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.

Friday, March 10, 2023

News bits: When rights collide, some people whine about it; Trump lawsuit yawner; Etc.

The Telegraph writes about attitudes in the UK (note I now question the reliability of the information posed here - I retract this news bit): 
Women’s rights have gone ‘too far’, say majority of Gen Z and millennials, study shows

More than half of younger generations polled say women's rights are now discriminating against men

Some 52 per cent of Gen Z and 53 per cent of millennials say society has gone so far in promoting women’s rights that it is discriminating against men, a survey by Ipsos UK and the Global Institute for Women’s Leadership at King’s College London found. In contrast, four in 10 baby boomers (40 per cent) and Gen X (46 per cent) said the same. More than half of all men (55 per cent) held this opinion, compared to 41 per cent of women.
Men, what a bunch of wuss. No wonder so many of them in America are Christian nationalists. They get to sanctimoniously whine about being severely persecuted and oppressed with backing from the self-righteous wrath of loving, infallible God.


Note added after posting earlier today:
 Another reference in another story mentioned The Telegraph. That suggested that The Telegraph might be a radical right or hyper-radical right source. I checked on a fact accuracy and bias assessment source and found that The Telegraph is too often not reliable. Therefore, I retract this news bit as too likely unreliable.



_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________


The NYT writes about Trump and the absent without leave law: “Prosecutors Signal Criminal Charges for Trump Are Likely -- The former president was told that he could appear before a Manhattan grand jury next week if he wishes to testify, a strong indication that an indictment could soon follow

Yawn. The only news bit will be if (i) he is indicted or not, and then (ii) if he is acquitted or found guilty and liability for lawbreaking survives appeal all the way to the US Supreme Court. Everything else is the same empty white noise we have been hearing for some years now.


_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________


Budget wars are heating up -- the GOP proposes blither and crackpottery, Biden proposes something that might work: This is posturing in advance of the radical right in congress ready to force the US to default on its debt. A NYT opinion piece by Paul Krugman argues these points:
  • In 2013 radical Republicans proposed a budget that was economic nonsense, i.e., it would not have reduced the debt. It included a move to privatize Medicare over a period of some years, which would have achieved a goal the GOP wanted.
  • In 2023 radical Republicans propose things that are even more nonsensical, while claiming the federal debt is a crisis. If the GOP was serious about there being a crisis, one could not see that reflected in their proposal, which preserves debt-increasing Trump tax cuts, with no cuts in in defense, Social Security or Medicare. Krugman comments on that: “Yet it also claims to balance the budget, which is basically impossible under these constraints.”
  • By contrast, Biden’s proposal might do some good. He proposes to modestly reduce the ongoing spending deficit, while shrinking the federal deficit by about $3 trillion over 10 years. In essence, Biden’s proposal reduces deficit while modestly expanding social programs by (i) raising taxes on corporations and wealthy individuals, and (ii) cost-cutting measures in health care, e.g., via using Medicare’s bargaining power to reduce spending on prescription drugs. 
  • Biden’s budget proposal is not far out of synch with what the Congressional Budget Office comes up with in its analysis of the Biden proposal. So, unlike the blithering nonsense from the GOP, there is some credibility in what Biden proposes.
  • Krugman sees no economic sense in the Republican plan and muses about why that might be: “The modern G.O.P. gets its energy from culture war and racial hostility, not faith in the miraculous power of tax cuts and small government. So why not give up on the ghost of Reaganomics? Why not come out for a strong social safety net, but only for straight white people?” 
Was that last comment by Krugman snark? 🤨

Of course, there is zero chance that Biden’s proposal would pass in congress. The entire Republican cadre hates taxes and government. So, we will be left with gridlock probably right up to the time of a US default, maybe some time thereafter if the radicals force the US into  default.

_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________


More fun with the budget -- the hyper-radicals throw down the gauntlet: The WaPo writes about what the foaming at the mouth hyper-radicals want in their budget utopia:  
The House Freedom Caucus insisted on steeper spending cuts than some GOP lawmakers had been considering, along with caps on future spending, as the fight over the debt ceiling intensifies

A powerful group of far-right Republicans on Friday issued a new set demands in the fight over the debt ceiling, stressing they would only supply their votes to raise the limit if they can secure about $130 billion in spending cuts, cap federal agencies’ future budgets and unwind the Biden administration’s economic agenda.

The ultimatum from the House Freedom Caucus — led by Rep. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) — threatened to deal a massive blow to government health care, education, science and labor programs.
That’s more like what we have come to expect from the hyper-radical wing of the GOP. They believe in blue space lasers, babies and microchips in vaccines and lizard people Democrats. Those crackpot freaks are so far to the extreme right, they almost make the radicals look centrist. Almost, but not really.

Come June or whenever the US hits its spending ceiling, things are going to get real interesting and extremely ugly.

_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________


More on the budget: The WaPo editorial board argues that the debt really is at crisis levels and a lot more than what Biden proposes is necessary. This paints a really scary scenario:
As debt gets bigger than the economy, the interest costs become so onerous that there is little money left for anything else. By 2033, the nation will be spending more on paying creditors than on the entire defense budget.

Even the more modest goal of attempting to stabilize the debt as a size of the economy would take close to $8 trillion in savings, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget says. Mr. Biden proposed about $3 trillion in net savings over the next decade, achieved mostly by hiking taxes on the rich and a proposal for the government to pay less for the prescription drugs it buys through programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. He deserves credit for offering some cuts and revenue raisers, but his plan underscores the reality that getting anywhere close to what’s needed over the next decade will take heroic political efforts.

The scale of sobriety that is now necessary means we will need to do a lot more than lawmakers are acknowledging. Republicans falsely claim that the nation’s budget situation would be fine if it just cut back on welfare, waste and foreign aid. Democrats are equally misleading when they suggest it will take raising taxes on big businesses and the rich and perhaps shaving a bit off defense to get where we need to be.

The CBO projects Medicare will have to start making dramatic cuts to benefits by 2030 and Social Security by 2033. There’s another reckoning coming even sooner, at the end of 2025, when Mr. Trump’s individual tax cuts expire. The GOP made the corporate tax cuts permanent, but not the cuts for families. If the tax cuts are extended, the nation’s finances look worse.
Is it just me or does the budget issue look this time like it is going to force a solution on us sooner rather than later, e.g., in the next 4-5 years? Some experts have been arguing for years that the longer we dither, the worse the pain will be later. That argument feels right.

Hear ye, hear ye...

The warnings are coming fast and furious now.  Trump indictments coming soon!

I don’t know, but I’m having visions of “The Boy(s) Who Cried Wolf.”  

In other words, I’ve seen the Trump movie enough times, and heard about Trump getting his “comeuppance” ad nauseam, that I’ve got to see it to believe it.  Yeah, “Fool me once…” Syndrome has set in for me.

So, what do you think? 

  1. Will the news of these indictments pan out?  If yes, how soon before at least one of them happens?  I'm not asking what the NEWS thinks; I'm asking what YOU think.
  2. What will be their ramifications?  (E.g., Jail time for Trump [there’s a laugh], big fines, will it bolster his chances “bigly” of getting the Republican nomination because he’s been wrongfully accused [poor me…witch-hunted], etc.)  What do you see happening to Trump and his brand?
  3. Of all Trump’s “legal problems” (tax evasion, stolen classified documents, 1/6 insurrection incitement, hush money payments to porn stars, interference in the 2020 election), what is the most egregious?  Rank them in order of legal seriousness, as you see them.

Thursday, March 9, 2023

News bits: An odd court decision whacks the bad guys for being bad; Etc.

Right-wing activists Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman’s robocalls targeting Black voters violated the Voting Rights Act and Ku Klux Klan Act — and the question isn’t close enough to require a jury, a federal judge ruled.

[The judge said that] the evidence “establishes that the neighborhoods that Defendants targeted were not accidental or random,” finding that a reasonable jury couldn’t escape the conclusion that the pair wanted to “deny the right to vote specifically to Black voters.”

Recorded by a woman identifying herself as “Tamika Taylor,” the robocalls largely targeted diverse regions with the false message that “if you vote by mail, your personal information will be part of a public database that will be used by police departments to track down old warrants, and [will] be used by credit card companies to collect outstanding debt.”

Though Wohl and Burkman painted themselves as “goofballs and political hucksters with an irreverent sense of humor,” Judge Marrero rejected that the robocalls were “mere hyperbole.”
If the Republican Supreme Court takes this case up, it will try to find a way to let these two Republican vote fraudsters off the hook on free speech grounds. After all, Republicans use the law to protect their own and savage those they hate and politically oppose.

______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________

Ukraine update: The NYT writes: “Russia Lacks Firepower to Keep Advancing, U.S. Intelligence Chief Says.”

That’s not credible. Maybe it will be credible when it happens. Another pulse check in six months might to shed enough fact-based light on this to come to a reasonably fact-based opinion.

______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________


The WaPo writes: “Russia fires barrage of hypersonic missiles, piercing Ukrainian air defenses.”

Russia continues happily to pulverize Ukraine into the stone age.

______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________


Morally bankrupt American military: The NYT writes: “Pentagon Blocks Sharing Evidence of Possible Russian War Crimes With Hague Court. American military leaders oppose helping the court investigate Russians because they fear setting a precedent that might help pave the way for it to prosecute Americans.”

Biden and State Department want to turn the evidence over. The US military fears prosecutions of its personnel. If the Pentagon stopped doing things that create liability for prosecutions, this would not be a concern. 

______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________

From the Pissed Off Catholics Files: The WaPo writes about an investigation it launched into this odd story: “A group of conservative Colorado Catholics has spent millions of dollars to buy mobile app tracking data that identified priests who used gay dating and hookup apps and then shared it with bishops around the country. The secretive effort was the work of a Denver nonprofit called Catholic Laity and Clergy for Renewal .... The use of data is emblematic of a new surveillance frontier in which private individuals can potentially track other Americans’ locations and activities using commercially available information. No U.S. data privacy laws prohibit the sale of this data.”

Personal privacy online is just about non-existent. How many priests will get axed from this little fishing expedition is an interesting question.

______________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________


From the Snarky Columnist Files: A WaPo opinion by Alexandra Petri opines, snarking on the Faux News and Tucker Carlson spinning the 1/6 coup attempt into a harmless, fat-free nothingburger:
I got an advance transcript of Tucker Carlson’s next several shows, operating under the same premise as his recently released, selectively edited Jan. 6 coverage! It follows.

Viewers! For too long, Big Paleontology and the mainstream media have lied to you, saying that the planet was hit by a meteorite that caused dinosaurs to go extinct. That’s what they want you to think. But I’ve looked at the footage and — it’s just not the case. For the overwhelming, vast majority of the time that dinosaurs were walking around on Earth, there’s not a single meteorite to be seen.

Mostly, the dinosaurs were not impacted by a meteorite, actually. Finally, someone with the courage to say it. It makes you wonder: What else are they keeping from us?

Next, we will observe footage that reveals Abraham Lincoln was mostly not assassinated — I have almost an hour of footage of him enjoying a theater performance without incident! And footage showing that for the overwhelming majority of his life, Elvis was alive. Next, lots of footage of the Hindenburg flying without a single problem! Makes you wonder who stood to gain by painting it as a disaster! 
Faux News and Carlson are doubling down and saying the 1/6 coup attempt was peaceful and lawful. They have to double down or lose audience share. For Faux, as we all know, concern for profit is first, while truth is a distant third behind 2nd place audience share.  


Tucker showing the peaceful patriotism  
of the 1/6 coup attempt

What Tucker Carlson Really Thinks of Trump? "I Hate Him Passionately."

Tucker Carlson has been a central proponent of Trump and the MAGA movement in the GOP. He's a trusted go-to source for the MAGA troops, and in the past I have even heard rumors of his running for president in 2024. But, like a lot of other people, I've always had the suspicion that he's a phony who runs a lucrative business telling Fox audiences what they want to hear. It looks like there's something to that hunch according to recently obtained private comments Carlson made which have surfaced in the context of the Dominion Voting Systems defamation suit. The following is an excerpt of a NYT article published yesterday.

_________________________________________

NYT: 3/8/23

Here are five examples of Mr. Carlson’s views on Mr. Trump from the documents:

Nov. 6, 2020

As votes were being counted in the 2020 presidential election, Mr. Carlson texted with his producer, Alex Pfeiffer, fretting about viewers turning away from Fox News after the network called Arizona for President Biden.

Alex Pfeiffer: Trump has a pretty low rate at success in his business ventures.

Tucker Carlson: That’s for sure. All of them fail. What he’s good at is destroying things. He’s the undisputed world champion of that.

Nov. 10, 2020

A staff member texted Mr. Carlson to say they’d heard Mr. Trump was planning not to attend the inauguration, an important symbol of the peaceful transfer of power.

Carlson: I’d heard that about the inauguration. Hard to believe. So destructive.

Carlson: It’s disgusting. I’m trying to look away.

Nov. 23, 2020

Mr. Carlson texts with the Fox News host Laura Ingraham about Sidney Powell, a lawyer for Mr. Trump and one of the biggest promoters of the unfounded election fraud claims.

Carlson: I had to try to make the WH disavow her, which they obviously should have done long before.

Laura Ingraham: No serious lawyer could believe what they were saying.

Carlson: But they said nothing in public. Pretty disgusting. And now Trump, I learned this morning, is sitting back and letting them lose the senate. He doesn’t care. I care.

Jan. 4, 2021

Mr. Carlson texts with members of his staff, two months after the 2020 election and two days before the insurrection at the Capitol building, about looking forward to not having to cover Mr. Trump.

Carlson: We are very, very close to being able to ignore Trump most nights. I truly can’t wait.

Carlson: I hate him passionately.

Jan. 7, 2021

After the riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, Mr. Carlson texts with Mr. Pfeiffer about Mr. Trump’s culpability in the insurrection and how to deal with viewers who still support him. It was two weeks before the inauguration of President Biden.

Carlson: Trump has two weeks left. Once he’s out, he becomes incalculably less powerful, even in the minds of his supporters.

Carlson: He’s a demonic force, a destroyer. But he’s not going to destroy us. I’ve been thinking about this every day for four years.

Pfeiffer: You’re right. I don’t want to let him destroy me either. [REDACTED]. The Trump anger spiral is vicious.

Carlson: That’s for sure. Deadly. It almost consumed me in November when Sidney Powell attacked us. It was very difficult to regain emotional control, but I knew I had to. We’ve got two weeks left. We can do this.

 

 Full article here: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/08/business/media/tucker-carlson-trump.html?campaign_id=190&emc=edit_ufn_2023

 

Wednesday, March 8, 2023

News bits: Abortions wars; Election wars; More abortion wars

I post about abortion wars because it is one of the culture war issues where we can often or usually clearly see radical right progress. What is happening with that issue is also coming to us now with other issues the authoritarian-theocratic radical right has both (i) demagogued, and (ii) the power to conduct nationwide social warfare. Politico writes about how Christian nationalist (CN) Republican politicians in power are slowly forcing companies to comply with CN religious dogmas:
Walgreens won’t distribute abortion pills in states where GOP AGs object

The nation’s second-largest pharmacy chain confirmed Thursday that it will not dispense abortion pills in several states where they remain legal — acting out of an abundance of caution amid a shifting policy landscape, threats from state officials and pressure from anti-abortion activists.

Nearly two dozen Republican state attorneys general wrote to Walgreens in February, threatening legal action if the company began distributing the drugs, which have become the nation’s most popular method for ending a pregnancy.

The company told POLITICO that it has since responded to all the officials, assuring them that they will not dispense abortion pills either by mail or at their brick-and-mortar locations in those states.

The list includes several states where abortion in general, and the medications specifically, remain legal — including Alaska, Iowa, Kansas and Montana.  
“In my letter to Walgreens, we made clear that Kansas will not hesitate to enforce the laws against mailing and dispensing abortion pills, including bringing a RICO action to enforce the federal law prohibiting the mailing of abortion pills,” Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach said in a statement.
Some activists want people to boycott Walgreens for stopping sales in states where at least some abortion is still legal, at least for now. 

Q: Do you see this an an example of anti-democratic social warfare being waged by radical right authoritarian, theocratic CN warriors with the Republican Party being the CN's Department of War? If not that, what would you call it?

______________________________________________________________
 ______________________________________________________________ 


The latest radical right attack on election integrity: The radical right is mounting major nationwide attack on election integrity. It will make widespread vote fraud easier. The WaPo writes:
At a time of hyperpolarization over voting and elections, Democrats and Republicans had largely managed to agree on one thing — that a little-known data-sharing consortium of more than 30 states has helped keep voter rolls updated and free of opportunities for fraud.

But the Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), as the consortium is known, has been straining lately under the weight of accusations and misinformation from election deniers. Critics, some of whom have aligned themselves with the false stolen-election narrative of former president Donald Trump, have claimed that the group is actually a left-wing vehicle that shares sensitive voter data with liberal groups, encourages bloated and inaccurate rolls and enables the very fraud it is intended to stamp out. ERIC’s leaders deny these accusations.

Now, ERIC’s survival is in jeopardy, with Republican-led states withdrawing, others threatening to do so and heated disputes breaking out among members over how to save the organization. Should ERIC collapse, its boosters say the country would lose one of its most powerful tools for keeping ballot fraud at bay just as states are beginning to prepare for the 2024 election calendar.

“Why would people who purport to want more election integrity seek to damage the best tool out there?” asked David Becker, who helped found ERIC in 2012 with seven states when he led the elections program at the Pew Charitable Trusts and watched it grow over the ensuing decade. “The only thing I can come up with is they don’t actually want election integrity. They want more chaos.”

ERIC’s founding members thought they had devised the perfect way to impose sound voter-roll practices on states while keeping Republicans and Democrats happy in an area fraught with mutual suspicions. .... The system can also be used to help identify and prosecute those who have double-voted across state lines.
Q: Do you see this an an example of anti-democratic social warfare being waged by radical right authoritarian, theocratic warriors with the Republican Party being the authoritarian-theocrat Department of War? If not that, what would you call it?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

Abortion war in Texas: The Texas Tribune writes:
Federal court ruling may prevent Texas teens from getting 
birth control without parental permission

U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, a former religious liberty lawyer, found that a federal program that gives teens access to birth control denies a parent “a fundamental right to control and direct the upbringing of his minor children.”

A federal court ruling Tuesday may make it nearly impossible for Texas teens to access birth control without their parents’ permission.

U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk ruled that Title X, a federal program that provides free, confidential contraception to anyone, regardless of age, income or immigration status, violates parents’ rights and state and federal law.

Kacsmaryk, appointed by President Donald Trump in 2019, is a former religious liberty lawyer who helped litigate cases seeking to overturn protections for contraception.
This is CN theocracy being forced on people by the federal courts. Attacks on civil liberties like this allow radical right politicians in Texas and congress to escape most accountability. All they have to do is say the court did it, not them. It's a great tactic because it works quite well.

News chunks: Rule of law wars intensify; Tucker causes bipartisan outrage?

The radical right war on democracy and the rule of law is getting really ugly. Several sources are reporting that radical right Republican politicians in Georgia are pursuing oversight of state prosecutors. This is a direct attack on the rule of law. What prompted it is the possibility that Trump will be indicted for crimes he committed in Georgia. The NYT writes:
To Fani T. Willis, the district attorney in Atlanta, several bills in the Georgia legislature that would make it easier to remove local prosecutors are racist and perhaps retaliatory for her ongoing investigation of former President Donald J. Trump.

To the Republican sponsors of the bills, they are simply a way to ensure that prosecutors enforce the laws of the state, whether they agree with them or not.

To Fani T. Willis, the district attorney in Atlanta, several bills in the Georgia legislature that would make it easier to remove local prosecutors are racist and perhaps retaliatory for her ongoing investigation of former President Donald J. Trump.

To the Republican sponsors of the bills, they are simply a way to ensure that prosecutors enforce the laws of the state, whether they agree with them or not. 

Ms. Willis has been a centrist law-and-order prosecutor who has targeted some prominent local rappers in a sprawling gang case. She is also part of the changing face of justice in Georgia: The state now has a record number of minority prosecutors — 14 of them — up from five in 2020, the year Ms. Willis, who is Black, was voted into office.

And of course, there is the Trump inquiry, the latest accelerant to the partisan conflagrations that have consumed the increasingly divided state for years. The subject of Ms. Willis’s investigation is whether Mr. Trump and his allies tried to flout Georgia’s democratic process with numerous instances of interference after his narrow 2020 election loss in the state.


“For the hundreds of years we’ve had prosecutors, this has been unnecessary. 
But now all of a sudden this is a priority. And it is racist.” 
Fani Willis, Atlanta district attorney 

Those supporters include United States Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who tweeted in August that Ms. Willis was using taxpayer funds “for her personal political witch hunt against Pres Trump, but will NOT prosecute crime plaguing Atlanta!”

Lawmakers have fired back. At the hearing last month, State Senator Bill Cowsert, a Republican who is the brother-in-law of Gov. Brian Kemp, said, “For you to come in here and try to make this about racism, that this bill is directed at any district attorney or solicitor because of racism, is absurd, and it’s offensive, and it’s a racist statement on its own.”

Senator Brian Strickland, a Republican who was presiding over the meeting, told Ms. Willis, “You’re being emotional.”

So, who is being racist and emotional here, the radical right, the prosecutor investigating Trump, both or neither, in whole or in part? 

Since it is likely we will never know for sure, it seems reasonable to think the radical right is the one being racist and emotional. The evidence is consistent with that belief in the case of Trump trying to screw and subvert democracy in Georgia after the 2020 election. 

In my opinion, the radical right deserves a default position of distrust because it has worked for decades to build distrust in American society. Now, it just seems fair and balanced for the radicals to reap what they have so diligently sowed for so long. If the radical right wants public trust, it can take the time and effort to try to earn trust on the merits. Maybe in a decade or two, the default distrust position would become untenable. At present, the extremist elites are not inclined to earn public trust on the merits. They are all-in on demagoguing the base and shafting us whenever they can.

____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________

From the Wait, what?? Files: The Hill reports on something strange. Faux News’ Tucker Carlson may have actually cause some actual bipartisan outrage. Or maybe it’s just faux outrage from a few Republican fakers. The Hill writes:
Tucker Carlson’s Jan. 6 footage sparks bipartisan outrage

Fox News host Tucker Carlson whipped up a firestorm Tuesday on Capitol Hill, sparking bipartisan backlash and igniting tensions with Capitol Police by downplaying the Jan. 6 Capitol riot on his prime-time program as “mostly peaceful chaos.”

His show divided Republicans, with a number of GOP senators ripping his portrayal of the incursion at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger, who rarely offers opinions on political issues, said the Monday night show was filled with “offensive and misleading conclusions about the Jan. 6 attack.”

“The program conveniently cherry-picked from the calmer moments of our 41,000 hours of video. The commentary fails to provide context about the chaos and violence that happened before or during these less tense moments,” Manger wrote in a memo to lawmakers.  
Carlson at the same time won plaudits from other Republicans who have similarly criticized and downplayed the attack.

“When will judges begin applying justice equally? Doesn’t look like “thousands of armed insurrectionists” to me,” Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said in a tweet after thanking McCarthy and Carlson for showing the footage. 
“I’ve seen enough. Release all J6 political prisoners now,” Rep. Mike Collins (R-Ga.) said in a tweet as Carlson’s show aired.

Trump also weighed in on the footage, praising Carlson and McCarthy over its publication and calling the tapes the Fox host played for his audience “irrefutable.”

Although Faux promised to allow Capitol police to review the tapes for security purposes before airing anything, the Hill article says that Tucker and Faux just blew that off. That was just empty bullshit from professional liars.


We all knew this was coming
Remember a couple of posts I recently wrote about Carson, the professional liar, doing a whitewash job with the 1/6 security footage? Calling the violent 1/6 coup attempt mostly peaceful chaos is the sort of thing to be expected. Tucker doing mendacious propaganda like this is no surprise. 

What is a surprise is that a few Republicans in congress expressed disapproval in more than a tiny little squeak of displeasure. Most likely, that will blow over in the next few days. Tucker will be free to continue to lie about the 1/6 coup attempt as he whitewashes it. There will be silent complicity from Republicans in congress, if not their open support. This hiccup will be forgotten. Tucker’s poison will flow freely. 

I have said it before and say it again, the radical right is hell bent on rewriting inconvenient history. The violent 1/6 coup attempt will be mythologized into a tempest in a teapot incident. That is what most of the radical right rank and file believes it was anyway. Extremist elites just need to spread the myth to a larger audience. 


Q: In view of everything that has gone before now, is Republican outrage is credible and real, or is it just political theater for propaganda purposes, e.g., to ease the way for the mendacious mythologizing that Tucker is going to do to the 1/6 coup attempt?