Tuesday, November 29, 2016

What Now?

By way of creating a record, here are some comments I have made in email exchanges and so forth since 8 November:


1.      Trump is obviously ignorant, and, I suspect, not particularly intelligent. But he identified something in the electorate that most people in high places had ignored, and that is the long-simmering resentment of many ordinary citizens over how their concerns are dismissed by those who spend their time worrying about the market, the Israel-Palestinian question, international politics generally, and the mechanics of governance (or, in the case of Repubs, non-governance). Those people came out and voted, and because so many of them live in small places, they were under-counted in the polls. Hillary’s voters, on the other hand, weren’t so passionate about her (who could be?), and many of them didn’t bother to vote, having been assured that she would win anyway. Close to 9 million more people voted in 2012 than in 2016; Trump got fewer votes overall, in his victory, than Romney did in losing badly in 2012.

2.      The supporters of Hillary took Trump literally, but not seriously; Trump’s own supporters took him seriously, but not literally. This, which I heard tonight on the News Hour (public TV), is evidently a formulation by a writer for the Atlantic, and it rings true to me. Hillary-people heard the outrageous comments about Mexicans, Muslims, and so forth, and believed that he was serious, and so dismissed him as a clown. Trump’s voters heard the same things and laughed: in interviews over the past few days many of them actually laughed when confronted with the crazy statements, saying, in effect, that they never believed any of that. What they were responding to was his basic, gut message: the system is rigged –not the votes, but the whole system: the economy, the culture; and it needs to be torn down and rebuilt. That is a powerful message, one I myself believed, forty and fifty years ago.

3.      Trump has an enormous problem: he really thinks he can fix things by common-sense, tough-business-guy type negotiations or sword rattling. He can’t; the world is much more complicated than a contract over an apartment building. The good news is, there are a few things he can do, and so he will probably try those first: rebuilding the infrastructure (he said this immediately upon being elected): bridges, airports, highways, inner cities. A huge public-works project would be a very good thing, both because our infrastructure is really in bad, and deteriorating, shape; but also because it will spend a lot of money and put a lot of workers into decent-paying jobs who are now not working at all, or are flipping burgers and greeting people at Wal-Mart. People on the Left have been arguing for this for years; but the Repubs have refused to consider it, arguing disingenuously that it would increase the deficit and the debt. No one believes they actually care about the deficit or the debt; and now that they are in control they can forget about that. They will give him the money; unless the wacko far-rights in the House gum up the works. I predict they won’t do this; their constituents are largely Trump people.

4.      The Wall won’t be built. He’ll pretend to start that project, and events will quickly push it off the front page. It will languish and eventually die, with Trump saying it turned out to be unnecessary because he was so brilliant he stopped illegal immigration without it (More Mexicans returned to Mexico in the past year than entered the U.S. illegally, so he has a ready-made fact that he can use as proof that he stopped illegal immigration).

5.      Trump is clueless in foreign policy, or in foreign anything; and this is our biggest risk. He is thin-skinned and egotistical, and it’s hard to imagine how he will react when thwarted by international events. He may try to “bomb the hell” out of ISIS, for example, and that could well lead to a disaster. Putin is a clever man, though, and may be able to convince Trump that he (Trump) is controlling events even as they go Putin’s way. Trouble is, that would also probably be a disaster.

6.      A Trump administration may still be a very bad time: the people he appears to be considering for his cabinet and other top positions are second-and third-raters (Gingrich, Christie, Ben Carson) when they are not crazies (John Bolton, Steve Bannon, Rudy Giuliani, Sarah Palin). He will have a hard time finding experienced people for many positions, notably national security posts, because virtually all of the senior Repub people in these areas signed an open letter refusing to support him –he may have to rely on less-experienced junior people. Mike Pence is now the head of his transition team because he couldn’t staff it with experienced people. Pence only took the VP job because he was going to lose in a re-election bid in Indiana, and he is a far-right ideologue; Christie, besides being badly damaged by Bridgegate, backed off when the “grab her by the xxxxx” tape came out; and Trump requires absolute loyalty.

But Trump will probably be able to fill 2 or more Supreme Court seats, and republicans have a history of poor appointments there when it comes to tense situations: Nixon on Carswell and Haynesworth; Clarence Thomas; Bush II on Harriet Myers. Trump may well appoint a third-rater; and he may get away with it if only because he is feared by many Repubs. So the Court is likely to go farther right –which in this case means, the side with the most money (usually Business) will prevail in important cases. This may not sit well with Trump’s “base,” who, remember, are not really passionate Trump supporters, in many cases.

7.      Things that may go very badly:

a.      Tariffs that Trump has promised to impose on China. Could cause a trade war, higher prices here in the U.S., especially for cheap goods that Trump people buy at Wal-Mart, and loss of jobs in export industries in this country.

b.      Military adventures, if Trump persists in believing that he can kill off ISIS quickly and easily, or that he really understands ISIS better than the generals. Also, trying to blackmail allies over payments to NATO, for example, and encouraging small countries to build their own nuclear arsenals, while creating deteriorating relations with China, could have the effect of making North Korea think it really ought to try some experiments in dropping nukes on a few countries.

c.      Foreign relations, if Trump tries to cancel the Iran deal. He can take the US out of that agreement, but our allies won’t go along with him, resulting in isolation of the US and, incidentally, a loss of a lot of foreign business for companies like Boeing.

d.      Obamacare, if he really tries to repeal it. It was all good fun for the Repubs in the House to vote for repeal 50-some times; but actually repealing it would cause chaos in a huge industry. He is already backing off that, though.

e.      The economy, if he actually cuts taxes as he proposes, retains Social Security and Medicare at present levels as he has promised, “rebuilds” the armed forces, and embarks on a big infrastructure project. This is why, although stocks have hit new highs since Tuesday, bonds have come crashing down: inflation and interest rates could very well go up a lot.

So, I worry. Not as much as my kids do –I don’t think Daniel and his friends will be “rounded up and shipped out,” as he said; he lives in Massachusetts, not Alabama--, but quite a bit. The swastikas showing up in various places and the fact that the real crazies of the alt-Right are now seen as legitimate where they were formerly regarded as trolls who creep around in the dark places –those features of the new climate will debase us all.

But what underlies the Trump phenomenon? Where did we go wrong?

First, we have the tendency, almost exclusively among Republican politicians, to deny the legitimacy of a president, and to openly advocate opposing that president regardless of the positions he advocates. This happened to Clinton, and of course to Obama. A famous example is the filibuster, on January 26, 2010, by the Republicans in the Senate to defeat a resolution to create a deficit-reduction task force. This bipartisan resolution had been supported by Mitch McConnell and John McCain; but these two senators, as well as six cosponsors of the resolution, voted against it. Why? Because, between the time of the original crafting of the bill and the vote, President Obama had gone on record as supporting it. Being a Democrat has, itself, become illegitimate, if not (see Ann Coulter) treasonous.

Then there is, accompanying this, or following from it, is the increasing demonization of people who disagree with oneself. The only time you hear "I disagree with ..." from the mouths of an increasing number of people, both public figures and ordinary citizens, is when someone they support goes very far out of bounds. Thus, Republican politicians, confronted with Trump's comments on Mexicans, or his proposal to ban Muslims from the U.S., "disagreed" with him. As for political or cultural opponents, one doesn't "disagree" with such people, one abhors their beliefs, or is outraged by their statements. This is prevalent on the Left as well as on the Right. Just look at the headlines on the widely-followed news/political websites.

This demonization has been accompanied by, and facilitated by, our increasing tendency to segregate ourselves politically: as a nation, we've gradually sorted ourselves, so that most people don't encounter those unlike themselves (socially, politically, or economically) in the normal course of going about their days. This began with the super-rich, who are too precious to risk encountering, say, a homeless person or a tradesman other than at one's back door; but it has spread widely. Just as most black kids attend schools that are (a guess) more than 90% black, most of the states in the country are reliably "blue" or "red." Although I personally appreciate the lack of political advertising I am faced with here in Illinois (and when a local candidate advertises, you can instantly identify if he or she is a Republican, because the ad doesn't mention the party), this facilitates seeing the Other as fearsome and alien. Japan is one of the most anti-Semitic countries in the world. Jewish population in Japan: zilch.


Our population is increasingly ignorant, indeed functionally illiterate (this ignores areas where illiteracy rates results from a high proportion of immigrants). Newton Minnow, who famously declared, in the 1960s, that television was a “vast wasteland,” would today consider it an oasis of enlightenment compared to the Internet. I believe it was Benjamin Franklin who said that the man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot. Such people get their information from self-selected oral sources, and the tendency is to select sources that provide views comfortingly like ones own. Those sources rely on that, to tailor, indeed distort, their product to reinforce the political views they want to advance. Of course, when a steady consumer of such views hears a contrary piece of information, his response is that it is simply untrue.

Trump advances this tendency: when a person of national stature states as a fact things that are untrue, he legitimizes those ideas. Last year a survey found that regular viewers of Fox News were actually less well-informed than those who consumed no regular source of news at all. And when a national political party nominates such a person, it lends credibility to those views.  Routine surveys show that most Americans have no conception about basic facts regarding our government's performance, and often believe things that are actually directly opposite the truth. And ignorance doesn't just mean unaware of the facts: it means unable to connect things intellectually, to parse statement, to reason clearly.

contrary to the facts pr
Beliefs that are contrary to the facts produce justifications for draconian social policies. If one believes that most homicides are committed by blacks, and that most blacks are willfully unemployed, violent, unpredictable, and irresponsible, we shouldn't be surprised that a cop (who is most likely under-educated and under-trained, and subject to the prejudices of his class), shoots a big black guy who is standing by his car and makes a sudden, ill-advised move. And it is a short step from that to a presidential candidate who urges the adoption of national "stop-and-frisk" policies and national "concealed carry" legislation.


Sunday, July 17, 2016

Because they don't!

In view of the fact that even PBS seems to be approaching an all-Trump-all-the-time approach to its political programming here on the weekend before the Republican convention, perhaps it was not all that surprising to hear an earnest interviewer discussing Donald Trump with an equally earnest academic even on "This American Life."

Donald Trump is a twice-divorced New Yorker who freely curses during speeches, has no perceptible religious impulse, and in general displays none of the behavioral decorum or personal characteristics otherwise generally associated with the kind of person belonging to the religious Right, the interviewer said. Why, then, does he appear to command such significant support among America's evangelicals?

The interviewee began a well-rehearsed description of Evangelical issues and how important these are to their world-view. "They are very upset about same-sex marriage, for instance," he said. He went on to parse some of Trump's innumerable comments on pretty much everything --you can find almost any position you like in Trump's recorded logorrhea-- to show that Trump, such people believe, somehow shares their values.

I have a different, much simpler answer.

These Trump-supporting evangelicals can reconcile the man with their principles because they don't really care about the principles they publicly espouse. 

It's kind of like the deficit: the Republicans in Congress abhor the deficit, until a Republican sits in the Oval Office, or until they see a chance to spend on something they really want. In a similar fashion, the religiosity is just a pious (as it were) front; what they really like about the Right is the racism, the xenophobia. It's the intolerance that motivates these people. The mega-church is just where they can find it. It is decorously layered over with sincerity, with I-love-Jesus sentiment; and anyway, the music is pretty good and the whole spectacle is free, every Sunday. And you don't find many of those people there, just enough to sort of flavor the experience with a bit of spice while convincing you that you are actually a very tolerant, diverse sort of guy. And you can make some decent contacts there, too.

These people would have taken Ted Cruz, even though his pleading, on the stump, for the body of Christ to awaken was a bit unseemly, even for them. But Trump will do.

"Evangelical" is a nice label, gives you a feeling of belonging to a movement, and doesn't require you to think very much about what you believe in. And it will certainly never expose the wishes you have, deep down.

And now, they have Trump to say for them what they are too proper to say themselves. And they can say, with some plausibility, that he doesn't really believe it.

But they know different.

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Netanyahu Against The Generals


(an email to Brett Stephens, WSJ op-ed columnist, concerning his piece of May 24, 2016)

Mr. Stephens:



I find your interesting piece concerning the killing of the Palestinian kid and the resulting brouhaha very informative. I have three quarrels (I assume few people write you who have no quarrel!) –to wit:

1)      A security establishment –rather, one or more individuals within that establishment—who feel no compunction about publicly telling off its masters could be construed to be doing the duty of an informed citizen, as long as those individuals are willing to accept the consequences. Far from moving to become a law unto itself, such a military could be seen as resisting illegal orders (of the type that the defendants at Nuremburg so famously failed to sustain as justification for their illegal actions). Perhaps you would prefer to have such officers simply resign in silence, and thereafter hold their tongues out of –what? Some sense of loyalty to what they believe is an illegitimate cause?

2)      I find it remarkable that you assert “religious, ideological, and electoral considerations” to be the “stuff” of democracy. I would have thought that these things are the risk factors, parochial or partisan, that, in a democracy, stand as hurdles to a dispassionate consideration of what is in the nation’s best interests.

3)      Your closing comment about “those who believe themselves to be virtuous” versus “those who merely wish to be free” is intriguing: who are those who do not “believe themselves to be virtuous?” Are you among them? Aha! I thought not, because nobody is. We all believe we are good, within our own terms; and that includes the Palestinians who stab Israelis no less than the Israelis who destroy the olive trees of Palestinian farmers. But my real point is this: you say, “In the West, the virtuous are secular elites imposing … ‘the vision of the anointed’ on the benighted masses.” Please:

a.       By the inclusion of “secular,” I presume you do not mean those who refuse to follow the law, and so deny marriage licenses to gay couples;

b.      I assume you do not mean those who defy the Supreme Court so that a monument to the Ten Commandments can be placed in public space;

c.       I assume you do not mean those who murder abortion doctors, or shoot up public spaces in pursuit of religious virtue.

No, by “secular” you evidently mean those who try to affect public policy by changing laws and how they are applied (no matter how upsetting to those who cherish the status quo ante in all things).



And, I assume that “those who merely wish to be free” include those who want all the benefits, and none of the constraints, of operating businesses and personal lives in the public sphere. As an example, I would remind you that to say that a clergyman can be compelled to perform a homosexual wedding ceremony is simply false: but I believe that, if he wants to act as an officer of the state, he should be so compelled. I attended a gay wedding in Illinois in 2005, in a church. How so? The minister simply did not exercise the right (which he possessed, for other purposes) to certify a legal union. Let all the preachers with objections simply stop holding themselves out as authorized by the government to sign marriage certificates, and they should be okay marrying only those who belong to acceptable categories. The happy couples could then make a fifteen-minute stop at the courthouse on a convenient day and get their civil paperwork.



Because I raise controversial matters, (and on the perhaps remote assumption that you actually read all the stuff you undoubtedly get) I should declare myself, to some extent: I am a US citizen, a Jew, and inclined to socialistic beliefs. I have voted for Republicans, Democrats, Greens, and Socialists in my time. I am concerned about our democracy only to the extent that I find it threatened by Know-Nothingism and the willing forfeiture, by some candidates, of their cognitive capacities in favor of preening to masses who they prefer to be “benighted” because it is less work to cater to them than to lead them.



I expend this energy on your columns, occasionally, because I find your statement of facts coherent and balanced. But you must admit that your adjectives sometimes give away the game, when it comes to your conclusions.


Sunday, March 6, 2016

Who, Us?

Ross Douthat again today insists on portraying Donald Trump as a product, not of the party which produced him, but of an angry outcry against both parties. This equivalence in the press, always attempting to portray the two parties as equally unbalanced, has been commented on before, notably by Paul Krugman. Today, Douthat says, “The core of (Trump’s) support is a white working class that the Democratic Party has half-abandoned and the Republican Party has poorly served … stuck with a liberal party offering condescension and open borders and a conservative
 party offering foreign quagmires and capital gains tax cuts.”

Now, when did the “half-abandonment” occur? Could it possibly have begun with the election of 1968, after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, when the Democrats abandoned five southern states to George Wallace, and also abandoned enough voters in several other states to Wallace to place their electoral votes in Richard Nixon’s column and insure Nixon’s victory?

Did the Democratic Party abandon voters in 1980, so that Ronald Reagan could use “welfare queen” and “strapping young buck” slurs to energize his thoughtful, conservative base?

Or might it have been in 2000, when Democrats unaccountably abandoned their own majority of votes, in Florida and the country at large, in order to assure George W. Bush’s victory?

Well, how about Douthat’s assertion that what “liberals” offer white working class voters is “condescension?” Could we have a few examples? Remember, Mitt Romney was a Republican, and a “conservative,” when he said that 47% of the populace consists of “takers.”

And, I forget: where did the Democrats offer “open borders?” Was it in the law from the 1960s that allows Cuban migrants to the U.S. a much easier path to both admission and permanent residency?

Douthat feels that he cannot condemn Trumpism without assigning blame for it equally to both parties. So he invents formulations such as “But there are still basic norms that both parties and every major politician claim to honor and respect.” Is this sort of “respect” in evidence when the Senate Majority Leader and the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee each announce their intention to deny, not only hearings but even face-to-face interviews, of any Supreme Court nominee that the President could designate?

This is just one in a long list of examples of conduct that does not respect “basic norms” (if the Constitution can be so designated), to which we are so used that we are almost inured, over the past several years.

Trump is a creature of the Republican abandonment of politics in favor of the totalitarian outlook: no compromise is permissible, and our adversaries are unworthy of common courtesy, let alone respect or the entertaining, however fleetingly, that their ideas and goals have any legitimacy at all.

The decline of the Republican Party has been in evidence for a long time. Sensible Americans have lamented this, in the knowledge that our system requires competing interests to engage in order to craft solutions, however partial, to the problems confronting us. There is no longer any such engagement, as the direct result of Republican opposition to an elected president and the party’s slavish adoption of the prejudices of its most extreme, potentially violent, and backward elements.


That this state of affairs threatens the future of the Republican Party is bad enough. What is worse is the attempt of an apologist such as Douthat to place an equal share of blame elsewhere.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

A Better Explanation

Even as I posted my comments on Ross Douthat, Walliam Saletan, at Slate, was taking issue with the same Douthat column. And he did a much more forceful job of it. Here's what Saletan says.

Monday, February 29, 2016

Explanations

Today's entry in the "Trump-splainer" sweepstakes comes from Ross Douthat, the conservative op-ed columnist at the New York Times.

There have, of course, been many 'think pieces' that present an analysis of why Donald Trump, why now. Generally they focus on "soft" issues --that is, not what our policy should be with regards to Syria or gay marriage or even immigration. No, they tend to talk about the disillusionment of voters, generally the "white working class" voters who feel that history, as it were, is passing them by. This they attribute, essentially, to the duplicity, incompetence, and greed of the Washington "elite." Trump seized on these themes early, and has pressed them relentlessly. He doesn't really bother with policy: just leave it to him, and we'll be great, he says.

Many people are mildly (or not so mildly) disgusted by Trump; by his xenophobia, his arrogant self-promotion which goes beyond even that expected of politicians, his bullying of anyone who questions him. He's crude. All these characteristics are apparently strengths, in the eyes of Trump supporters.

The Washington elite are aghast, especially those in the Republican Party. They are, rather halfheartedly, attempting to mount a "stop Trump" movement. But there is a somewhat different dimension to the anti-Trump campaign. The big shots on the Republican side don't like his bombast; sure. But their real antipathy to him stems from the fact that he's just not conservative enough. Liberals may be outraged at the calls to deport 11 million Mexicans, or to bar entry by any Muslim into the U.S. and construct a national registry of Muslim citizens. But most of his Republican primary opponents have tried to outdo Trump in the extremity of his opinions: there is near-unanimity about Mexicans and Muslims; and they are, if anything, farther out than Trump when it comes to ISIS, Guantanamo, the incompetence of Obama and much of Congress, the question of whether the Senate should deign to even consider an Obama nominee to the Supreme Court.

Oh, sure, they wish he was more "civil;" but that word is used mainly to characterize the way he says what he says, and his penchant for rudeness and the politically incorrect phrasing of what are, in general, commonly-held opinions.

Indeed, so strict has become the Republican orthodoxy that Trump is criticized for his assertions that Planned Parenthood does a lot of good, or that we shouldn't let people die in the streets for lack of health care. These statements earn him the label "not a true conservative."

All this is in the Republican catechism. Mr. Douthat, in today's Times, takes a different approach. Trump's rise has been made possible in significant part by Barack Obama and how he has conducted his presidency --indeed, even his campaigns.

It is worth looking at a few of Douthat's claims in some detail:


  • "First, the reality TV element in Trump's campaign is a kind of fun-house-mirror version of the celebrity-saturated Obama effort in 2008... The quasi-religious imagery and rhetoric, the Great Man iconography and pillared sets, the Oprah endorsement and Will.i.am music video and the Hollywood stars pledging allegiance --it was presidential politics as one part Aaron Sorkin-scripted liturgy, one part prestige movie's Oscar campaign."
  • "[Trump is] ... proving, in his bullying, over-promising style, that voters are increasingly habituated to the idea of an ever more imperial presidency --which is also a trend that Obama's choices have accelerated... the current president has expanded executive authority along almost every dimension: launching wars without congressional approval, claiming the power to assassinate American citizens, and using every available end-around to make domestic policy without any support from Congress."
  • "... white working-class voters ... have been drifting away from the Democratic Party since the 1970s, but Obama has made moves that effectively slam the door on them: His energy policies, his immigration gambits, his gun control push, his shift to offense on same-sex marriage and abortion. ...liberalism still needs to reckon with the consequences. As in Europe, when the left gives up on nationalism and lets part of its old working class base float away, the result is a hard-pressed constituency unmoored from either party, and nursing well-grounded feelings of betrayal.
I think it can safely be said, after the spectacle of "W" landing in a flight suit on an aircraft carrier --turned at anchor in San Diego Harbor so that the downtown buildings wouldn't be visible in the photo-op--, an effort to cast Obama as the purveyor of some newly sensational reality TV approach to politics is, well, strained. Let's leave out the ridiculous reference to "quasi-religious imagery and rhetoric," on which the Republican Party has a virtual patent. 

In fact, any objection to the imagery of Obama's 2008 campaign should be viewed in light of his 2008 opponent's casting (I use the word advisedly, and with prejudice) of perhaps the least qualified nominee for vice-president in the past hundred years. It is worth noting that this nominee, in her acceptance speech, contrasted Obama, a former community organizer, with herself, a sitting governor, who, as she said, "has actual responsibilities." She then, after losing the election, resigned her governorship halfway through her term, in order to take a high-paying commentator job with Fox News.

The notion of an Imperial Presidency has been around for much of my adult life. Certainly, Richard Nixon (who was the inspiration for Arthur Schlesinger's book with that title) and Ronald Reagan's actions in Central America, Chile, and with Iran Contra all fall comfortably within such a description. Moreover, when Obama did seek a Congressional resolution for military action in Syria, it was denied him; and those who refused to provide the authorization then roundly criticized Obama for failing to go to war in Syria. Indeed, Newt Gingrich, who at the time was a Republican spokesman of some importance, criticized Obama for threatening to act, and then for failing to act, in the same month.

It is of course true that the white working class began leaving the Democratic Party in the 1970s, or, more properly, immediately upon the signing of the Civil Rights Act by Lyndon Johnson. This "drifting away" was facilitated by Richard Nixon's "southern strategy" and by the code-word racism of Ronald Reagan, such as in his "welfare queen" speech, his "strapping young buck" characterization of a black man receiving food stamps, and his announcement of his campaign, with a "states' rights" speech, at the site of one of the most notorious murders of civil rights workers in the 1960s South. Now Douthat finds Obama culpable for losing the fascist, xenophobic, and racist elements of the electorate to the Republicans. And in doing so, he manages to blame Obama for, in effect (he only implies this) the unwillingness of the Republicans to match their deeds to their rhetoric, resulting in the disillusion of this constituency and its consequent flocking to Trump.

It is hard to know what to make of this. Douthat is an intelligent person. But I would remind him that:
  • Obama won two elections by comfortable margins. 
  • Even as he took office, he received a barrage of political and personal insults from the Republican Party, which continue to the present time in that Party's announcement that it will not consider any nominee he may offer to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court --this from a Party that glories in its fidelity to the Constitution. 
  • The years of assertions by Republicans at the margins (notably, by Donald Trump) that Obama was ineligible to be president because he was born in Kenya, and the demand that he prove otherwise even after, in exasperation, he did so, were never contradicted by a single Republican in Congress. 
  • Obama has the distinction of being the only president whose State of the Union address was interrupted by a member of Congress, a Republican, yelling "You lie!" 
  • It is surely remarkable that a bill sponsored by eight Republican Senators, after Obama was quoted as saying that the substance of the bill was a good idea, was defeated, with all the Republican sponsors voting against it. 
  • The Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives announced that his primary legislative goal would be to insure that Obama would be a one-term president. 
This list could be extended indefinitely. But what is new, and ludicrous, in Douthat's argument, is the assertion that the shortcomings in our polity are attributable to Obama. It does not require an endorsement of Obama's policies --I certainly take issue with some of them-- to object that Douthat is, ultimately, blaming Obama for the successes of the Republican Party in pursuing calculated objectives which created the conditions that now threaten that Party, and the country. And Douthat uses "weasel words" to excuse himself on this count: Obama's actions and policies "accelerated" this process that produced Trump.

This attitude on Douthat's part is reminiscent of the Republican response to the gradually increasing complaints about income inequality, over the past year or so. After trying to deny that it existed, then that it posed a problem for the USA, the Republicans acknowledged income inequality in a sloganeering fashion by stating that "under Obama, the middle class has lost ground," ignoring the fact that this problem has been 30 years in the making, and, to the extent it is attributable at all to presidential action, most of the blame should be placed on Reagan and G. W. Bush. 

Douthat's piece does not help the cause of the Republican Party, or that of conservatism in general. To suggest that their current problems arose with the current Democratic president is to ignore the history of the Republican Party since 1980. The conservative project has been set aside for the entire time of the Obama presidency in favor of a sort of tantrum, in which the Republicans, outraged at losing two elections to a black guy from Chicago, have busied themselves with minutiae when they have not been attempting to damage the country as a means of damaging Obama.

The U. S. Government has a desperate need for a competent, responsible, opposition party if its democratic traditions are to endure. It has, over the past decade, lost such a party. There is a reasonable possibility that the Republicans are fatally damaged; but that should be no comfort to Democrats, or to any Americans. 

This was concisely described by William Falk, Editor of The Week. 


the “social norms” that once kept a divided government functioning are disintegrating; for the first time in history, the Senate is refusing to consider anyone the president might nominate to fill a vacant Supreme Court seat. Elections sometimes end stalemates like this one—but after November, the crisis could get much worse. 

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

It's Complicated, See?

TV Reporter: "Do you want the government to relinquish control over all federal land?"

Oregon Wingnut: "I want the government to follow the Constitution."


Well, of course you do. And apparently only you know what the Constitution says, and it's way too much to ask, to suggest that you maybe oughta be specific. "The Constitution" has become the catch-all for people who probably haven't read it but are mad as hell and aren't gonna take it any more. Funny how their view of the Constitution never seems to allow for the right of the government to enact, and enforce, laws. Laws are infringements on various "fundamental" rights. Like the "fundamental" right to own a howitzer.

Washington Post reporter Janelle Ross had a point when she asked, "Why Aren't We Calling the Oregon Occupiers 'Terrorists?' "

The answer, of course, is that these are white guys who drive pickups and carry guns on their hips. They take over federal buildings with impunity, and are handled with kid gloves by the press: Don't expect Wolf Blitzer, any time soon, to be poised in front of the Malheur National Wildlife Headquarters building in Nowhere, Oregon, breathlessly asking a 90-word yes-or-no question to a local about the goings-on inside the building. These guys call themselves "militiamen,' and the press calls them 'occupiers.' If they were black and had no weapons and stayed on the sidewalk, they'd be called 'activists;' add signs, and they are 'insurgents;' and if one of them pushed a cop they'd be 'terrorists.'

I guess black people are scary, and white people, even white people who torture white children, are not. We're just supposed to, well, let them be. although that may disappoint some would-be Patriots who are itching for a fight.

The question is: at what point does all this despising of government become, well, insurrection, as Ms. Ross says, or treason, which is what an attempt, using violence, to overthrow the government is? We've had lots of threats, from elected representatives darkly suggesting "Second Amendment solutions" to Obamacare or some similar outrage on the part of the federal government, to a Texas governor threatening to take his state and leave the Union.* We have, it would appear, a sizable minority of the population asserting their "Second Amendment Rights" because of a conviction that they will need all their guns in order to fight their own government (You didn't think all those 330 million guns were in the hands of dedicated "sportsmen," didja?).

Where all this ends up? Unless we're lucky, maybe like, say, Mexico? And if unlucky, Afghanistan?


*Oh, would that it were so! Texans, anyway, are a treasonous bunch, having twice in one generation committed armed rebellion against their government (in 1845 and again in 1861).