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.

Thursday, October 20, 2022

An argument for Ukraine-Russia-US negotiations

At 18:34 to 26:20 of this video, Jeffrey Sachs discusses the possibility of peace negotiations and what went wrong earlier this year. His analysis is clear and worth at least being aware of, even if it is not persuasive. If Sachs is right in his facts and reasoning, this make me quite uncomfortable with what the US and done and failed to do.
 




Acknowledgement: Thanks to PD for bringing this video to my attention.

News bits: Climate change, etc.

New Jersey tests a legal theory to punish liars
The state of NJ is suing big carbon energy polluters and their main supporting propagandist organization. DeSmog writes:
New Jersey Sues Five Oil Companies, Alleging Decades of ‘Concealment’
and ‘Public Deception’ on Climate Change

The case adds to a growing number of major climate accountability cases against the oil industry, a scenario that Shell predicted in 1998

The state of New Jersey filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against five oil companies and the oil industry’s most powerful lobbying group for covering up and misleading the public about climate change, the latest round of state and municipal-led climate litigation seeking accountability from the oil industry.

The lawsuit, filed in the New Jersey Superior Court, states that the companies knew about climate change for decades and actively sought to conceal that information from the public. Instead, they funded PR campaigns aimed at confusing and misleading the public.

The oil companies “concealed and misrepresented the dangers of fossil fuels; disseminated false and misleading information about the existence, causes, and effects of climate change; and aggressively promoted the ever-increasing use of their products at ever-greater volumes,” the complaint states.

The lawsuit names ExxonMobil, Shell Oil Company, Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips, and the American Petroleum Institute, the main lobbying group in which the five oil companies were members.  
As it happens, nearly 25 years ago, Shell predicted with remarkable accuracy the events that would broadly unfold. In a 1998 internal document that laid out future climate scenarios, Shell described a hypothetical catastrophic storm that would ravage the U.S. East Coast in 2010 — one that sounds unmistakably like Hurricane Sandy — which sets off a society-wide backlash that would engulf the oil industry. The result would be a legal and policy reckoning. From Shell’s 1998 forecast:
“Following the storms, a coalition of environmental NGOs brings a class-action suit against the US government and fossil-fuel companies on the grounds of neglecting what scientists (including their own) have been saying for years: that something must be done. A social reaction to the use of fossil fuels grows, and individuals become ‘vigilante environmentalists’ in the same way, a generation earlier, they had become fiercely anti-tobacco. Direct-action campaigns against companies escalate. Young consumers, especially, demand action.”
Today, a long list of major climate accountability cases are proceeding in state courts, each with extensive documented evidence demonstrating that the oil industry, including Shell, covered up internal climate science and instead chose to fund climate denial and greenwashing campaigns.  
And as DeSmog reported last month, Shell is acutely aware of how its communications on the energy transition can open it up to further litigation, warning employees in internal emails and presentations not to confuse the oil major’s net-zero talk with the company’s actual business plan.

What fresh hell is this? Oil companies and their hired propagandists doing ‘concealment’ and ‘public deception’??? No. Greenwashing? No. That's just not possible. This is America, home of the free and land of the brave, mom and apple pie. Gigantic oil companies would never pollute, lie, conceal or deceive. This must be a mistake.  



Oops!
New Jersey home after climate change-related 
superstorm Sandy visited the beach in 2010
(not sarcasm)


A letter to the editor about an abortion study
The lead researcher on a study that followed a group of women who got an abortion they wanted and a group who were denied an abortion. She wrote this letter to the NYT criticizing a NYT opinion piece that discussed her research. 

To the Editor:
Re “The Abortion Debate and the Physical Costs of Pregnancy,” by Ross Douthat (column, Oct. 6):

I led the Turnaway Study and was quoted extensively in Mr. Douthat’s column. My study compared the lives of women who received a wanted abortion with those who were denied, or “turned away” from getting an abortion — following both groups for five years to see how their life paths diverged.

As Mr. Douthat notes, we found that most women denied abortions eventually reconcile themselves to parenting. But Mr. Douthat glosses over the most important findings from the study.

People who carried unwanted pregnancies to term suffered worse physical health for years to come; in fact, two died from childbirth. Women denied abortions were more likely to live in poverty, along with their children, and to have a hard time covering even basic expenses like food and housing, compared with those able to get their abortions. Not being able to access abortion services curtailed people’s other life goals such as getting a higher education, finding a high-quality romantic relationship and even having intended children later under better circumstances.

Mr. Douthat diminishes the substantial harm done to women’s lives and to the well-being of their existing and future children on the basis of the finding that women are emotionally resilient. The callous argument seems to be that it is OK for the government to force someone to sacrifice their body, their family’s security and their life goals so long as it doesn’t also break their spirit.

Diana Greene Foster
Oakland, Calif.

The writer is a professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of California, San Francisco
Dr. Greene Foster makes some good points. The forced birthers will probably attack and downplay this research, the researchers, the data and/or the data analysis. This is the kind of inconvenient science, facts and truths that America’s radical right does not have the moral courage to face or accept. Are most forced birthers moral cowards? Probably. It looks that way. 


The poison stolen 2020 election lie continues its journey through the courts
This speaks for itself. Trump is knowingly lying to the courts. It just does not matter to him. Facts are not going to get in the way of this gigantic lie. It is worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Trump, so why not keep lying?


This is the flock that Trump is fleecing.

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Why the US must press for a ceasefire in Ukraine

 

The following is an opinion piece by John Matlock, Jr., who helped to end the Cold War as ambassador to USSR from the late 80s to 1991 when it ceased to exist. He joins a growing list of experienced diplomats and International Relations specialists alarmed by the reckless, perhaps unwinnable war unfolding and escalating almost by the week now. The piece appeared on October 17, 2022 in the online magazine Responsible Statecraft.

John Matlock, Jr. was the last US ambassador to the Soviet Union (1987-91). Prior to that he was Senior Director for European and Soviet Affairs on President Reagan’s National Security Council staff and was U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia from 1981-1983. He was Kennan Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton,  and has written numerous articles and three books about the negotiations that ended the Cold War, the disintegration of the Soviet Union, and U.S. foreign policy following the end of the Cold War.


Why the US must press for a ceasefire in Ukraine

As a key player in Kyiv’s defense and the leader of sanctions against Russia, Washington is obligated to help find a way out.

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Science: COVID is evolving

There's this bit of ☹️ news about evolution and COVID from WaPo
Instead of a single ominous variant lurking on the horizon, experts are nervously eyeing a swarm of viruses — and a new evolutionary phase in the pandemic. 

This time, it’s unlikely we will be barraged with a new collection of Greek alphabet variants. Instead, one or more of the multiple versions of the omicron variant that keep popping up could drive the next wave. They are different flavors of omicron, but eerily alike — adorned with a similar combination of mutations. Each new subvariant seems to outdo the last in its ability to dodge immune defenses. 

“It is this constant evolutionary arms race we’re having with this virus,” said Jonathan Abraham, an assistant professor of microbiology at Harvard Medical School. 

The pace of evolution is so fast that many scientists depend on Twitter to keep up. A month ago, scientists were worried about BA.2.75, a variant that took off in South Asia and spawned a cloud of other concerning sublineages. In the United States, BA.4.6 and BF.7 have been slowly picking up steam. A few weeks ago, BQ.1.1 started to steal the spotlight — and still looks like a contender to take over this fall in Europe and North America. A lineage called XBB looms on the sidelines, and threatens to scramble the forecast. 

To focus too much on any one possible variant is, many experts argue, missing the point. What matters is that all these new threats are accumulating mutations in similar spots in what’s called the receptor binding domain — a key spot in the spike protein where virus-blocking antibodies dock. If those antibodies can’t dock, they can’t block. Each new mutation gives the virus a leg up in avoiding this primary line of immune defense.

This is what was concerning as soon as COVID variants started popping up. This thing isn't over yet and it may never be.


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Evolution
For the science wonks, a bit about evolution and chemical space. The initial isolate of SARS-CoV-2 from Wuhan, China has a 29903 nucleotide, single stranded RNA genome. That is typical for a Coronavirus. That makes the COVID genome about average for viruses, some of which are smaller and some larger.

For each nucleotide in the 29903 locations, there are four possible nucleotides. If there is a mutation at one of those positions, that is evolution. Mutational evolution is blind and can kill the organism, have no effect or be helpful in some way. Selection for survival of non-lethal mutations in the next generations is not blind. Probably about 50% of mutations will kill the virus. That prevents that particular mutation from being passed to subsequent generations of viruses. Other mutations will have no effect on the virus due to degeneracy of the genetic code.

RNA viruses tend to have high mutation (evolution) rates, as this 2018 article, Why are RNA virus mutation rates so damn high?, discusses:
RNA viruses have high mutation rates—up to a million times higher than their hosts—and these high rates are correlated with enhanced virulence and evolvability, traits considered beneficial for viruses. However, their mutation rates are almost disastrously high, and a small increase in mutation rate can cause RNA viruses to go locally extinct. .... The fabled mutation rates of RNA viruses appear to be partially a consequence of selection on another trait, not because such a high mutation rate is optimal in and of itself.

Chemical space
Chemical space is a concept that refers to the space spanned by all possible molecules and chemical compounds adhering to a given set of construction principles and boundary conditions. Translated into English, it refers to all possible chemical structures that would fit within some defined space that a certain kind of molecule fits in. The thing to understand is that if one takes a fairly simple organic molecule such as a steroid and considers space for it and small to modest sized chemical variants (say up to ~500 Daltons[1]), the number of compounds that fit in that space are in the billions or trillions. One could loosely think of a chemical variant of a steroid as akin to a 'mutation' of the steroid.

The RNA genome of COVID is big compared to a steroid. The number of possible nucleotide mutations that COVID can contain in its chemical space is beyond gigantic, 4 to the 29903th power. Translated into English, that means 4 multiplied by 4 a total of 29903 times. That is the chemical space that the COVID genome has to play around and evolve in. 4 times 4 seven times is 16,384. Do that another 29,896 times and that's the space COVID has to evolve in. It's freaking HUGE.  

In English, we are probably seeing just the very beginning of a period of rapid evolution of COVID in both humans and other animals it can infect. Translated into English, that means, get boosted every time a COVID booster vaccine contains RNA from the local or regional variant du jour that is infecting people and killing some of them and long hauling some others. Periodic new boosters are probably going to be coming out every ~5-10 months for a long time to come. 

Darned evolution . . . . grumble, grumble . . . . . I've been vaccinated 5 times now against a grand total of three different COVIDS (the original strain and two omicron variants). That pipsqueakery is looking more and more like five shots is just the beginning. (cluck of grumpy disapproval)


Footnote: 
1. Wikipedia says this about the size of chemical space for most pharmaceutical small molecule drugs:
A chemical space often referred to in cheminformatics is that of potential pharmacologically active molecules. Its size is estimated to be in the order of 1060 molecules. There are no rigorous methods for determining the precise size of this space. The assumptions [3] used for estimating the number of potential pharmacologically active molecules, however, use the Lipinski rules, in particular the molecular weight limit of 500. The estimate also restricts the chemical elements used to be Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Sulfur. It further makes the assumption of a maximum of 30 atoms to stay below 500 Daltons, allows for branching and a maximum of 4 rings and arrives at an estimate of 1063.
Drug companies have made a heck of a lot more than 1,063 small molecule drug candidates. There have been well over 1063 variants of steroids, statins, antibiotics, lipids, vitamins, signal transmitters (melatonin, serotonin, etc.), etc. What has been made so far is a paltry ~49 million molecules as of July 2009. Some of those are drug candidates and some are for other purposes, e.g., food additives, plastics, catalysts, fuels, etc. 

News: It's not so good today ☹️

Democracy in peril, not Republican voters main concern

Republican Voters See Democracy in Peril, 
but Saving It Isn’t a Priority

A New York Times/Siena College poll found that other problems have seized voters’ focus — even as many do not trust this year’s election results and are open to anti-democratic candidates.


Clearly, the rot that Trump implanted in the minds of conservatives and some others about stolen elections has sunk in and that false belief will persist. That is just some of the gigantic damage to democracy that Trump and his rotten Republican Party has inflicted on American democracy and society and we still suffer with. America and democracy have been hyper-polarized and grievously wounded by radical right conservatism and its immoral-evil dark free speech Leviathan e.g., Faux News. The open question is whether we will ever recover. Right now, that is not possible.



Voters and poll workers face all-out war at the polls
The NYT writes:
Right-Wing Leaders Mobilize Corps of Election Activists

Officials are prepared for aggressive challenges in midterm elections. “We’re going to adjudicate every battle,” Stephen K. Bannon said.

On the eve of a primary runoff election in June, a Republican candidate for secretary of state of South Carolina sent out a message to his supporters.

“For all of you on the team tomorrow observing the polls, Good Hunting,” Keith Blandford, a candidate who promoted the falsehood that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald J. Trump, wrote on the social media app Telegram. “You know what you are looking for. We have the enemy on their back foot, press the attack.”

The next day, activists fanned out to polling places in Charleston, S.C., demanding to inspect election equipment and to take photographs and video. When election workers denied their requests, some returned with police officers to file reports about broken or missing seals on the machines, according to emails from local officials to the state election commission. There were no broken or missing seals.
There we have it. Radical right Republican politicians and elites see non-Republican voters and honest poll workers as cheats, liars and criminal felons for simply voting. That is an outrageous insult to honest voters and poll workers. That is the kind of anti-democratic poison the Republican Party and most of its candidates openly and undeniably stand for. 

In view of its fulminating attitude and unjustifiable behaviors toward honest non-Republican voters and honest poll workers, is it fair and evidence-based to consider the Republican Party, its candidates and elite supporters to be domestic terrorists? It sure looks that way. 

The GOP has declared all-out war on those of us who are sane, secular and tolerant, and our democracy and our civil liberties. So why can't we respond in self-defense? Or, in the name of comity and turning the other cheek, should we just let the GOP steam roll us into the kleptocratic Christian fascism it so desperately want to impose on all of us?

Theres no steal to stop, but that doesnt stop self-professed
Republican patriots from stopping it anyway

Just look at them, they actually believe the lies and slanders



From the Kleptocrat-in-Chief’s 
kleptocracy is fun files
Trump Hotels Charged Secret Service Exorbitant Rates, House Inquiry Finds

The Trump Organization charged the Secret Service up to $1,185 per night for hotel rooms used by agents protecting former President Donald J. Trump and his family, according to documents released on Monday by the House Oversight Committee, forcing a federal agency to pay well above government rates.

The committee released Secret Service records showing more than $1.4 million in payments by the department to Trump properties since Mr. Trump took office in 2017. The committee said that the accounting was incomplete, however, because it did not include payments to Mr. Trump’s foreign properties — where agents accompanied his family repeatedly — and because the records stopped in September 2021.
Once again, kleptocracy is properly seen as as one of the radical right’s core agenda items. No Republican would complain about the Kleptocrat-in-Chief ripping taxpayers off. That is a major agenda item for both the Christian nationalists and the brass knuckles capitalist elites who dominate the morally rotted Republican Party. Those elites very much want to join the endless festival of kleptocracy that awaits them once they have killed democracy, the rule of law, inconvenient truth and our precious civil liberties.
 
The Christians want taxpayers to pay for all Christian church activities and schools. The capitalists what to pay little or no taxes and adhere to few or no regulations. Republican capitalist elites want taxpayers to suffer from the side-effects of cruel, unregulated capitalism. They demand that society and the environment absorb all the risk and damage inherent in being hell-bent on profits with zero social conscience about human or environmental consequences.

In a nutshell, vast wealth for elites at the tippy top is a key part of what both Christian and capitalist Republican elites stand for and what they want. They just might get their wish. The other key part is vast power over average people and all governments, so that little or nothing stands in the way of wealth gushing up to the top elites. They might get that too.

Monday, October 17, 2022

News bits: Secularism and civil liberties under direct attack, etc.

Legalized discrimination is on the horizon thanks 
to the radical Republican Christian nationalist Supreme Court
Secular Schooling Is Critical to a Functioning Democracy

The US education system is being desecularized as public money floods into private religious schools. This mix of religious conservatism and free-market fundamentalism threatens to unravel public education.

.... our radicalized Supreme Court has handed down a series of decisions that annihilate the proverbial wall of separation between church and state, emboldening those who would use our privatized public education system to push a conservative Christian social vision.

In this context, we should treat #YeshivaGate not as an isolated scandal but rather as a preview: religious straitjackets are coming for more American students if we don’t aggressively defend the role of secular schooling in a pluralist democracy.

In recent years, the de-secularization of our nation’s public school system has proceeded rapidly on numerous fronts — some more eye-catching than others. The bizarre Bremerton case made headlines, for example, when the US Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruled in favor of a football coach who repeatedly engaged in ostentatious public prayer during school events. This ruling counters decades of precedent, paving the way for sanctioned proselytizing by authority figures in public schools.

One development that may be less familiar concerns taxpayer funding for schools that, like the Hasidic yeshivas, force children to study religious doctrine. Since 2002, it has been constitutionally permissible for states with voucher programs to direct taxpayer funding to religious schools. And .... the Supreme Court ruled that in fact states must subsidize religious education wherever they subsidize secular private education. So although the Times’ yeshiva reporting asserts that “tax dollars are not supposed to go toward religious education,” legally speaking, that isn’t true.  
In Carson v. Makin, two families sued Maine’s education commissioner, claiming that she had violated their freedom of religious expression by refusing to fund their children’s tuition at two different Christian schools.

One of the schools in question lists as its first educational objective: “To lead each unsaved student to trust Christ as his/her personal savior and then to follow Christ as Lord of his/her life.” Their Statement of Faith declares that any sexual activity or identity expression that falls outside of a Christian marriage between “one man and one woman” is a “sinful perversion,” and that a wife must “submit herself to the Scriptural leadership of her husband.” The other school’s mission includes fostering “within each student an attitude of love and reverence for the Bible as the infallible, inerrant, and authoritative Word of God,” and “imparting a biblical understanding of the nature of government and an appreciation for our Judeo-Christian heritage as Americans.” Both schools have policies that discriminate against students and staff on the basis of LGBTQ status and religious affiliation.
A core Christian nationalist dogma is to 100% eliminate secular public education and replace it with mandatory religious education, preferably fundamentalist Christianity. The Republican US Supreme Court is doing what is needed to make that vision of America become a reality as soon as it possibly can. Like it or not, radical Republican fundamentalists are going to ram God down our throats.

A recent NPR segment indicated that the teachers at some fundamentalist Jewish religious schools are grossly ignorant and many students that graduate cannot read or write. In one case a young student told to tell his science teacher that the Earth was not the center of the solar system or the universe. The teacher was flabbergasted, but at least looked it up and changed his mind. Other fundamentalist teachers will not be so open to reality.


Something is wrong with the mainstream media --
It's ossified and fossilized, or corrupted by profit motive, or both
SNL has better coverage of Herschel Walker than the mainstream media

The mainstream media persist in portraying unfit Republican candidates as normal and the midterms as an ordinary clash of policy differences. As New York University’s media guru Jay Rosen put it on Twitter, “Election coverage begins by positing the existence of two parties operating in roughly the same way, but with different ideologies. That picture is the foundation, on top of which consensus practices rest.” He adds, “With the foundation now in ruins, the practices are snapping and breaking.”

Put differently, voters can get a more exact picture of the election from “Saturday Night Live.”

Coverage of Herschel Walker’s shambolic debate performance on Friday provides a clear example. Mainstream media “takeaways” mostly portrayed the event as clashes on abortion, inflation, President Biden and Medicaid. Walker beat expectations, some reported. He helped himself!

What debate were they watching? Surely, the event’s significance boiled down to Walker’s decision to defend his claim to have worked for law enforcement by holding up an honorary police badge, which has no official significance, and declaring, “I am work with many police officers.”

The devastating moment should have been the story coming out of the debate, as SNL’s “Weekend Update” recognized. The parody newscast captured just how bizarre the moment was, and unlike many in the media, highlighted Walker’s inability to put a simple sentence together. The same could be said of social media, where the stunt quickly became a meme.

The New York Times, by contrast, mentioned the badge stunt as one of its five key moments from the debate and included Walker’s remark that the badge is “not a prop. This is real.” But the article didn’t explain that the badge was only an honorary recognition, nor did it include quotes showing Walker’s incoherent syntax.

This moment was as devastating as former Texas governor Rick Perry’s “oops” moment or Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio’s stumble in the 2016 GOP presidential debate. Yet too many in the mainstream media chose to downplay Walker’s unfitness and habitual lying.

Likewise, Walker’s rejection of a price cap on insulin because “you got to eat right” didn’t even make some of media outlets’ takeaway lists [reminds me of Reagan saying that ketchup is a vegetable]. It was as if the difference between the candidates amounted to sober disputes over health-care policy. 

Democracy watch
Demagogue: a political leader who seeks support by appealing to the desires and prejudices of ordinary people rather than by using rational argument (Google);  a leader who makes use of popular prejudices and false claims and promises in order to gain power (Merriam-Webster); a person, especially a political leader, who wins support by exciting the emotions of ordinary people rather than by having good or morally right ideas (Cambridge dictionary); NOTE: I have been informed that demagogues originate in democracies and they go from demagogue to tyrant on their route to power, so all those definitions fail to mention that aspect of the demagogue

Leaders of democracies increasingly echo Putin in authoritarian tilt

From Italy to Brazil to the United States, political leaders increasingly are echoing Russian President Vladimir Putin and one another by embracing far-right authoritarianism

In a flurry of elections, some of the world’s major democracies have been leaning toward or outright embracing far-right authoritarian leaders, who have echoed one another by promising to crack down on loose morals, open borders and power-hungry elites.

Voters in Italy last month elected a nationalist leader whose party proposes a U-turn from the effects of globalization. In Brazil, right-wing president Jair Bolsonaro injected doubt into the results of his reelection bid by speculating that the vote would be rigged against him in a conspiracy driven by the country’s elites. In the Philippines this year, voters chose the son of their former dictator Ferdinand Marcos as president, electing to stick with strongman politics.

Though hardly a champion of democracy, Russian President Vladimir Putin late last month delivered an address that would sound familiar — and, to many people, attractive — in democracies from the United States to much of Europe. Putin railed against expansive definitions of gender, calling the idea a “perversion,” part of a “complete denial of man [and an] overthrow of faith and traditional values” by “Western elites.”  
In the United States, former president Donald Trump has presumptively rejected future election results, and a majority of Republican candidates on the ballot this fall for major state and federal elective offices have joined him in repudiating the outcome of the 2020 presidential election — an epidemic of election denialism in the United States that historians and political scientists define as a core element in any country’s drift toward authoritarian rule.
Anti-democratic rot and shameless demagoguery is not confined to other countries. It is here in the US right now. The global authoritarian movement is aggressive, morally rotted and demagogic (lies, slanders, crackpot, irrational emotional manipulative, etc.). It seems that all these powerful conservatives the world over, and they are radical right conservatives, appear to be scared to death of LGBQT people, and the loss of traditional values. But that's just a ruse to rouse the rabble and undermine faith in democracy. 

But exactly what are are those traditional values? Based on current radical right rhetoric and politics, here’s some of them for the American authoritarians, mostly radical Christian nationalist and/or brass knuckles capitalist Republican elites:
  • Freedom to discriminate against, including firing them from their jobs, LGBQT people, atheists, women, non-White people, those with unacceptable political opinions and any other deemed deserving of oppression, disrespect, ridicule and/or physical attack  
  • Freedom to deny or downplay any and all inconvenient science, especially including climate change and the role man plays in it and the damage it is causing
  • Freedom for wealthy and powerful elites to steal from the nation and its people in the name of infallible God who has anointed them as leaders by virtue of their God-given wealth and/or power
  • Freedom to lie, slander and deceive the masses, for example by lying about and deny the secular origin and nature of American society and its constitution and laws, falsely claiming America was ordained by infallible God as a White Christian nation to be ruled with a self-righteous iron fist by angry White Christian heterosexual men
  • As per Jennifer Rubin’s WaPo opinion piece (above), freedom to attack, undermine, subvert, neuter and fossilize the MSM into a useful tool for liars, autocrats, theocrats and kleptocrats 
This kind of demagoguery, e.g., those points or local variants thereof, shoots through the authoritarian propaganda all over the planet. Attack democracy and distributed power by scaring people witless so that they fall for the propaganda and embrace of the comforting lies that demagogues hawking autocracy, fascism, kleptocracy and theocracy routinely offer.


Qs: Has the MSM become more the enemy than friend of the democracy, the rule of law and the people? Do sources like SNL provide better coverage of bad but important things like The Herschel than the MSM? Is American political and religious conservatism more anti-democratic and pro-authoritarian-theocratic than liberal politics and religion?