Friday, August 28, 2020

Doughfacedonny is the greatest mass murderer in American History

 Studying history is like always getting the after-action report without having to deal with the play-by-play. This has been a horrible year, the worst things happened and the worst person in the world is in charge, making sure that the worst things continue and are made worse by his actions or inaction. It is easy to forget in the day-to-day outrages and lies that trump is, through his callous and sociopathic response to the novel Coronavirus, the greatest mass murderer in American history.

In this age of 24/7 news services, social media, and the politicization of everything it is really important to have actual journalists willing to do the legwork of compiling, cross-referencing, and connecting the fire hose of news on a single subject. History officially begins 20 years ago, we still have no idea how trump's abuse of power will affect how badly the COVID-19 pandemic ultimately becomes. But there is enough evidence on record to assemble a narrative that strains out the noise of all the disasters in America to focus on just how badly trump behaved this year. There just isn't a strong enough word to describe how awful he is and how strongly attached his authoritarian followers are to this disaster.

Remember how he joked "what have you got to lose?" by voting for this singularly unqualified, incompetent, narcissistic, lazy, cruel, vindictive, preening, smug, lawless monster? The list of crimes is miles long, the list of lies tenfold longer, the abuse of power and profiting from the office he squats in dwarfs the original sin of how he got to this position; treason. The only thing more daunting is the depravity, denial, and obedience of republicans from top to bottom. Now we know, and hopefully the future will understand that fascism is always there just under the surface, smoldering, ready to ignite and consume our precious institutions that gave a veneer of civilization so exhaustingly won from the aristocracy over more than two centuries.

Historians, professional academics with credentials that are far better than mine, have not even started really beginning the chronicle of George W. Bush's crimes, lies, and abuses of power. Now the right-wing authoritarian followers, with a huge assist from Russia, were suckered in by an even bigger con-artist social dominator who hated the same people they did and promised pain for their enemies; openly and without much push back from those precious institutions we all have been taught would protect the republic from tyranny. The office of the presidency has vast power, and now all Americans have a much better understanding of how powerful and destructive those powers can be in the hands of a sociopath.

The Trump Pandemic: A blow-by-blow account of how the president killed thousands of Americans.

By WILLIAM SALETAN

Saletan, writing in Slate magazine, published this compilation timeline/narrative with exhaustive links to sources on August 9. I feel guilty for not having read it until now. It is unbelievable that trump's impeachment for blackmailing the president of Ukraine to help him get reelected is not the central story of this traitor's administration. Saletan has done all Americans (as distinct from republicans, except where we can use this article to bludgeon the bastards) a great service with his work on the topic. 
At the time [July 17], nearly 140,000 Americans were dead from the novel coronavirus. The interviewer, Chris Wallace, showed Trump a video clip in which Robert Redfield, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warned of a difficult fall and winter ahead. Trump dismissed the warning. He scoffed that experts had misjudged the virus all along. “Everybody thought this summer it would go away,” said Trump. “They used to say the heat, the heat was good for it and it really knocks it out, remember? So they got that one wrong.”

Trump’s account was completely backward. Redfield and other U.S. public health officials had never promised that heat would knock out the virus. In fact, they had cautioned against that assumption. The person who had held out the false promise of a warm-weather reprieve, again and again, was Trump. And he hadn’t gotten the idea from any of his medical advisers. He had gotten it from Xi Jinping, the president of China, in a phone call in February.

The phone call, the talking points Trump picked up from it, and his subsequent attempts to cover up his alliance with Xi are part of a deep betrayal. The story the president now tells—that he “built the greatest economy in history,” that China blindsided him by unleashing the virus, and that Trump saved millions of lives by mobilizing America to defeat it—is a lie. Trump collaborated with Xi, concealed the threat, impeded the U.S. government’s response, silenced those who sought to warn the public, and pushed states to take risks that escalated the tragedy. He’s personally responsible for tens of thousands of deaths. [emphasis mine]

As of writing, the number is now over 181,000 deaths and 5.88 million cases, many of whom will suffer permanent organ damage and suffer health consequences for the rest of their lives. What Saletan reveals by putting all of these fragments of data, the lies and abuses of power, in chronological order in a well-written narrative style history is how much worse the pandemic has been because of trump. This is really important because of how deluged Americans are with scandals and disasters on so many topics which has a tendency to dissipate focus on how singularly responsible the man who refuses to take any responsibility for exacerbating the pandemic is actually exacerbating the pandemic which has affected all of us. I kept thinking at the beginning of the pandemic that republicans can't lie to a virus, no amount of scapegoating, demonizing Democrats, or fox news noise can mitigate the spread of this disease. As always, I hate being right. I wrote about how unprepared and overstretched the private health care system was here.

Saletan neatly summarizes the fact that trump dismantled every defense and preparation for an epidemic that he inherited from the Obama administration and before then. And trump had two stories about it, he had to save money for tax cuts (obvious but unstated by Saletan), and he was too busy golfing and ripping off the treasury or just outright too stupid and lazy ("other priorities" as Saletan notes). But the timeline Saletan links to for the conspiracy with China and all the lies accompanying it must have fallen through the cracks because I don't remember much of that. But the dueling lies about Chinese trade deals and the Chinese virus are fascinating. Somebody forgot to inform Laura Ingraham which side of the duel was du jour because she asked trump about human rights abuses, that has been framed as a socialist (i.e. Democratic) plot rather than an authoritarian one but trump was doing the "cozying up to dictators" routine that day. I promise that will be funny one day but thinking historically I lol-ed today. 

Before getting into Saletan's treatment of trump's refusal to take steps towards containing the spread of COVID-19, refusal to increase production of PPE and supplies like ventilators, or testing for the virus I wanted to share CNN's chief White House correspondent's tweet from this morning. Just to focus a little closer on how the compartmentalized thinking of authoritarian leaders makes Benjamin Franklin's adage about not believing anything you hear so timeless.


Gosh it would be great to have a political press willing to risk being impolite to fascists more often. But I guess once in a while has to do.

 Not until March 11, six weeks after blocking travel from China, did Trump take similar action against Europe. In a televised address, he acknowledged that travelers from Europe had brought the disease to America. Two months later, based on genetic and epidemiological analyses, the CDC would confirm that Trump’s action had come too late, because people arriving from Europe—nearly 2 million of them in February, hundreds of whom were infected—had already accelerated the spread of the virus in the United States.

The second step was to gear up production of masks, ventilators, and other medical supplies. In early February, trade adviser Peter Navarro, biomedical research director Rick Bright, and other officials warned of impending shortages of these supplies. Azar would later claim that during this time, everyone in the administration was pleading for more equipment. But when Azar requested $4 billion to stock up, the White House refused. Trump dismissed the outcry for masks and ridiculed Democrats for “forcing money” on him to buy supplies. “They say, ‘Oh, he should do more,’ ” the president scoffed in an interview on Feb. 28. “There’s nothing more you can do.”

The third and most important step was to test the population to see whether the virus was spreading domestically. That was the policy of South Korea, the global leader in case detection. Like the United States, South Korea had identified its first case on Jan. 20. But from there, the two countries diverged. By Feb. 3 South Korea had expanded its testing program, and by Feb. 27 it was checking samples from more than 10,000 people a day. The U.S. program, hampered by malfunctions and bureaucratic conflict, was nowhere near that. By mid-February, it was testing only about 100 samples a day. As a result, few infections were being detected. [emphasis mine]

Trump did these things. The refusal to test until the pressure to increase it gets strong enough is a through-line of his awful, awful response. And that refusal stems from his bloated self-image, narcissism, and infantile rejection of object permanence... it "looks bad" because if we can't see it it's not happening; people aren't actually dying. That is his rationalization.

Trump didn’t just ignore warnings. He suppressed them. When Azar briefed him about the virus in January, Trump called him an “alarmist” and told him to stop panicking. When Navarro submitted a memo about the oncoming pandemic, Trump said he shouldn’t have put his words in writing. As the stock market rose in February, Trump discouraged aides from saying anything about the virus that might scare investors.

The president now casts himself as a victim of Chinese deception. In reality, he collaborated with Xi to deceive both the Chinese public and the American public. For weeks after he was briefed on the situation in China, including the fact that Beijing was downplaying the crisis, Trump continued to deny that the Chinese government was hiding anything. He implied that American experts had been welcomed in China and could vouch for Beijing’s information, which—as he would acknowledge months later—wasn’t true. On Twitter, Trump wrote tributes worthy of Chinese state propaganda. “Great discipline is taking place in China, as President Xi strongly leads what will be a very successful operation,” he proclaimed.

 Finally, masks. 

The simplest way to control the virus was to wear face coverings. But instead of encouraging this precaution, Trump ridiculed masks. He said they could cause infections, and he applauded people who spurned them. Polls taken in late May, as the virus began to spread across the Sun Belt, indicated that Trump’s scorn was suppressing mask use. A Morning Consult survey found that the top predictor of non-use of masks, among dozens of factors tested, was support for Trump. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey found that people who seldom or never wore masks were 12 times more likely to support Trump than to support his opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden. Some scientific models imply that Trump’s suppression of mask use may have contributed to hundreds, if not thousands, of deaths.

There are so many more instances where trump's actions or inactions, suppressing speech, holding mass rallies, delaying production or distribution of vital supplies, and so on that have led to increased deaths that it is simply too big a betrayal of his oath to comment on. I urge you to read the whole article and follow the plethora of links to internalize the scope of this crime. We historians criticize Herbert Hoover for his refusal to act, or act in ways that exacerbated the scope of the Great Depression as bad leadership. What do you call consistent actions to that lead directly to mass death and suffering? By election day it is possible (Dear God, let me be wrong on this one) that more Americans will have died from COVID-19 than in WWII. Putin got his money's worth when he accomplished this coup against American democracy. In his wildest dreams the Russian military, or any other for that matter, could not inflict so many casualties on American service members. But in the end, this is Trump. His legacy is death. 

History is more of an art than a science, you can look for parallels and similarities in events but it is impossible to conduct scientific experiments. There is no way to know how many Americans would have died if Hillary Clinton had taken office from an election she won by almost 3 million votes. Elections have consequences, decisions made by leaders have real-world effects. Trump can have no benefit of the doubt, no rationalizations for his actions and words; he caused this. And may he rot in hell for it after being tried for the greatest mass murder of Americans in history and all of his other crimes.

Thursday, August 20, 2020

I Hope They Know What They Are Doing

 The Democrats are still trying to play fair in a very unfair game. The problem is that no one is paying attention to how clean and conciliatory the Party is at their convention. The political press would, of course, howl like mad if the left had a more prominent position and are always on the lookout for the slightest disagreement to decry "Dems in disarray". The scumbag traitors in the republican party will call any Democrat "the most liberal... socialist, baby-killer, etc" no matter the truth. The progressives like Capper will call anything that is not completely subservient to whatever his wish list includes at the moment "corporate sell-out republican lite". And the leftists who fawn over Glenn Greenwald will demand that the party be burned to the ground. Driftglass was on to something when he coined the "Democratic War on Four Fronts." These are never calmly considered criticisms made in good faith either. That said, I think the DNC is running a rather solid convention so far.

For all the moaning about having John Kasich and Colin Powell give speeches they were really only on screen for a few minutes. And the republicans speaking at the Democratic convention were brief and persuaded me that they were there because of the extraordinary circumstances, not because they were planning a hostile takeover the way the Lincoln Project is doing. Kasich's remarks were less than a page and a half long, I sometimes need more than that just to get warmed up. We can read all sorts of nefarious intentions into his appearance; or we can ignore it as a silly stunt that is unlikely to change more than a handful of votes and get back to work. AOC and Bernie Sanders made a much stronger impression on me.

Powell's speech was about the same length and hewed pretty closely to his specialization, what a commander-in-chief is supposed to do. I had a little more trouble with this for lack of any indication that he bears responsibility for lying us into Iraq. Sure, I get what the Democrats were going for, "look at our broad coalition", but sweeping the past under the rug for present-day expediency does a lot more for the republican trying to get their reputation rehabilitated than for the party trying to save democracy. And the "regular" republicans jawing about their 11th hour conversion of convenience only got a collective 1 minute and 12 seconds. They looked to be people living among polite society, the types that might be sensitive to whispers about being scumbags for supporting doughfacedonny in the first place, making the social cost of continuing to slum with the Qanon freaks and tribespeople with shit in their hair too high. Which needs to happen a lot more but who wants to live out in the boonies among them?

I keep thinking about what I learned in grade school, that after the republicans shit the bed so badly in causing the Great Depression Franklin Delano Roosevelt rallied the public with his fireside chats. A calm, reassuring voice that was both free from preconceptions about ideology and sympathetic to the real pain felt by most Americans. This convention has much the same feel. We're in the middle of both a pandemic and a depression, even if it is not openly stated, and what a lot of Americans who aren't rock-ribbed progressive ideologues need is just some reassurance that the giant obstacle blocking relief and recovery can be and will be removed by this election. Sure, you can be cynical and complain that the convention looks like an overly-scripted and produced infomercial but that's what all political conventions are now. They stopped having an actual function a long time ago and are now just a way for a party to make it's case to the voters. Running this tight ship of professional speeches given in a lot of living rooms and kitchens with no chaos and technical difficulties between acts, says "we are the grown-ups". 

It remains to be seen whether this convention style makes any difference. And Democrats still seem wrapped up in trying to impress the mainstream media, which never works, and being unifiers instead of the opposition party trying to unseat the incompetent, sadistic, corrupt fascists from power. My goal from the beginning has always been to remove republicans from power, and then push them as far away from the ability to harm Americans as possible. That would open up a lot of space to actually debate ideas, try new things, and allow regular people to organize and be part of the process. A lot of "ifs" to be sure, but we liberals haven't been able to do anything like it in a long time. Politics should not be a spectator sport and abdicating responsibility to get involved ensures you lose 100% of the time. 

Thursday, August 13, 2020

The Kraken is Let Down Again

 So I've got to say it because I can't stand it any longer. Capper, you are dead to me. I have had enough of your whining purity tests, your constant complaining about the Democratic Party, the omnipresent allegations of a Wall Street conspiracy within the party, and I have absolutely had it with the republican pseudo-male rape fantasies "being shoved down our throats." It's crap, it's constant crap and I can't handle that kind of negativity and defeatism anymore. 

And let's get it out of the way; I know that I am nobody. I am fully aware that I have very few Twitter followers. I am painfully aware that I have no influence on anyone. And I know that losing one follower will not affect you in the least. But I'm tired. Tired of watching a guy whom I started out as a big fan of just fall deeper and deeper into a perpetual curmudgeon idiom while so many of us are trying hard to ease the suffering of our fellows and the damage to our nation. 

You are standing in the way of that work and I will no longer be counted among your followers.

If you look through my archives you will see the multiple instances where I cite you and your work as a trusted source. You were one of the few people who supported my blog and followed me on social media and I am very sad that it has come to this. I don't even know what you stand for anymore. It seems when you support the conspiracy theory that Democrats are somehow forcing you to accept a state of things that you find intolerable that it is really an exercise in projection. You studied psychology, it should be apparent that what you complain about is the inverse of what you demand; that everyone do and believe exactly as you do or they are sheep. 

Most of us are fine with both Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. Not happy, they were really no one's first choice but no one held a gun to anyone's head and forced them to vote for Biden in the primaries. Everyone who voted in the primaries had a choice. Wall Street can give all the money they want to their favored candidates but in the end it is votes that advance the nominee. I voted for Bernie in the primary, just like I did the last time, and I am perfectly okay with him now calling on all Democrats to support the actual Democratic nominee and his running mate. You cannot get over your pride just enough to kick doughfacedonny out of the office he is perverting and all the damage he has done has not convinced you that maybe compromising could be the key to getting some of what you want instead of bargaining it away. 

Perusing my archives will also find several instances of me questioning your blog partner Jeff, may he rest in peace. The attitude he had toward insisting that his definition of progressivism was the only true way and everyone else was wrong or a sellout was so grating. I take back nothing I said about him but I am sorry that he suffered and passed away too soon. This, however, does not excuse your taking up his purity pity party flag and running with it. When I wake up and see things like this in my feed I kind of want to throw up:

 

 

 

How is this helpful to anyone? It is like when Jeff passed away his spirit passed into you.

 

Don't you just love the "shut up and vote the way we tell you" tactic that the Democrats are using? And they're deploying it early and often this year. Because, y'know, it works so well.

Posted by Chris Capper Liebenthal on Thursday, August 13, 2020

 Sure, I get it. You're old now, retired. You don't have to fight the rat race anymore. Don't have to sweat some boss you've never even met decide on a whim that they aren't making enough money off of you and need to kick you out in the cold. Or bust your ass retraining and sending out hundreds of resumes only to have not one call you back. Politics was a hobby for your generation, not a life and death struggle as it is for younger generations. 

The thing is your shtick isn't even original, I see it in just about every comment thread on the subject. Which gets me to the conclusion; this kind of pessimism is infectious. We are all influenceable and impressionable to one degree or another, heck I used to take what you said seriously. Not only is it infectious but the holier-than-thou attitude snowballs. The republicans figured out a long time ago that if you just assert a thing over and over again many people will come to believe it. The more curmudgeons of any age that express the readily-apparent fact that the Democrats have a lot of problems in this conspiratorial tone, the further we all are from fixing it.

I wrote a post almost a year ago decrying the effects of "wailers" on the left that find that "perfect rhetorical florish" to kneecap Democrats trying to run for office without actually doing anything to fix problems or build anything. I don't know what you do offline politically Capper, but your public facing online presence is all tear down, no build up. And I can't be a part of that anymore. Sure, you can say "I told you so" when Barr's secret police have us in a camp somewhere because the sellout Democrats couldn't get it done. But until then, I've picked a side and I'm not going to let you drag me down anymore.

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

The Big, Big Deal and the Nature of Political Succession

Nothing profound here, selecting Kamala Harris as a running mate is as completely acceptable to me as it was expected. She has been a solid senator and has the only real prerequisite needed for Vice President, a pulse. Her seat can be filled by a Democratic Governor in a non-swing state and all the conventional political considerations are fulfilled. Senator Harris is young enough as politicians go to make continuity very possible. All is well in the only functioning political party in the United States. I saw on Twitter something about the "irony that a multi-cultural woman is the safe choice" for the ticket. I don't mean this in a derogatory way, but now that Democrats have their "woke" due diligence, it is time to get some plans in place to right the ship of economic justice and democracy enrichment.

So where does that leave the rest of us? Doughfacedonny has successfully reopened a lot of Civil War era wounds, crashed the economy even worse than most people expected, let loose a pandemic that will likely have killed more Americans than World War II, and shown just how easily "It Can Happen Here." He skated all sorts of norms of presidential politics, thus far successfully beaten down any attempt to hold him accountable for welcoming foreign interference in the last presidential election or punish Russia. So just like post-Watergate we will probably see a great deal of new rule making to just shore up those loopholes donny squirted through like a well-buttered sow. 

Senator Harris has shown that she can fight republicans on terms that make them feel icky. Which, in our imperfect world where half of the so-called "left" in this country was going to whine no matter who was picked, is definitely a bonus. She will absolutely make puritan Pence squirm and probably cry. If nothing else, that is about the best short-term benefit I can ask for. 

A serious question for all the Bernie bros, holier-than-thou purity angels, and pretend Democrats who've been concern trolling regular folks since the beginning; where did you get these high expectations for American politics? Honestly, have you ever studied any American political history? In terms of "getting what 'we' want" there has been exactly one "good" administration, that of FDR, and Americans had to suffer through THE GODDAMNED DEPRESSION AND A WORLD WAR to get bank regulation, social security, labor protections, and progressive income/corporate taxes. The rest of our history has been an endless series of bad deals, compromises, regression, and ratfckery. Including a damn Civil War. So where exactly do you get these ideas of what progress should look like? It doesn't work here the way it works in other industrial countries. So really, it is time to get over yourselves. Progress is not going to be handed to you on a silver platter or any other way but to fight for it. 

Everyone should just take it down a notch, lower expectations and remember that the president is not our dream date, they are the bus or train that gets us where we need to go along that track. While the above mentioned wailer types have been hand-wringing about how "the fix was in" or the establishment's omnipotent hand ruined the chance for progress again, thousands of regular people organized and ran for offices all over the place. Now, those people get to sit on party committees and decide policies or draft ideas; not you. And in the upcoming election, more people will get organized and just go out and do it.

All I really want from a Democratic administration is a roof. Not like a wall, just a barrier that can keep republicans from getting their greasy mitts on the apparatus of government and sabotaging it. A roof to keep 35 year old fascists from getting a judgeship for life and putting Stephen Miller or Jared in charge of anything where they can harm others. Anything else is gravy. I tried making a wish before doughfacedonny stole the election with Russia's help, I'm not doing it again. Voting against evil is enough. 

For now.