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Wielding 9-11 as a Weapon

Trump turns a tragedy that unified Americans into a way to politically attack his enemies

The still-pinned professionally produced political attack by @realDonaldTrump against @IlhanMN does more to insult America and spit on the memory of 9-11 than any comment by her. https://t.co/CW6OTY1fof #IStandWithIlhanOmar

It’s the terrorists — the forces of Osama bin Laden’s al-Qa’eda — who intended their 9-11 attacks as a weapon, as a means of dividing and weakening the US and its society, of fomenting a war between East and West, between Christian and Muslim.

It didn’t quite work. There was war, but it was — with the help of people like (yes) George W. Bush — not framed as a war between East and West, between Christian and Muslim, but against the specific factions, forces, and individuals ostensibly behind the attacks (with an opportunistic veering off into Iraq, but that’s another story).

The rise of Donald Trump and his nationalism, his continuous invective against the Other — the Muslims, the immigrants, the exploitative allies and trading partners, the city-folk, the gays, “socialists,” the transgender, the women, the non-white, the poor — has all too easily picked up that weapon of fear and resentment and ignorance and tribalism.

And now, with a Twitter attack not just in passing, but pinned to the top of his stream, Donald Trump has picked up that 9-11 weapon that Osama bin Laden laid out for him and is using it as a weapon against someone who represents everything he stands against: a Democratic woman of power who has been democratically elected to oppose his agenda.

In doing so, Donald discredits any reverence America still feels for 9-11. He turns it into a cudgel to use against his opponent. He politicizes it, hugs it to himself like he hugs the American flag, not because it really means anything to him, but because he can weaponize the gesture against others. He diminishes that attack’s significance far more than Omar’s in-passing reference to it in an address that wasn’t even about 9-11. He makes it all about him and his political position and his nationalistic movement.

And he does it at a moment when self-avowed fans of his are being arrested for making death threats against the person he’s continuing to so prominently attack.

Yeah, Donald, I can recognize the real enemy of America here.

Donald Trump does not like wind turbines. Nosirree.

Which means, of course, he makes stuff up about them.

Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States. https://t.co/NsRWqgxDiJ

Yes, and how does having a coal mine near your house affect your property values, Donald? Or living downstream of a coal plant?  Or having an oil derrick across the street? Or fracking in your neighborhood?

Do nearby wind turbines impact property values? There are some studies that indicate that — though nothing that approaches 75%, a number he keeps increasing with each speech it seems — and there are other studies that suggest the effect is anything but systemic.

As to cancer … well, (a) again, Trump ignores the very real health effects of living near other energy sources, and (b) it’s bullshit.

But, then, Trump, beyond being a great, grand friend of the fossil fuel industry (from doing all in his power to pump up the coal industry, to trying to open every coastline and national park to oil exploration), has had a mad-on against wind power for some time, specifically regarding his prolonged and ultimate failed attempt to keep a wind farm from being built offshore of his Scottish golf course.

That Windswept Look

And if there’s one thing we know about Donald Trump, it’s that he never forgets an enemy, whether it’s a politician who says something mean to him, or a wind turbine.

Do you want to know more?

 

The dire, dreadful urgency of The National Emergency!

“This is a DIRE NATIONAL EMERGENCY, so I’m going to threaten what I’ll do… some time next week. Now I have to head off to Mar-a-Lago for the weekend.” https://t.co/ie9POzttih

Deadly Ninja Assassins!

RT @baddestmamajama: Why are all movies about assassins about “elite assassins” and not ones who are just doing ok and sorta dreading their…

Pallas Cat

This put a huge smile on my face. https://t.co/Gd2mLFFyKv

OMG TEH CUTEZ!

Election cycle, or just another opportunity for political junk mail?

Yes!

I would be willing to bet a shiny nickel that department is better known internally as the “Department of Ripping Open Return Envelopes Looking for Donation Checks and Throwing the Useless Push Surveys Away”. https://t.co/iG9Tw5d2kF

I give donations to very specific individuals or causes. The “party” or “congressional committee” don’t count.

Minor props to the DCCC for not hiding the money solicitation at the end of the survey, like most of these do. It’s right there up front, so I can ignore it and add to the recycle bin.

On Cat Ownership

Yes, I’ve said all three of these things. More or less.

RT @scottlynch78: The three random yet recurring phases of cat ownership:

1- You are as elegant as moonlight and shadow, my sleek panther, my tiny hunter

2- You are my little boopersnoot squigglebutt squishydoodle

3- STOP CRAPPING OUTSIDE YOUR GODDAMN BOX YOU MALEVOLENT LITTLE STENCH GARGOYE

I love my cats. At least 2/3 of the time.

Better Dead Than Red!

Trump has decided that fear-mongering about socialism is his path to the White House in 2020.

The question is not *whether* we will be a “socialist” nation, but how much and in what areas. (Ditto for “capitalist”.) This is not a binary decision, dog-whistles notwithstanding. https://t.co/uYmK0GeguZ

We are not a capitalist country. We do not have a free-wheeling free-market economy. We do not live in a Hobbesian war of all-against-all, Dickensian workshop, Ayn Randian anarchy. Indeed, most people reject Scrooge’s idea of a capitalist ideal for those who don’t succeed:

“At this festive season of the year, Mr. Scrooge,” said the gentleman, taking up a pen, “it is more than usually desirable that we should make some slight provision for the Poor and Destitute, who suffer greatly at the present time. Many thousands are in want of common necessaries; hundreds of thousands are in want of common comforts, sir.”

“Are there no prisons?” asked Scrooge.

“Plenty of prisons,” said the gentleman, laying down the pen again.

“And the Union workhouses?” demanded Scrooge. “Are they still in operation?”

“They are. Still,” returned the gentleman, “I wish I could say they were not.”

“The Treadmill and the Poor Law are in full vigour, then?” said Scrooge.

“Both very busy, sir.”

“Oh! I was afraid, from what you said at first, that something had occurred to stop them in their useful course,” said Scrooge. “I’m very glad to hear it.”

“Under the impression that they scarcely furnish Christian cheer of mind or body to the multitude,” returned the gentleman, “a few of us are endeavouring to raise a fund to buy the Poor some meat and drink and means of warmth. We choose this time, because it is a time, of all others, when Want is keenly felt, and Abundance rejoices. What shall I put you down for?”

“Nothing!” Scrooge replied.

“You wish to be anonymous?”

“I wish to be left alone,” said Scrooge. “Since you ask me what I wish, gentlemen, that is my answer. I don’t make merry myself at Christmas and I can’t afford to make idle people merry. I help to support the establishments I have mentioned — they cost enough; and those who are badly off must go there.”

“Many can’t go there; and many would rather die.”

“If they would rather die,” said Scrooge, “they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population. Besides — excuse me — I don’t know that.”

“But you might know it,” observed the gentleman.

“It’s not my business,” Scrooge returned. “It’s enough for a man to understand his own business, and not to interfere with other people’s. Mine occupies me constantly. Good afternoon, gentlemen!”

We do have, in the United States, what are properly deemed socialist institutions. We have Social Security Insurance for the elderly, and Medicare and Medicaid for the poor and aged and disabled. We help poor people heat their homes in the winter. We have public-built roads, and police and fire-fighting forces that have their costs divided up amongst the whole population, not just those who explicitly call on them. We have national (and state, and local) parks, not just private preserves for those who own them. We have regulations about pollution, and about safe food, and proven drugs; about overtime pay and child labor and a five day work week; about requiring lenders to tell you the truth with some degree of clarity when you borrow money. We have tax incentives for public policy ends, some of them to support individuals, some of them to support businesses. We provide support to farmers to help them deal with wide-swinging fortunes in commodity prices and the weather.

Those are all “socialist” ideas — and many of them were attacked as dire deep-red socialism when proposed, threatening the moral fiber of freedom in our country when they were passed.

That said, we are not a socialist country, either — at least not in the state-controlled-economy Stalinist-Communist model, which is what the anti-socialist commentators condemn. Supply and demand largely control the economy. People can start (and end) businesses. People purchase goods and services almost solely from privately owned companies and corporations that are “public” only insofar as their stock is sold to the public. People can spend their money pretty much as they prefer, and pass on much of their wealth to their children (or to their cats, or to a charity of their choice).

There are no Democratic candidates who are proposing the sort of Stalinist/Maoist collectivist state as their ideal — even the stereotype of Bernie in his wildest dreams.

But that’s not what you hear from Trump and the GOP. From their perspective, the entire Democratic field consists of Levellers and people who want to tax everyone at 100% and allocate money out to everyone on an even basis, regardless of whether they are patriotic “maker” entrepreneurs or lazy “taker” welfare queens.

One could have a serious discussion about individual policy proposals — Medicare for All, Tuition-free College, Child Care subsidies for working parents, whatever — looking at the pros and cons of their goals, the costs and benefits, the risks and rewards. Heck, one could have a considered relitigation of those socialist programs and policies already in our society.

But instead, the Right is pivoting Red-baiting mode, coloring any sort of “socialist” proposal as hurtling down Perdition Road toward a Venezuela or Cuba or Soviet Union. (If pressed, they’ll also condemn “Euro-Socialism” as a terrible evil, no matter how happy the people of the more socialist states in Europe poll as being.)

Ideally, as I said, we would debate individual proposals and policy points. Apparently Trump has decided — and the GOP have agreed to follow — the concept that anything done for the common good is some sort of crazed communistic “socialism,” and therefore should be painted as a horrifying evil. The goal of the Democratic candidate in 2020 — and of the party in general — has to be to note those areas where we already have “socialism” in what we as citizens accept as normal and beneficial, and clarify that the discussion should not be about facile philosophical labels, but about specifics as to what people do or don’t want, and the costs and benefits of pursuing that.

“Capitalism” and “Socialism” are neither necessarily contradictory, nor are they a binary choice of all-of-one or all-of-another. Making that clear is the best messaging that Democratic politicians could put forward, in opposition to the scaremongering already coming from the Trump campaign.

Do you want to know more? ‘High-level fear-mongering’: Trump’s economic team drives ‘socialism’ attack – POLITICO

It’s like sometimes they don’t even bother to pretend they aren’t comic book villains

With gleeful commentary about what a fine distraction the President is

A top US official told a group of fossil fuel industry leaders that the Trump administration will soon issue a proposal making large portions of the Atlantic available for oil and gas development, and said that it is easier to work on such priorities because Donald Trump is skilled at sowing “absolutely thrilling” distractions, according to records of a meeting obtained by the Guardian.

Joe Balash, the assistant secretary for land and minerals management, was speaking to companies in the oil exploration business at a meeting of the International Association of Geophysical Contractors, or IAGC, last month.

Why, yes, let’s absolutely “drill, baby, drill” all along the Atlantic seaboard (except Florida, through special concession to its politically sensitive barely-tilting-GOP population). What could possibly go wrong?

A reminder of what could go wrong, courtesy of the Deepwater Horizon disaster

Just as interesting was this bit, which I guess was the sort of thing one says behind not-quite-closed doors:

“One of the things that I have found absolutely thrilling in working for this administration,” said Balash,“is the president has a knack for keeping the attention of the media and the public focused somewhere else while we do all the work that needs to be done on behalf of the American people.”

Which raises the question of whether Trump does outrageous stuff and folk who want to operate without the “attention of the public” take advantage of it to scurry out under his cover? Or is Trump intentionally playing the media and public to allow these folk to do their own thing without that “attention.”?

In either case, it’s clear the Trump Administration focus is on cranking up American oil production as much as possible, which should make some large oil firms quite happy indeed.

Do you want to know more? US official reveals Atlantic drilling plan while hailing Trump’s ability to distract public | Environment | The Guardian

Finding “safe places” to wear a MAGA hat

Cats in hats might get into spats

I don’t condone physical retaliation against anyone wearing provocative political wear… but it’s also disingenuous to pretend that such garb isn’t making a statement, and looking for a response. https://t.co/PcV4RkFMh7

Or, put another way …

A MAGA hat is a product sold by Donald Trump. It’s a product worn by Donald Trump. It’s a product in support of — financially and ideologically — the President of the United States and, by extension, his policies.

Some people clearly feel that’s keen. Indeed, I would assume that number includes folk wearing such a hat. But clearly other people (if one looks at disapproval polling numbers, a significant majority of Americans) disagree with that sentiment, sometimes with passion as well.

Indeed, for people who feel that Trump represents an existential threat to themselves or their loved ones, that passion can understandably boil over in the face of what they see as provocation. I don’t see a MAGA hat as “Fighting Words,” but it’s not beyond my imagination that some do.

Still, I can’t condone people acting with violence toward such headwear without any further provocation. But unpleasantness, perhaps verbal confrontation, a measure of social opprobrium, perhaps. Carrying a message into public is asking for a response to that message — and that response may be camaraderie as a fellow-traveler, or something quite different.

(That’s true whether we’re talking a MAGA hat, or a Gay Rights hat, or a Radical Christianist hat, or a “Tax the Wealthy” hat.  A hat that makes a statement to people has to be expected to draw a reaction to that statement.)

So maybe an app that lets MAGA hat wearers hang out with people who won’t disagree with them is a good idea. True, it’s largely been conservatives who have condemned the idea of “safe spaces” …

To wrap things up, it’s worthwhile considering what constitutes such a “safe space” according to the app developers?

– Does this business serve persons of every political belief?

There have been times and places where folk wearing leftist regalia were not welcomed to patronize a business — and political stance is not a protected class under the civil rights laws — but, sure.

– Will this business protect its customers if they are attacked for political reasons?

I suppose it depends on what one means by “attack”. Physical assault? That makes sense. Someone who verbally indicates disagreement with a political statement? (“MAGA!” “Eat the Rich!” “Gay people are going to roast in hell!” “Death to Infidels!”) I suppose it depends on whether it disrupts other customers.

– Does this business allow legal concealed carry under this state’s laws?

Huh. That’s an interesting thing to lump under “safe spaces.”

– Does this business avoid politics in its ads and social media postings?

Does that include expressing conservative political sentiment?

In other words, is the intent to come up with a “safe space” for any person, regardless of their politics? Or just for people who wear MAGA hats?

Also, it’s interesting that avoiding politics in ads and social media is being valued here, when you’re looking to literally march around in clothing that is expressing politics.

So, how is that app working out?

 “Finally, I am able to avoid places which don’t respect America and [the] US Constitution. Eat your heart out, snowflakes,” wrote one user, who rated the app five stars.

Huh. The irony is almost overwhelming.

There Oughta Be A Law!

This Constitutional Law Moment brought to you by This Is Why We Need More Civics Education. Yeesh. https://t.co/bwreHhSeWP

Diamond and Silk are, of course, bestest buds of both the President and headliners at last weekend’s CPAC. They are not, however and quite clearly, lawyers.

With Malice Toward None

A remarkable speech by a remarkable president. (Full text https://t.co/646JWywaUF). https://t.co/K0Mgjupvxn

The concluding passage from Lincoln’s second inaugural address, a little over a month before he was assassinated:

With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.

Rights and the Brain

RT @OutandEqual: Today, and every day, Out & Equal honors the queer and ally women who have, and are, blazing new trails. Watch @ananavarro…

The Courageous President

For such a powerful, awe-inspiring, wealthy, successful guy, Donald Trump sure whines a lot. https://t.co/IxJwIjAdTM

Welcome to Crazy Town

STILL not normal. And not in a good way. https://t.co/TdWHMrXC3p

The Diplomatic President

Just in case anyone is still wondering: this is STILL not normal. This is the US President, in Vietnam on a delicate diplomatic mission that could mean life or death for millions … and he’s taking time out for petty public snipes at a political opponent. https://t.co/1MgskQr3RE

The Minimum Wage is not a “gift”

Yes, Ivanka — AND people want to get a livable wage for what they work. The transaction goes both ways, remarkably enough. What makes you think someone working a minimum wage job isn’t working enough to warrant that amount, or more? https://t.co/ONTzuR8iUg

Bad Science Climate

If at first you fail to quash the science… create some counter-science. https://t.co/hqKRVTe180

Another “Girl Genius” Collection! Woot!

I just backed Queens and Pirates: a Girl Genius Graphic Novel on @Kickstarter https://t.co/mLsx3xEzHq

Shocking

RT @_youhadonejob1: Seems like false advertising. https://t.co/IXbV9Hip0u