the conservative law professor mired in legal peril over the central role he played in trying to overturn Joe Biden’s victory on January 6, put the independent state legislature theory at the heart of his notorious memo laying out the roadmap for an electoral coup.
Smith explained that the supreme court could embolden state legislatures to dictate who wins presidential elections in their state according to political whim. “That might be unconstitutional under state law, but under this doctrine state courts would be powerless to prevent them.”
As if race and the future of American democracy were not enough, the conservative justices are also bearing down once again on the right to equal treatment for same-sex couples. They have taken on a case asking whether a graphic design firm, 303 Creative LLC, should be able to turn away gay couples requesting help creating wedding websites on religious grounds.
Saturday, October 1, 2022
From the fall of democracy files: Theocracy creeps into federal courts
The Fifth Circuit reverses and grants judgment *for* a judge who does a prayer ceremony in his courtroom before hearing cases.
— Raffi Melkonian (@RMFifthCircuit) September 29, 2022
Judge Jolly dissents in relevant part. His description of what the scene in Court is like is below. 1/ https://t.co/u9ocV8tpeC pic.twitter.com/5rxi4WebIc