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, October 6, 2023

YEAH BUT..................................................... WHAT IS THE ANSWER??

 Not an enjoyable read. Long too. For the enquiring mind:

Large and sustained federal budget deficits are harmful to the fiscal health of the United States, yet policymakers struggle with reining in the red ink. Even during the years of economic growth immediately predating the COVID-19 pandemic, the federal government ran large and growing budget deficits, near $1 trillion per year. As policymakers enacted emergency measures to combat the COVID-19 crisis, federal budget deficits ballooned to levels not seen since World War II. Although the deficit has reverted to pre-pandemic levels as the United States winds down pandemic spending, deficits are projected to grow significantly over the coming decades—an ominous trend that will put increased strain on the federal budget. BPC’s economic policy team analyzes the government’s running budget deficit and updates the Deficit Tracker monthly.

For the rest of the details:

https://bipartisanpolicy.org/report/deficit-tracker/


Damn, that IS nasty. But what to do about it? What are the solutions? What is the answer?

I seldom read anything about making those spending cuts to the military. Or reversing tax cuts to the rich. I do hear a LOT about Medicare and Medicaid, school lunch programs and such.

How about money for research and development?

How about money for infrastructure programs?

How about money for the disabled, and disabled veterans?

How about cutting back on food inspections or safe drinking monitoring?

I mean, we NEED to cut somewhere, right? 

What would YOUR priorities be? Your solutions?

Reverse tax cuts to the rich? Deep cuts to the military? Cut entitlement programs? Cuts to research and development? Cuts to foreign aid - including Ukraine? Close the border so we aren't spending so much on supporting immigrants?

EVERYONE knocks the other side for THEIR suggestions. But there has to be some way to cut the deficit spending. 

Fitch Ratings downgraded U.S. debt from AAA to AA+ on August 1, citing rising deficits, a broken budgeting process, and political brinksmanship—echoing Standard & Poor’s downgrade after the 2011 debt limit episode.






News bits: Ancient human footprints; Normalizing the banality of crazy

Ancient footprints upend timeline of humans’ arrival in North America

New evidence adds to work showing people made these prints sometime between 21,000 and 23,000 years ago

Two years ago, a team of scientists came to the conclusion that human tracks sunk into the mud in White Sands National Park in New Mexico were more than 21,000 years old. The provocative finding threatened the dominant thinking on when and how people migrated into the Americas. Soon afterward, a technical debate erupted about the method used to estimate the age of the tracks, which relied on an analysis of plant seeds embedded with the footprints.

Now, a study published in the journal Science confirms the initial finding with two new lines of evidence: thousands of grains of pollen and an analysis of quartz crystals in the sediments.  
The thousands of footprints found in White Sands are an extraordinary but evanescent record of life around Lake Otero, the body of water that rested inside the basin during the Pleistocene. The ancient tracks are the remnants of complex interactions. Children played. Humans stalked giant sloths. A person walked a mile, carrying a child and placing them down occasionally.  
Fossil footprints were first seen in New Mexico’s Tularosa Basin in the early 1930s and were initially thought to be evidence of a bigfoot, said David F. Bustos, a resource program manager at White Sands National Park. They turned out to be from a giant ground sloth, a 2,000-pound mammal that went extinct around 10,000 years ago. Researchers also found tracks from trudging mammoths, a dire wolf and other ice age creatures.



The WaPo reports that some experts are still not convinced the footprints are that old, but conceded this new analysis makes the age assessment significantly more plausible. Bustos commented about the skepticism “it was hard to believe that humans could be walking along with the mammoth prints nearby, and that the prints could be of the same age.”  
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A WaPo article postulates that the increasingly deranged, violent rhetoric from Trump and far radical right authoritarian Republicans is normalizing crazy:
After eight years of Trump in politics, is a ‘banality of crazy’ setting in?

Last week, the Republican Party’s leading presidential candidate proposed executing suspected shoplifters.

“Very simply, if you rob a store, you can fully expect to be shot as you are leaving that store,” former president Donald Trump said in Anaheim, Calif., outlining his vision for a second term at the convention of the state’s Republican Party. As the audience applauded, laughed and cheered, Trump added for emphasis, “Shot!”

The Anaheim speech was part of a pattern of increasingly aggressive rhetoric by Trump — and a somewhat muted response by the news media to his repeated exhortations to violence.

During his speech in Anaheim, Trump also mocked Rep. Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) husband, who was gravely injured last year in a hammer attack by an assailant who reportedly believed the former president’s lies about a “stolen” 2020 election.

A few days before his appearance in California, Trump suggested on his Truth Social platform that the outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, deserved “DEATH!” for reassuring Chinese officials that the United States had no plans to attack in the waning days of the Trump administration.

He has also hinted darkly about seeking retribution against judges, prosecutors, witnesses and officials involved in his multiple criminal and civil cases. In April, Trump said that an indictment by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg (D) would result in “potential death and destruction.” On Monday, facing a civil suit alleging business fraud, Trump urged people to “go after” Letitia James (D), the New York state attorney general who filed the suit.

The latest comment received only scattered attention.

Trump’s intimations of violence have received relatively less press coverage because they have become so routine, said Brian Klaas, a political scientist at University College London. Klaas says this reflects “the banality of crazy” — a tendency for the news media to ignore or downplay statements once considered shocking but which now, due to repetition, are taken more for granted.

“Bombarded by a constant stream of deranged authoritarian extremism from a man who might soon return to the presidency, [journalists] have lost all sense of scale and perspective,” Klaas wrote in the Atlantic last week, in a headline that felt both jarring and unsurprising: “Trump Floats the Idea of Executing Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley.” Klaas continued: “But neither the American press nor the public can afford to be lulled. The man who, as president, incited a violent attack on the U.S. Capitol in order to overturn an election is again openly fomenting political violence while explicitly endorsing authoritarian strategies should he return to power.”
Qs: Is there such a thing as a moderate Republican in view of the behavior and rhetoric coming from the ARRRP and its leaders? What about all of these decent, otherwise normal rank and file Republicans who are deceived and cannot see or accept that they support corrupt, bigoted dictatorship -- are they moderates?
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Anecdote: A couple of opinions in the WaPo today argue, e.g., that there is such a thing as “moderate Republicans”, the Dems should have saved McCarthy's speakership and Dems need to step up to fill the sanity gap that arose with the collapse of the ARRRP into total violence-fomenting insanity and moral breakdown. 

FWIW, most of the comments I looked at to those opinions push back hard. They reject blame shifting to Dems for the breakdown of government and democracy that radical right authoritarians have intentionally created. 
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In a morality-focused opinion piece, another source notes the pro-violence rhetoric rising in Musk's X hellscape:
The Moral Case for No Longer Engaging With Elon Musk’s X

The former Twitter is incentivizing violent content, which will only become worse to stand out to users 

A video of [a horrific public murder], obtained initially by the New York Post, was soon seized upon by one of X’s newest “stars” — one of those users who has thrived under the new Elon Musk regime at the former Twitter. His feed (which I will not publicize) is a stream of incendiary incidents from around the world, posted several times a day to an audience that is approaching a million followers.

I don’t follow this account, but X’s algorithm makes absolutely sure that I see what it has to say. A senseless murder is apparently a content opportunity not to be missed. The user’s post on Tuesday contained all the ingredients for success: It was timely. It was shocking. It was an innocent 32-year-old man dying on the streets of New York City. It was a chance, duly taken, to write an inflammatory comment on Carson’s work in public policy, as though it had somehow led to this moment, as though he had it coming.

.... I watched as the video clocked 1 million views, then 2 million. Up up up. Disgusting replies flooded in by the thousands: That’s what you get for supporting woke policies; should have carried a gun; looks planned. By the time I got home, I had deleted the app from my phone.  
.... it’s time to step back as an engaged user, one who for the past decade has posted several times a day and scrolled countless times more. My eyeballs are no longer for sale to Musk and whatever grotesque content he wants to serve up in front of them.  
Decency long left the building at X. It flows from the very top. When former executive Yoel Roth, whom Musk wrongly accused of being a pedophile, warned recently about hate speech on X, CEO Linda Yaccarino’s first reaction was to play down his concerns. On Monday, Musk followed up: “I have rarely seen evil in as pure a form as Yoel Roth.”

Thursday, October 5, 2023

News bits: Getting info from government via FOIA requests; Vaccine crackpottery works

One of the most potent tools that federal and state government corruption fighters have is freedom of information laws. Commonly called FOIA requests, these laws allow anyone to ask for information of specified issues. Nate Jones, the head of FOIA requests for the WaPo writes about his work in a current article, I find documents officials want to keep hidden. Here’s how. In the comments to that article, Jones linked to an earlier article about his work, RETIRED U.S. GENERALS, ADMIRALS TAKE TOP JOBS WITH SAUDI CROWN PRINCE, which comments:
More than 500 retired U.S. military personnel — including scores of generals and admirals — have taken lucrative jobs since 2015 working for foreign governments, mostly in countries known for human rights abuses and political repression, according to a Washington Post investigation.

In Saudi Arabia, for example, 15 retired U.S. generals and admirals have worked as paid consultants for the Defense Ministry since 2016. The ministry is led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, who U.S. intelligence agencies say approved the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a Post contributing columnist, as part of a brutal crackdown on dissent.

Congress permits retired troops as well as reservists to work for foreign governments if they first obtain approval from their branch of the armed forces and the State Department. But the U.S. government has fought to keep the hirings secret. For years, it withheld virtually all information about the practice, including which countries employ the most retired U.S. service members and how much money is at stake.

To shed light on the matter, The Post sued the Army, the Air Force, the Navy, the Marine Corps and the State Department in federal court under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). After a two-year legal battle, The Post obtained more than 4,000 pages of documents, including case files for about 450 retired soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. The Post submitted its first FOIA requests for the documents in May 2020. After getting little or no response from the military services and the State Department, The Post filed a lawsuit in federal court in April 2021. The WaPo's legal complaint is here.
That's just an FYI about FOIA and governmental refusal to obey transparency law when it is inconvenient, embarrassing or reveals evidence of corruption, crime and/or treason. Pages 1-3 of the WaPo's complaint:

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The most commonly reported reason for not having been boosted was a prior SARS-CoV-2 infection (39.5%), followed by concern about vaccine side effects (31.5%), believing that the booster would not provide additional protection over the vaccines already received (28.6%), and concern about booster safety (23.4%) or that it would not protect from SARS-CoV-2 infection (23.1%).

Improvement in booster uptake is necessary for optimal public health in the United States. The development of vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 occurred at an unprecedented speed, but vaccine uptake remains among the greatest current public health challenges as updated boosters continue to be developed and made available to the public.  
In September 2022, bivalent boosters were recommended for everyone 12 years old and above and since December 2022, they have been approved in the United States for all people aged 6 months and above. However, as of May 2023, less than 20% of eligible persons had received an updated booster, representing a critical public health challenge.
There you have it. Lies and crackpottery about COVID mRNA vaccines have poisoned the minds of about 80% of the American public. Truth just doesn't have the impact that a juicy fear or distrust-inducing lie or false conspiracy theory has. That seems to be about as true in health care as it is in politics.
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Global warming update: The AP writes:
September sizzled to records and was so much warmer 
than average scientists call it ‘mind-blowing’

After a summer of record-smashing heat, warming somehow got even worse in September as Earth set a new mark for how far above normal temperatures were, the European climate agency reported Thursday.

Last month’s average temperature was 0.93 degrees Celsius (1.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1991-2020 average for September. That’s the warmest margin above average for a month in 83 years of records kept by the European Space Agency’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

“It’s just mind-blowing really,” said Copernicus Director Carlo Buontempo. “Never seen anything like that in any month in our records.”
But remember, as the CARRRP* likes to point out, it's just the weather, not the climate.

* Corrupt authoritarian radical right Republican Party (corruption just needs to be in the mix)
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Religion update: The AP reports:
In many countries around the world, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of people who are nonbelievers or unaffiliated with any organized religion. These so-called “nones" — atheists, agnostics, or nothing in particular — comprise 30% or more of the adult population in the United States and Canada, as well as numerous European countries. . . . . [We] also look at regions where openly being a none is rare or even dangerous.
The AP report on the US:
The decades-long rise of the nones — a diverse, hard-to-summarize group — is one of the most talked about phenomena in U.S. religion. They are reshaping America's religious landscape as we know it.

In U.S. religion today, “the most important story without a shadow of a doubt is the unbelievable rise in the share of Americans who are nonreligious,” said Ryan Burge, a political science professor at Eastern Illinois University and author of “The Nones,” a book on the phenomenon.

The nones account for a large portion of Americans, as shown by the 30% of U.S. adults who claim no religious affiliation in a survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.


Many embrace a range of spiritual beliefs — from God, prayer and heaven to karma, reincarnation, astrology or energy in crystals.

“They are definitely not as turned off to religion as atheists and agnostics are,” Burge said. “They practice their own type of spirituality, many of them.”

Dulak still draws inspiration from nature.
Data like this is what drives the most of aggression and extremism of the American Christian nationalism movement. The CN wealth and power movement sees an existential threat in the nones, agnostics and atheists. This atheist, i.e., me, sees an existential threat in the CN movement, but not in honest, tolerant, organized religion. I'm an outlier among outliers.

Also note that other research into this indicates that the nones, agnostics and atheists amount to about 50% of the American public. It depends on how one words the questions and what factors are taken into account. Some nones claim to be Catholic or protestant to avoid social ostracism in their communities.

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Fun little bits of news

Texas Republican will nominate Trump for Speaker of the House
Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) announced late Tuesday that he will file paperwork to nominate former President Trump to be the next Speaker of the House.

“This week, when the U.S. House of Representatives reconvenes, my first order of business will be to nominate Donald J. Trump for Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives,” Nehls said in a statement. “President Trump, the greatest President of my lifetime, has a proven record of putting America First and will make the House great again.”
What fun!
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McHenry orders Pelosi to vacate Capitol office in one of first acts as Speaker pro tem
Speaker Pro Tem Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.) ordered Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) to vacate her Capitol hideaway office so he could take it over, just hours after becoming acting Speaker, Pelosi’s office said Tuesday.

Pelosi denounced the demand in a statement late Tuesday.

“With all of the important decisions that the new Republican Leadership must address, which we are all eagerly awaiting, one of the first actions taken by the new Speaker Pro Tempore was to order me to immediately vacate my office in the Capitol,” she said.

“This eviction is a sharp departure from tradition,” she continued. “As Speaker, I gave former Speaker Hastert a significantly larger suite of offices for as long as he wished.”
Things is gettin' personal up thar in the House! It's fair to say that there's not going to be much or any bipartisanship or good will going forward. It is a broken institution. It will probably stay broken for quite some time to come. 
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Jim Jordan throws his hat in the ring for Speaker
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) on Wednesday announced he would seek the Speakership.
Barf.
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Republicans Already Barred Trump From Being Speaker of the House
Some Republicans have suggested that Donald Trump should take up the gavel. But the former president's legal troubles could block any efforts to bring him into the House's GOP leadership, according to Republican Conference rules.

But even if Trump had full Republican support in the House, Rule 26 of the GOP Conference states, "A member of the Republican Leadership shall step aside if indicted for a felony for which a sentence of two or more years imprisonment may be imposed."
Well, that's no big deal. Just vote Rule 26 out of existence. No, wait. They can't do that because there's no Speaker in the House at present. I'm confused. 🤪
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Trump insisted Tuesday that his organization’s financial documents were not the least bit fraudulent—but even if they were, he couldn’t be held responsible because it was up to the lenders and insurers to fact-check that.

“Also, the financial statements are very strong in terms of cash, liquidity, and everything else. This case is a scam,” Trump continued. “There can’t be fraud when you’ve told institutions to do their own work.”

In other words, it's not fraud when you tell institutions like banks and insurance companies to do their own work to fact check the papers a liar puts in front of them. Hm. Seems like an odd defense. Does that mean bank robbery is legal if the bank has insufficient security? Or, I can say my home is worth 10 times what it is worth and get a big fat loan on that basis and blow all the money on fun stuff like the Fornicator-in-Chief?

Hm, what's that hand in the 
upper right grabbing?

Politics is so confusing . . . . . 
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House speaker contender Steve Scalise reportedly called himself ‘David Duke without the baggage’
Republican, who some say could replace Kevin McCarthy, has had reported associations with ex-Ku Klux Klan grand wizard

Wheeee! What fun! No baggage, therefore I'm not a racist.
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Gingrich says House GOP should expel ‘anti-Republican’ Gaetz
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) on Tuesday called on House Republicans to expel Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and defeat his motion to oust Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) from his post.

In a scathing op-ed published in The Washington Post, Gingrich attacked the Florida Republican as “anti-Republican” and said Gaetz was engaging in “childish behavior” and “has become actively destructive to the conservative movement.”

Newt (the Stinker) Gingrich? The champion punchbowl Turd Tosser? Now there's a destructive, childish voice out of hell and a fun blast from the toxic past.

People, things in the GOP are in gooood shape.  

News chunks: Religious discord; On atheism; Attacks on democracy in Europe

One of the people I engage with, significantly more knowledgeable and intelligent than me, has been arguing for decades that there are too many rats in the cage for democracy and civil society, referring to dictatorship and human conflict. For decades, that argument has felt more true than false. The AP writes about what appears to be an example of the overcrowded rat cage called Israel:

Jews spitting on the ground beside Christian pilgrims 
in the Holy Land sparks outrage

Old City Jerusalem, Aug. 25, 2023
They look like they are straight out of the Dark Ages

A video that shows ultra-Orthodox Jews spitting on the ground beside a procession of foreign Christian worshipers carrying a wooden cross in the holy city of Jerusalem has ignited intense outrage and a flurry of condemnation in the Holy Land.

The spitting incident, which the city’s minority Christian community lamented as the latest in an alarming surge of religiously motivated attacks, drew rare outrage on Tuesday from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other senior officials.

Since Israel’s most conservative government in history came to power late last year, concerns have mounted among religious leaders — including the influential Vatican-appointed Latin Patriarch — over the increasing harassment of the region’s 2,000-year-old Christian community.

Many say the government, with its powerful ultranationalist officials, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, has emboldened Jewish extremists and created a sense of impunity.  
“What happened with right-wing religious nationalism is that Jewish identity has been growing around anti-Christianity,” said Yisca Harani, a Christianity expert and founder of an Israeli hotline for anti-Christian assaults. “Even if the government doesn’t encourage it, they hint that there will be no sanctions.”
That sounds a lot like the aggressive, cruel mindset of Christian nationalism in the US, i.e., Christian Sharia under an intolerant, bigoted wealthy White heterosexual male Christian Taliban looks approximately the same.

About 10 years ago, me and my family took a trip that included Madrid Spain during Easter. This is the kind of imagery me and my family witnessed:

They look like they are straight 
out of the Dark Ages





Long story even longer, in 1976 (the year after the dictator Franco died) my college room mate and I visited Barcelona. The city was significantly dead, but more alive than the amazingly dead East Berlin at the time, but far less alive than surprisingly fun and sophisticated West Berlin. We went to the Picasso Museum in Barcelona. It was so dead. The two of us just walked into the museum and had had the whole place to ourselves for several hours before it was time for tapas at lunch. There were maybe 4 or 5 other people in the museum. But by the time me and my family visited the Picasso again ~10 years ago, the place was alive and the line ~1 hour long just to get in the freaking door. 

What was different? IMHO, mostly two things. One was the death of the radical right dictator Franco. Two was the loosening strangulation grip of the medieval Roman Catholic church on all aspects of Spain and its society in the 2010s. Despite brutal iron fist Catholic church and the parades in the 2010s, the power of the Church was obviously dying. The women in the parades we witnessed were all old (unlike the picture shown above).

Now in 2023, when I see radical Jews in Israel coming closer to physically attacking Christians in Israel, it looks to me just like Christian nationalists in America coming closer to attacking defenders of American democracy, civil liberties and the secular public interest. It all looks about the same to me.

Q: Is it me, or is it the case that in advanced democracies like the US, religion is more pro-tyranny (theocracy) than pro-secular democracy? 
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Opinion | America doesn’t need more God. 
It needs more atheists.

I like to say that my kids made me an atheist. But really what they did was make me honest.

I was raised Jewish — with Sabbath prayers and religious school, a bat mitzvah and a Jewish wedding. But I don’t remember ever truly believing that God was out there listening to me sing songs of praise.

I thought of God as a human invention: a character, a concept, a carry-over from an ancient time.

I thought of him as a fiction.

Today I realize that means I’m an atheist. It’s not complicated. My (non)belief derives naturally from a few basic observations:

1. The Greek myths are obviously stories. The Norse myths are obviously stories. L. Ron Hubbard obviously made that stuff up. Extrapolate.

2. The holy books underpinning some of the bigger theistic religions are riddled with “facts” now disproved by science and “morality” now disavowed by modern adherents. Extrapolate.

3. Life is confusing and death is scary. Naturally, humans want to believe that someone capable is in charge and that we continue to live after we die. But wanting doesn’t make it so.

4. Child rape. War. Etc.

And yet, when I was younger, I would never have called myself an atheist — not on a survey, not to my family, not even to myself.

Studies have shown that many, many Americans don’t trust atheists. They don’t want to vote for atheists, and they don’t want their children to marry atheists. Researchers have found that even atheists presume serial killers are more likely to be atheist than not.

Given all this, it’s not hard to see why atheists often prefer to keep quiet about it. Why I kept quiet. I wanted to be liked! But when I had children — when it hit me that I was responsible for teaching my children everything — I wanted, above all, to tell them the truth.

In 2017, psychologists Will Gervais and Maxine Najle tried to estimate the prevalence of atheism in the United States using a technique called “unmatched count”: They asked two groups of 1,000 respondents each, how many statements were true among a list of statements. The lists were identical except that one of them included the statement “I believe in God.” By comparing the numbers, the researchers could then estimate the percentage of atheists without ever asking a direct question. They came up with around 26 percent.

If that’s true or even close, there are more atheists in the United States than Catholics.

Do you know what some of those atheists call themselves? Catholics. And Protestants, Jews, Muslims and Buddhists. General Social Survey data back this up: Among religious Americans, only 64 percent are certain about the existence of God. Hidden atheists can be found not just among the “nones,” as they’re called — the religiously unaffiliated — but also in America’s churches, mosques and synagogues.
Now, can you see why the authoritarian radical right has no choice but to align with hard core Christian nationalist (CN) theocrats in support of morally corrupt Christian Sharia law and an elite, wealthy, bigoted White, heterosexual male Christian Taliban? That seems obvious to me. And that's despite vehement CN propagandist denials, deflections, downplays, lies and slanders.
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A WaPo opinion comments on the rise of an authoritarian radical right in Europe, especially Germany:
NORDHAUSEN, Germany — Populist, nationalist and illiberal parties are rising across Europe, peddling a rancid brew of intolerance toward migrants, LGBTQ+ people, Ukraine’s survival and, often, the niceties of democracy itself. But in few places has a right-wing party so extreme surged so quickly as in Germany — even as some of its most prominent leaders trade in barely veiled echoes of the country’s Nazi past.

It’s even more chilling that Alternative for Germany, known as AfD, is now the most popular party across most of the former East Germany, including in one state, Thuringia, where Hitler’s National Socialist Party had its first great success. And it remains to be seen whether the country’s more populous, prosperous and globalized western states will hold out as a firewall against the ethno-nationalist blaze sweeping Europe’s biggest, most consequential nation.

“Whether Germans have learned from their history is an open question,” Sergej Lochthofen, the retired editor of Thuringia’s biggest newspaper, told me.

In France, the main right-wing party, for decades the refuge of scoundrels besotted with World War II’s collaborationist Vichy regime, now vies for the top spot in national polling. Rightist parties either lead governments or share power in Italy, Hungary, Poland, Sweden, Finland and elsewhere.

On Saturday, populism’s rise struck Slovakia, with the parliamentary election success of the overtly pro-Russian, nationalist Smer party, which vows to end support for Ukraine.  
“This is the paradox,” Michael Mickenberg, a scholar of right-wing movements, told me. “The usual pattern is that radical positions repel voters. Here you see both radicalization of the party and growing electoral support.”  
Bigotry and overt racism, along with calls for mass deportation, are staples of AfD’s rhetoric. One prominent figure in the party, Björn Höcke, has suggested that “Africans’ reproductive habits” were unacceptable in Germany, and called on Germans to stop atoning for Nazi crimes, insisting they take a more “positive” view of the nation’s history.  
In the small town of Nordhausen, where the Nazis developed the V-2 rocket — the miracle weapon that Adolf Hitler thought would bring Britain to its knees — I met with Jörg Prophet, a local AfD figure. He lost a recent mayoral election, but still managed about 45 percent of the vote.

Prophet, 61, was raised in communist East Germany, where revisionist World War II history framed the capitalist West, not Hitler and his jackbooted legions, as the war’s real villain. The politician clings to some of that twisted [whitewashed] history. The Allies whose bombing leveled Nordhausen, he said a few years ago, “showed as little morality” as the Nazis. That’s a staggering assertion in Thuringia, where tens of thousands of prisoners died at Buchenwald, one of the Third Reich’s earliest and biggest concentration camps.
Notice how the European authoritarian radical right (ARR) believes and acts a heck of a lot like its American counterpart? It's radicalized, bigoted-racist (anti-immigrant, anti-LGBQT), anti-democracy (hence hostility toward Ukraine), pro-dictatorship, pro-corruption, and happily rewriting inconvenient Nazi and fascist history (like the ARR in the US whitewashing American history of slavery). Same morally rotted beliefs, same propaganda tactics, same pro-thug dictator mindset.

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Breaking news: McCarthy is very likely ousted as House speaker

CNN just reported that McCarthy will very likely be ousted as speaker based on the current ongoing voting. So far 7 House radicals have voted against the weasel.

By golly, the authoritarian radical right Republican Party is showing its incompetence, unfitness to govern and authoritarianism. McCarthy worked with Dems to keep the govt from shutting down, which in authoritarian radical right Republican dogma is treason. 

Grumpy Kevin
A traitor accused of treason by his own 
treasonous party


Kevin McCarthy ousted as speaker in Republican-led House 
The Republican-led House voted Tuesday to oust Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) as speaker, the first such removal in congressional history. McCarthy’s removal was sought by hard-right members of his own party. Democrats did not provide votes that would have been needed to save him. The move puts the House in uncharted territory as it searches for a leader.
Kevin McCarthy: ‘I’m Not Going To Provide Anything’ 
To Dems To Save My Speakership

The GOP leader is apparently counting on his own party to keep him in charge as his far-right flank prepares to try to oust him
He provided nothing and apparently got nothing. 


Context: Republicans cited the federal debt as a major reason for voting against McCarthy. In their usual insulting hypocrisy and gigantic double standard politics, they are silent about their own support for Trump's Dec. 2017 tax bill that created tax breaks for rich people and blew a huge hole in the federal deficit. The Hill reports:
“Chaos is Speaker McCarthy. Chaos is somebody who we cannot trust with their word,” Gaetz said on the House floor. “The one thing that the White House, House Democrats and many of us on the conservative side of the Republican Caucus would argue is that the thing we have in common: Kevin McCarthy said something to all of us at one point or another that he didn’t really mean and never intended to live up to.”

“I don’t think voting against Kevin McCarthy is chaos,” he continued. “I think $33 trillion in debt is chaos.”
Also note Gaetz calling his pro-dictatorship radical right caucus "conservative" when in fact they are corrupt pro-dictatorship liars and thugs.