Here We Go

The big buzz on Tuesday August 11 is that Joe Biden finally announced his running mate for Vice President on the Democratic Party ticket.

So here we go, America: Meet Kamala Harris. Your likely next next President of the United States.

As I’d said, this was not only Joe Biden’s most likely choice, but the most unsatisfactory from a libertarian perspective, or even a “progressive” one. As we keep telling people, Kamala Harris is a cop who wants to be president. So the fact that both parts of the ticket are essentially statist means that far from going back to the status quo ante of the Obama years, we might get yet another incremental lean towards authoritarianism, even if it’s not the Trumpist overly racist variety.

On the other hand, four years of the Trump Organization mean that more white liberals and people “of color” are reconsidering the militarized police state and even gun control, so libertarians have that much going for us!

I think that Biden may have been thinking in terms of which candidate had the least downsides. Elizabeth Warren might have been more politically acceptable, but her agenda might have alienated moderates in the same way that Harris alienates progressives, not only that, her Senate replacement is not guaranteed to be a Democrat. Latter-day favorite Karen Bass was also a progressive, but like Bernie Sanders, she has an unfortunate habit of praising communists (and Scientology, same difference). Susan Rice had loads of qualifications but no political experience, and that’s the opposite of what you need for Vice President, since the VP has only two constitutional duties – breaking a Senate tie and replacing the President in emergency – and neither of these is a day-to-day responsibility. I’m sure Rice could be better used elsewhere.

I can also think of two areas where Biden’s choice is a positive. I’d mentioned that the main reason he might not choose Harris is that she ripped him fairly badly in at least one debate. But then again, it was George HW Bush who referred to Reagan’s agenda as “voodoo economics.” And if Reagan was savvy enough to pick Bush anyway, clearly Biden is just as pragmatic and willing to bury grudges. That’s a sharp contrast to the current resident, whose staff have had to censor intelligence reports to make sure the facts didn’t hurt his feelings.

Plus, the fact that Harris IS a hardass and no pushover is exactly what the political moment needs. Of course the Party of Trump is going to rag on her gender (and her race, to the extent that they can get away with it), but they were going to do that anyway. And yes, Clinton had to put up with a lot of that, and did about as well as could be expected, but as I kept telling people, some folks aren’t willing to assess how much of Hillary Clinton’s problem was her being a woman and how much of it was her being her. She didn’t maneuver and she didn’t counterpunch. But something tells me that if Kamala Harris ever had to debate Donald Trump and he tried stalking behind her back, she would shut that shit off RIGHT quick.

And again, I see all the “progressives” on Facebook, bitching and moaning and finally rationalizing their choice, or lack thereof. One guy said, “I don’t care if the Democratic nominee is the tuna salad in the back of my fridge, at least it’s not Trump.” Certainly the tuna salad would be less moldy and rotten.

I’m reminded of the last cycle when a Democrat partisan friend told me, “I’d rather vote for an empty pizza box than any Republican.” And I said, “I agree. Unfortunately the Democrats didn’t nominate an empty pizza box, they nominated Hillary Clinton.” Which is why I ended up voting for Gary Johnson, cause he was the closest thing we had to an empty pizza box. And that’s why this year, I’m going to vote for Biden, cause he’s closer to being an empty pizza box than even Gary Johnson was.

Of course the real question is how The Boy King is going to react to this, especially since MSDNC and the other networks are not covering his 6 pm COVID briefing conference for once. Because as we know, Trump needs the camera like a Boulder Highway ho needs crack, and he absolutely cannot stand to NOT be the center of attention. So what’s he going to do to upstage Sleepy Joe? Maybe invade Costa Rica to stop them from spreading coronavirus and/or radical leftism. Either that or announce that at his convention, his NEW running mate is going to be Kristi Noem or Nikki Haley.

(‘But Sir, haven’t I been a good boy?’ ‘Yeah, sure Mike, but I don’t need you anymore. I’m trading you in for a hotter model. Now go away.’ ‘Yes, Master.’)

Now, keep in mind, anything bad I say or will say about Biden and Harris has nothing to do with my choice. I have absolutely no faith that Joe Biden has a plan to reverse the spread of coronavirus, or to repair the economy that resident rump decimated. But the first day that Joe Biden is president will be the first day that Donald Trump is NOT president, and that by itself will do wonders for this country’s chances for recovery.

It’s just that there are some things to consider both in this election season and afterward. One, despite the Republican Party doing everything in its power to eliminate itself as a choice for rational people, they are also doing everything in their power to eliminate the choice of rational people in that oldthink bourgeois institution called the election. Two, half the reason they did as well as they did last time despite not having the levers of national government is that the “rational” alternative to Banana Republicanism doesn’t convince people that they actually know what this country needs or wants, and Democrats should know by now that you can’t keep playing “you HAVE to vote for the lesser evil” and not have somebody call your bluff.

In retrospect, it was actually great strategy for Joe Biden to sit back and let Trump hog the spotlight most of the year, because he did nothing but disgrace himself and make Biden look great simply by default. But now Biden and Harris have to be proactive. They have to take the spotlight from Trump and give people something to vote FOR.

Good luck with that. We’re all going to need it.

It’s Not The Heat, It’s The Stupidity

“You know the very powerful and the very stupid have one thing in common. They don’t alter their views to fit the facts. They alter the facts to fit the views. Which can be uncomfortable if you happen to be one of the facts that needs altering.”

-The Fourth Doctor

In the wake of… all this… it’s really for the best that the Republican Party cancelled its Jacksonville convention over coronavirus, given that the whole purpose of moving it from North Carolina was that the Governor there wouldn’t let Trump have a big crowd for his acceptance speech. For one thing, for somebody who spends a lot of his time in Florida, you would think that Viceroy Trump would know what the weather conditions are like in August. I’m pretty sure a lot of people told him that if the only way to minimize coronavirus was to be stuck outside in Florida, around hurricane season, in deep August, they would just as well not go at all, which may be why most of these shindigs happen in places with indoor air conditioning.

But as we leave the first week of August 2020, we have to acknowledge the real environmental threat to our survival. It’s not climate change. Yet. It’s not the heat, it’s the stupidity.

I have to admit, since Donald Trump ran for office, I’ve gotten a lot more hard and cynical myself. For instance, I used to have more sympathy for stupid people.

By stupid, I mean subnormal intelligence, “slow” or just having average intelligence without having exposed yourself to much knowledge. I grew up watching movies like Forrest Gump where stupid people were assumed to have some kind of special wisdom compensating for their lack of smarts. Even the stupid people with criminal records (like Michael Clark Duncan in The Green Mile or Billy Bob Thornton in Sling Blade) were shown as being ultimately good at heart.

Well, fuck that.

I had done an earlier bit where I described a certain “anti-conceptual mentality” by using direct quotes from Ayn Rand’s philosophical works to describe what is often called willful ignorance. I said: “When Ayn Rand refers to this (very Randian) term, “anti-conceptual mentality”, she is describing a self-created moron. Such a person is not of medically subnormal intelligence (what used to be called ‘retarded’) but a person of at least average intelligence who deliberately does not apply it, for whom everything is an unexamined given because examination would mean taking a risk he is not willing to pursue, and thus he is almost entirely a collection of second-hand, superficial thoughts.”

See, while Ayn Rand as a person has more issues than TIME Magazine, I still call myself an Objectivist (if I have to call myself anything) because I still find the philosophy to be a practical guide to life whatever one’s opinions of Rand. Briefly: Reality exists, independently of human consciousness, perceptions, or political consensus. At the same time, the human mind and perceptions are sufficient to grasp reality as it is, and in fact they have to be, because there is no supernatural force outside consciousness that will give you a perfect understanding of an object without effort. And in practical terms, what this means is that we cannot separate morality from intellect. The only way we will be able to know the right thing to do is if we can learn things in general.

This was something that Rand herself stressed in emphasizing an “objectivist” morality over an “altruist” morality that disdained self-interest and reason over serving others and faith in non-reason, such as an organized religion, “feelings” or a “Higher Power.” And if this seems counterintutive to most people, it’s because most philosophies, even secular ones, place intellect at odds with morality.

There are plenty of takedowns of Rand if you want to look for them, and while I disagree with a lot of her personal conclusions, I don’t think most critiques address this challenge she places to other philosophies. Indeed I would say that this country in particular is very bad at placing reason and facts over opinion and feelings, and it’s largely because of that anti-rational mentality. And it’s largely because of that that we are so screwed by many factors, including a political culture that allowed just enough people in just enough states to elect Donald Trump.

This leads to a point that is implicit in Rand’s work but that I don’t think she ever actually spelled out in these words: If one has at least normal intelligence, ignorance is a choice. Stupidity is a choice. And since stupid decisions often lead to destructive consequences, stupidity is a moral choice. It’s like drunk driving. You might not be “in your right mind” when you’re drunk, but you’re still legally responsible for being DUI and any acts you commit DUI because you made the sober decision to do something reckless in the first place.

To quote again from my other post: “The anti-conceptual mentality avoids going outside his prejudices because his intuition tells him he would no longer be able to do what he wants to do. Therefore he avoids not only abstract reasoning but intuition and introspection. As the phrase goes, “if you don’t know why hitting children with tear gas is wrong, I don’t know how to explain it to you.”

I go over all this because it’s not enough to bag on the various people of mediocre or subnormal intelligence (like the various Facebook Trumpniks who commit at least three typos per paragraph) but to address the numerous people who do have brains and who might even have some conceptual ability but still choose not to consider the real consequences of serving Trump. They can do this because again, we as a culture place reason at odds with morality, and are expected to sacrifice the former to the latter. If one does not practice critical thinking even with one’s own premises, one is not practicing rationality but rationalization. Yes, that includes a lot of “Randroids” who attach to Rand’s pro-capitalist and anti-socialist teachings and use them to advocate for Republicans simply because they can mouth the right words. Even in Reagan’s day, Rand herself was not a fan: “A few months before her death, Rand told an audience of her fans, no doubt to the surprise of many, that she didn’t vote for Ronald Reagan against Jimmy Carter, whom she regarded as a small-town power luster. “There is a limit,” she told them, “to the notion of voting for the lesser of two evils.”

“Rand did welcome Reagan’s strong language toward Soviet Russia and his promises to cut spending and taxes. But she warned that his invitation of the so-called Moral Majority to the halls of power would be a long-range disaster. By tying the (supposed) advocacy of freedom and capitalism to, in Rand’s words, the anti-intellectuality of “militant mystics,” who proclaim that aborting an embryo is murder and creationism is science, Reagan’s presidency would discredit the intellectual case for freedom and capitalism and embolden the anti-intellectual, authoritarian mentalities in the country.”

The chain should become clear upon reflection: Reason is the source of morality, because to determine “right” from “wrong” we must be able to distinguish from other categories besides right and wrong. Morality cannot be the source of reason because that begs the question of what is Right in the first place, and if one cannot answer that question for oneself, it creates a situation where authority figures define your terms, and thus your thinking, for you.

A naive simpleton in power is far more dangerous than an evil pragmatist because you could expect the pragmatist to examine his own practical limits and work within them. The simpleton only operates on a moral code which was handed down to him by someone else and which he has not tested by circumstances. If unethical people work with him and they know how to push his buttons, they can get him to perform atrocities. This is what happened with George W. Bush in Iraq.

In the last couple decades, comicbook writers have gone into scenarios where Lex Luthor or Norman Osborn would run for president and win, and while they’d inevitably over-reach and get taken down, even they acknowledged some limits. When Lex became president in the DC Universe, he actually severed his ties to Lexcorp. So if you want to consider where our political culture is, consider that Donald Trump and his various people literally have less ethics than a comicbook supervillain.

Needless to say, when you have a real person who is both less intellectual than Forrest Gump and more evil than Lex Luthor, the damage he can do is that much greater than a person can accomplish with stupidity or evil alone.

This is the issue with being an intellectual who places morality at odds with intellect. If you’re a Rod Dreher, and you’re a traditional conservative, and you have a brain, and you read history, and you know, for instance, that the decades-long oppression of Francisco Franco in Spain (in the name of ‘traditional Christianity’) led to a backlash after Franco’s death that made Catholicism less popular and socialism and secularism that much more popular, you can look at the situation here. You have led yourself to the conclusion that your culture is under siege. Your morality tells you to hate the people who hate Christianity. Your intellect tells you that Trump is a grifter and a deceiver. But Trump tells you, “These people, they’re not really after me. They’re after YOU. I’m just in the way.” And it doesn’t matter that you know how many times Trump has lied, it doesn’t matter how many times he’s been proven false, how many times Trump has failed, he’s telling you what you want to hear. He’s reaffirming what you already believe. He knows what your priorities are, and he knows how to push the right button to completely bypass your intellect. And so you march in line and follow The Leader no matter what, cause you’re convinced that once They take him out, you’re next.

The punchline, of course, is that while secular liberal culture may not have any affinity with traditional religious culture, it was not nearly so hostile to the latter as the other way around, and the secular majority didn’t have good reason to oppose the religious culture until it actively supported a politics that undermined our national security for the sake of Russia and China, undermined our economy and ended up killing 150,000 Americans and counting, cause apparently wearing a Goddamn five dollar mask is gonna get you kicked out of the Real American Patriot He-Man Woman Haters’ Club.

The result that “good Christians” fear so much has become that much more likely, probably inevitable, because of the actions they told themselves would prevent it.

The execution of stupidity as philosophy was made clear again by the now-famous interview that HBO aired for Axios between reporter Jonathan Swan and Donald Trump. Other people have described the event at least as well as I could, and it’s not like Swan’s interview told us anything we didn’t know, but there are a couple of details that matter in terms of this topic.

The first question Swan asked was where he brought up Trump’s adherence to the power of positive thinking, “the mantra that if you believe something, if you can visualize it, then it will happen.” Now Trump did say this is only true to a certain extent, and that he also has to consider the downside (which he does, in a way that causes therapists to ponder). But Swan asks if that mindset is suitable to handling the worst pandemic we’ve seen in a century. And of course, Trump just accentuates the positive, with a bunch of generalities. Swan presses that communication needs to be based in reality, and wishful thinking is insufficient.

And then there was the point where Trump defends his record on coronavirus by throwing Swan a sheaf of bar graphs and Swan looks confused, and then says, “Oh! You’re doing death as a proportion of cases, I’m talking about death as a proportion of population, and that’s where the US is really bad.” And Trump just gives him this blank, pleading stare, and goes, “You can’t DO that.” Which means, “You’re not following my terms of argument when even I don’t know what they are.”

Which goes to another point of Onkar Ghate’s article: “Closely connected to this disdain for the truth is a complete amoralism. “The normal pattern of self-appraisal,” Rand observes, “requires reference to some abstract value or virtue,” such as “I am good because I am rational” or “I am good because I am honest.” But the entire realm of abstract principles and standards is unknown to an anti-intellectual mentality. The phenomenon of judging himself by such standards, therefore, is alien. Instead, Rand argues, the “implicit pattern of all his estimates is: ‘It’s good because I like it’ — ‘It’s right because I did it’ — ‘It’s true because I want it to be true.’”

When you have no standard of judgment other than “it’s good because I like it” and no means of verifying results other than “it will be true because I wish it to be true” you get the coronavirus “policy” that is on track to kill a quarter-million people in this country by the end of the year.

Which is why Swan’s interview got so much attention from the rest of the Mainstream Media, and why it is both ultimately revelatory and ultimately meaningless. It is ultimately revelatory in that it makes clear that this country’s coronavirus policy is screwed because of the evil simpleton in charge, and it is ultimately meaningless because the reason things are screwed is because the evil simpleton in charge of coronavirus policy is not the only one who follows the philosophy of wishful thinking and anti-reason, and if he didn’t have that support base, he would have been removed by impeachment if not one of his numerous other scandals.

The problem there being that even if Trump is effectively an unaccountable King now, he still has to have a formal election before he can really rewrite the system to cement his power, but he not only needs to be re-elected to do that, he needs at least a Senate to do that, and if he doesn’t get a handle on coronavirus, both the White House and Senate are in danger due to the simple fact that the virus is ravaging the voter base in Trump states later than it did in “blue” states that the Trump Organization wrote off. Trump may be telling voters to believe him over their lying eyes, but if you’re dead, it doesn’t matter if you believe Trump or not, you can’t vote. (Remember, Illinois is a blue state.)

The real irony is that people like Ayn Rand (and me) are thought of as “Social Darwinists” because we don’t agree with liberal altruism, but that in itself is a misnomer embraced by the kind of “scientific” racists who don’t agree with species evolution. In actual Darwinism, “survival of the fittest” doesn’t mean “survival of the most fascist”, it means “survival of the species best adapted to its environment.” And since human development and civilization are more mental and social as opposed to matters of physical evolution, “social Darwinism” would really mean a process in which individuals and culture become better adapted to a changing environment. “Social Darwinists” like the current Republicans don’t believe in that Darwinism any more than the Theory of Evolution, and the end result will be that the liberal-socialist triumph they fear so much will become that much more likely. Yes, hundreds of thousands will have to die to achieve that result, but if Republicans don’t care about those people, you’d think they would care about “traditional values” and their own political careers. And if they did, you’d think that they could adapt.

Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes

The big news for Thursday, July 30 – at least for one hour – was that Herman Cain, Republican activist, businessman and former presidential candidate, died today from coronavirus after attending resident rump’s campaign rally in Tulsa in June, in close quarters without a mask.

This really isn’t something that deserves either sympathy or gloating. When you refuse to take cheap, common sense precautions against a disease with at least a one-percent fatality rate, and which may cause permanent damage even if you do survive, that should not even be considered a news event. “Conservative Mask Denier Dies Of COVID-19” is no more a news story than “I Turned On The Tap And Got Water” or “Man Wearing Honey and Raw Steak On His Skin In Bear Country Eaten By Bears.”

It is no more a surprise than Wednesday’s big story, where Congressman Louie Gohmert (R.-Gohmert) revealed that HE has the coronavirus, which apparently he only found out about because he was scheduled to go with Trump on a campaign event in west Texas (Gohmert’s district area) and as part of the president’s security procedure, he had to be screened. As it turns out, it was a surprise not only to Gohmert but to his staff, who found out when he told them in person. (Most likely, without a mask.)

So no surprise either that one of the other stories surrounding the event was when a staff member sent a tweet to the reporter who broke the story and asked: “When you write your story, can you include the fact that Louie requires full staff to be in the office, including three interns, so that ‘we could be an example to America on how to open up safely,'” the aide added. “When probing the office, you might want to ask how often were people berated for wearing masks.” As it turns out, he could do this because there was no policy in Congress for containing the coronavirus other than the decision of individual politicians for themselves and their staff, and it was only as a result of this event that Speaker Nancy Pelosi instituted an official mask mandate for House buildings and the chamber. And that of course, is because so many representatives, pretty much all Republicans, resisted the idea of any guidelines for containing coronavirus, let alone requirements.

As they say on the Internet: “Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.”

I mean we’ve heard the phrase “King Midas in reverse”, and Trump certainly is that, but he also seems to be Jesus in reverse: Everyone around him seems to be getting sick all of a sudden.

What we are seeing is what happens when you assume that laws – whether the Laws of Man or the Laws of Nature – don’t apply to you, because your tribal allegiance trumps reality itself. This is what happens when you ignore the people screaming in your ear that you’re driving the car off a cliff, and tell them “Fake News” or “Look man, gravity’s just a theory.”

The other huge event – at least for one hour – was when the financial reports came out for the end of the month and the second quarter, and it turned out, “Gross domestic product shrank 9.5% in the second quarter from the first, a drop that equals an annualized pace of 32.9%, the Commerce Department’s initial estimate showed on Thursday. That’s the steepest annualized decline in quarterly records dating back to 1947 and compares with analyst estimates for a 34.5% contraction. Personal spending, which makes up about two-thirds of GDP, slumped an annualized 34.6%, also the most on record.”

It is of course not good to an incumbent president’s chances to have the worst quarter and the worst consumer spending slump ON record, but never mind that, never mind the coronavirus, never mind the coverage of John Lewis’ funeral, to Trump, the REAL atrocity is that the news wasn’t all about him, even if he is the proximate cause for most of what’s wrong with this country. So once again he sought out the short-attention-span media by making himself the biggest atrocity.

So after the economic news and the Herman Cain news, and the Barack Obama eulogy for Herman Cain, but before his press conference, Trump twitted, “With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good) 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history. It will be a great embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely, and safely vote???”

Translated into Lucille Ball: “WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA”

As one guy on Facebook said: “Well yeah, cause see, if you have enough money to travel, it’s important to be able to vote. But if can’t afford to travel, you should instead drive 5 miles to wait in line for 4 hours to vote.”

Sure, we can say that the president has no authority to delay an election on his own behalf, and the term of the president and Congress end on January 2021 whether there’s an election or not, but the fact is, Trump has been able to bullshit his way around every other aspect of the Constitution up til now – largely because the enforcement mechanisms are mostly in the hands of the president himself – so why not this one?

The fact of the matter is that the president can’t unilaterally stop an election, but as with Trump’s deliberate efforts to undermine mask wearing and an organized campaign for virus containment, he can exert influence on various voters AND state governments who take his rhetoric seriously, and get them to undermine vote-by-mail in their states. The irony being that these efforts are most likely to succeed in the states that were more likely to vote for Trump anyway, and thus discourage senior citizens and other high-risk groups (who are more likely to vote for Trump) from using alternative voting methods, and thus encourage them to either risk the coronavirus by in-person voting, or be safe and not vote at all. Thus Trump’s disingenuous bellyaching is most likely to suppress the vote in the states where he is most likely to need it. In any case, “vote-by-mail is illegal cause it hurts Republicans” (allegedly) is like saying “we should abolish the Electoral College cause it hurts Democrats.” (Mind, I have gone over serious reasons why we should ditch or at least modify the Electoral College, but ‘Democrats don’t like the results’ should not be one of them.)

Then there’s the other liberal fear that Trump will call out the troops to enforce his will, but the reason he had to cobble together his wannabe stormtroopers from the “alphabet soup” bureaucracy to engage in the suppression campaign in Portland was because after the limited military participation for Bill Barr’s publicity stunt in Lafayette Square, the negative feedback, both outside and within the ranks, was such that the Defense Department heads made it clear they weren’t going to get behind such tactics again. As for Portland, Oregon’s Governor announced Wednesday that they will begin pulling out tomorrow. So either the “riots” failed and Law & Order (TM) succeeded, or the latest distraction campaign failed and it’s time for this week’s distraction.

I mean this is the problem that Trump is only now starting to deal with. He’s such a fountain of evil ineptitude that any horrible thing he does is going to be overshadowed by the even more horrible thing he does tomorrow, but that creates its own problems. “Never mind that teenage girl I raped! Lookit all these 10-year olds I killed!”

And if Trump is starting to get pushback from “my” military when he clearly DOES have presidential authority, I am not sure he will be able to use the military to save himself once his authority is in doubt. It’s testimony to the personality we’re dealing with that his delusions of godhood become more loud and insistent the more incompetent (and impotent) he proves to be.


None of which will make any difference if Biden can’t win a clear victory in 2020, at least as clear in Electoral terms as Trump got in 2016. Which is where we come to the next round of Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes. Early this week, Joe Biden announced that he will announce his choice for Vice-Presidential running mate by next week, before the Democratic National Convention, which due to coronavirus will be mostly video-conference this year. And most people would say the choice of Vice-President doesn’t mean much, but then Joe is 77 and there’s a good chance he could die in office. He probably won’t, but then in 2016, a racist and obvious dumbass was probably not going to even get nominated by a major party, much less win an election, cause everybody could SEE how unlikely that was. I mean you have to admit, Kennedy’s choice of a running mate in 1960 was pretty consequential, wasn’t it?

Biden has already decided his running mate will be a woman, and it is increasingly likely to be a person “of color.” These are the most likely choices, with their pros and cons:

Senator Kamala Harris (D.-California) – by libertarian standards, both she and Biden are bad choices, given that both suffer a reputation for counterproductive ‘law-and-order’ legislation that they try to counter with even more ham-handed moves to the ‘progressive’ wing. Which of course makes it that much more likely that she’s going to be Biden’s pick. The main factor against her is that she cut Biden hard in the pre-primary debates when it looked like he was the weak one in the pack.

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D.-Massachusetts) – certainly the best choice from a ‘progressive’ standpoint, but that may be the best reason to keep her in the Senate where she would actually stay on the floor. As a matter of fact, that’s the main factor against any pick who is a current Senator. If Democrats are smart (and if they were, we wouldn’t be here) they would realize that taking out Mitch McConnell and/or his Senate majority is more important even than taking out Trump, because Mitch is the one who’s been enforcing a one-man veto on any government reforms even before Trump took office. If McConnell lost his seat, even if Republicans re-take the majority in 2022, it’s unlikely that any other Republican Senator will have the same seniority, or ruthlessness. And Republicans have to defend 23 seats this cycle. Prior to coronavirus, most of them were safe. Now, even Mitch’s seat is in question. All Democrats need to take a majority is a net gain of three (with the Democratic Vice-President as a tie-breaker) or four if they somehow win that many without winning the White House. But it is now feasible that they could take enough seats for a three-fifths majority. That’s not very likely, but no longer impossible. In either case, Biden will need all the Senators he can get.

Senator Tammy Duckworth (D.-Illinois) Along with Warren, she is the leading non-Black candidate to be running mate, and again, simply because she is a Senator, this is a problem. On the other hand her being maimed during active service in Iraq undermines Republican attempts to say the evil Demonrats don’t support our troops, unless of course you think that baiting a combat veteran worked better for Tucker Carlson than it did when Trump insulted McCain. And in the long run, it’s hard to say how well THAT worked.

Stacey Abrams – was the Democrat candidate for Governor in Georgia and lost largely because Republican Brian Kemp was the Secretary of State setting the rules for the same election he was running in. (Nice work if you can get it.) Con: unlike the Senators, she doesn’t have much experience with national government. Pro: simply for being who she is, she, along with Duckworth, would be the most likely choice to make Republicans cry.

Who will Biden pick? Will he survive to January 20? Will Trump declare himself Emperor? Will he make Ivanka a Senator and Jared his horse? Tune in next time for: Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes!

Guillotine Insurance

In belated honor of Bastille Day, I would like to discuss the concept of guillotine insurance.

“Guillotine insurance” is a term a lot of leftists use to discuss ideas like national healthcare, or minimum wage, or something else that is supposed to keep the peasants from revolting. There’s at least one reason why a lot of people don’t take such rhetoric seriously, and I’ll get to it later. But as I’ve said, it is irrelevant to argue that “health care is a human right” or that anything else leftists want is a “right” when we have rights that are enumerated in the Constitution and the current government won’t even acknowledge those.

For example, Portland.

Apparently the Black Lives Matter protests in Portland, Oregon had been dying down – one reason they hadn’t been in the news before now – but then someone decided to send in some people, not that anyone will take credit or give specifics. Starting July 7, resident rump sent in US Marshals Special Operations Group, Customs and Border Protection Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC) and the Federal Protective Service, which is in charge of protecting federal properties. In the early morning hours of July 15, officers in unmarked camouflage were filmed as they got out of an unmarked van and grabbed a person in a helmet. More such reports came up in social media. According to the BBC, “The role of federal troops sent to Portland is the subject of intense speculation at the moment … They belong to a new federal force created last month in an executive order signed by President Trump which tasks them to protect historic monuments, memorials, statues, and federal facilities … When asked about the arrest of a protester captured on video, the CBP said the individual was suspected of destroying federal property. They said agents had identified themselves and were wearing CBP insignia but their names were not displayed “due to recent doxing incidents against law enforcement personnel who serve and protect our country.”

The goal is precisely to make sure that no one is accountable. If the tactic works (as in, it boosts Trump’s polls), Trump can step up to the podium with his retarded-toad grin and take credit for everything, and if it blows up, he can fire the alleged guy in charge like one of his wives. It’s the same way that Peter Navarro supposedly acted outside the White House when he wrote an op-ed against Anthony Fauci when we all know that Navarro won’t pee standing up before getting verbal permission from Trump. I call it “implausible deniability.”

Trump and his people have confirmed that this lawbreaking-and-disorder effort is just a test run for a wider campaign. Supposedly they’re going to go to Chicago next. Well, at least people there have guns.

I’m almost not joking. There is no reason why civilians can’t just shoot these guys. Why not? What agency do they represent? None? You won’t tell us? For THEIR protection? But if they haven’t done anything wrong, what do they have to hide? If you won’t tell us what authority you represent, you don’t represent ANY authority, and you have no more right to use force than anyone else, therefore anyone else can use force on you. Self-Defense! Stand Your Ground, man!

As terrible as this is, and it IS terrible, because it sets yet another precedent eroding American rights against an already established standard of letting the president of either party do whatever the fuck he wants, it’s worth remembering the analyses of people who point out that if Trump hadn’t let so many people die from coronavirus and the economy wasn’t endangered as a result, he wouldn’t be resorting to the usual tactic – escalate the chaos (even if he has to create it himself) and then tell his cult that only he can solve the problem he created. And as even Fox News told him, that’s not working anymore.

This, incidentally, is why the coronavirus is directly linked to Donald Trump’s decline in the polls and declining political fortunes when nothing else, up to and including impeachment, has knocked him off. Because people in 2016 already KNEW Trump was an unqualified, bigoted idiot, and they still liked the cut of his jib. Further revelations of his low character just reinforced the support of the people who voted for Trump precisely because of his low character. As long as his character deficiencies didn’t hurt THEM, they were glad to have a head of state who was dumb for public consumption and triggered the libs. Now that Trump’s dysfunction is the proximate cause of the spread of coronavirus in America, and even those people who aren’t directly affected yet still can’t go to bars and buffets and hair salons, they can blame the governors in their states, but deep down they know the governors aren’t the reason for the virus itself. Why else would Trump get such a horrible crowd in Tulsa, when he carried Oklahoma in 2016 by over 36 points?

Back in PC (Pre-Corona) it didn’t matter that our president was Liddle Donnie Clown Boy, because he at least knew enough to not interfere with one thing he’d inherited from Obama, and that was the economy. But because Trump isn’t even deep enough to be one-dimensional, he couldn’t understand that the coronavirus can’t be left alone to spread, and that if it isn’t contained, THAT destroys the economy. (Almost as if human beings are a necessary component of said economy!) Now we actually need a plan of action, and all Clown Boy can do is juggle his balls and holler at the marks to buy tickets to his next three-ring circus.

Just as Trump’s destabilization of Portland not only made the local situation worse but is counterproductive for his image as a “strong leader” who is actually solving our problems, his constantly casting about for demons and radicals and socialists to hunt down is doing more to radicalize the population than anything the Left has done on their own initiative. The apparent radicalization of America is nothing more than a growing part of the population realizing that cops already can abuse and kill anyone when they can get away with it, and the only reason this hasn’t happened to more white Americans is that it was not politically correct for authorities to do so. White protestors are dealing with what black people have been dealing with all along.

Among the various norms that Trump has destroyed, the latest is the most ironic: he is undermining the concept of white privilege itself. This is a term often used by the Left, I would say, used to death, but if “white privilege” means anything, surely it means the privilege of not being harassed, beaten or killed, even IF you’ve committed a crime?

When you try to explain the concept of white privilege to a non-leftist, salt-of-the-earth, “Why don’t we have a WHITE History Month?” kinda guy, you can point out that when the cops confronted Dylann Roof after he shot up everyone in a black church, the FBI de-escalated and got him lunch on the way to the police station, whereas Eric Garner was strangled by cops over selling loose cigarettes. When you put it that way, a lot of people get it.

Very soon, and certainly if Trump is re-elected, we are all going to find out what it is like to be black people.

No, not in the figurative “The Irish are the blacks of Europe” sense, or the disingenuous “Irish Catholics were the first indentured servants in North America” sense, I mean in the practical sense that I’ve already mentioned. It was easy to treat black people and other minority groups as having no sovereignty because they didn’t have much in the way of numbers and even less political influence. Black people still don’t have much in the way of numbers, but as a whole, people “of color” are an increasing plurality. More than that, the country as a whole, including white people, is turning away from a Republican view of the world, even as the Republican world is becoming increasingly self-enclosed and reactionary. That’s why they’re so afraid of mail voting and absentee voting (even though upper-class groups and absentee homeowners have often had to use such measures) because they don’t think they can win elections fair and square anymore. The ruling class is afraid of public sovereignty.

David Frum was right: “If conservatives become convinced that they can not win democratically, they will not abandon conservatism. The will reject democracy.” It used to be that Republicans like Reagan and even the Bushes could win majorities by giving the public something to vote for, and a vision of government that appealed to the majority. But apparently now that’s just too hard. What you are seeing under Trump and Mitch McConnell is an effective agenda to rule not only as a plurality, but actively against the majority, sort of like apartheid South Africa. After all, Frum has also said: “The main benefit of controlling a modern bureaucratic state is not the power to persecute the innocent. It is the power to protect the guilty.”

There always was a contradiction in the Declaration of Independence in saying broadly, “all men are created equal”, but in practice asserting that only white men are equal. We have lived with this contradiction because we saw the universal point behind the declaration and worked to resolve the contradiction by creating a white ethnic “melting pot”, freeing the slaves, giving women the vote and moving towards greater equality. The Banana Republican Party now seeks to resolve the contradiction by rejecting the Declaration itself, by asserting that men are not created equal, that there is one law for the ruling class, and the law for everyone else is simply to serve. The fact that this standard would have kicked both Stephen Miller and Donald Trump’s ancestors out of the country is an irony that is lost on them, as most ironies are.

The Trump Organization is undermining the legitimacy of government itself.

Now if you’re one of those “libertarians” who always votes Republican and is perfectly fine with anonymous thugs throwing civilians in vans as long as they’re the people you hate, you can at least take comfort in knowing that your heroes are undermining support for Big Government, just not in the way you expected.

When leftists raise the concept of “guillotine insurance” they are perhaps being a bit naive in assuming that that’s how government in America works. We don’t assume we have to fight the government for our rights, which is one reason why we never assert them. We don’t have guillotine insurance in America, because we didn’t think we needed it. Partly it’s because there was more of a race culture than a class culture (compared to largely homogeneous European countries) but one of the reasons that we didn’t even have a class culture is because all of us, even the elites, actually believed in the American Dream. We had reason to believe that it didn’t matter how poor you were or where you were born, you could make it. That was the case for the white melting pot, and it’s even true for the large numbers of non-white immigrants who continue to come to America.

But that may not be the case any more. Income inequality in the US is not only higher than it’s ever been, it approaches the inequality levels of 1789 France. This is not an exaggeration. Trump Republican policies did indeed keep the economy going, but they deliberately hollowed out the safeguards we needed to keep it going in an emergency, including the pandemic response team that helped stop Ebola. And once Trump let the coronavirus spread to a national catastrophe, his Republicans only grudgingly allowed middle-class supports for a cratered private sector while cronies were allowed to dip their beaks in the limited “small” business fund. And it doesn’t matter if that was too little too late, we’ve gotta get the kids back in schools, even though there’s no vaccine and the resident is deliberately undermining mask-wearing efforts, we’ve gotta get adults back to work and get the economy going again. After all, it doesn’t matter how many people die, Wall Street bounced back, and that’s all that really matters. You’re just supposed to shut up and obey. Goosestep back into the offices, back into the shops, back into the schools, be a good little soldier, cough out your lungs and die for The Leader.

FUCK.

THAT.

A political class doesn’t do that sort of thing if it fears losing power. And if it doesn’t see a threat to its rational best interest in flipping off the public, it must be because they have reason to believe they’ll never lose an election again.

People on my side – or what I thought was my side – have used slogans like “Fear the government that fears your gun.” I would add, “Fear the government that fears your vote.”
Because if you don’t use one, you’d better be ready to use the other.

What Was The Point Of All This Again?

It’s the Fourth of July. It’s time for our yearly patriotic message. And this year, my message is: Maybe this country was a mistake.

Why? Because this country was founded for a reason. Not just an abstraction of “freedom” or “liberty” but an attempt to create such in the face of a historical context in which a previous standard of freedom and liberty were threatened by the arrogance of a remote government. The United States of America is now 244 years old. And in this year it is now further away from the principle behind the Declaration of Independence than ever and closer than ever to being the servile colonial state that it was before 1775.

And it would serve well to use Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence to demonstrate the issue. For now, put aside the whole issue of whether the whole Revolution is invalidated by slavery or whether Jefferson himself (as opposed to Yankee Founders) is invalidated by being a slave owner. The premise of our revolution was that we were our own country, not merely someone else’s colony, and that our rights are universal and inherent, and that we had a right to rebel because the government abused its powers and denied our equal rights. The premise of our Constitution is that once we had achieved independence, we had to create a republic not only to protect our sovereignty but to protect the general welfare. By comparison to our Founders’ stated reasons for creating this country, where is America now in terms of freedom?

https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/declaration-transcript

In Congress, July 4, 1776.

“The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America, When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

Again, don’t focus too much on the inherent contradiction of a slaveholder declaring “all men are created equal” or whether rights are endowed by God. At this point, I will say that the premise of the paragraph is that Jefferson was declaring “self-evident” something that many did not see as self-evident, that at least all white men are created equal, which was revolutionary enough, given that it meant that a British “noble” has no greater inherent worth than a commoner, and that people from Europe do not have greater inherent worth than white Americans (especially since in other American colonies the caste system was even more formalized).

As for the “Creator” I will say that it speaks to the inherent contradiction, especially with modern “conservatives” who insist that rights are endowed by God: I find it interesting that the people who most loudly insist that rights are endowed by a Creator are ones most uncomfortable with the “all men are created equal” part. Given that religion has been invoked on both sides of the debate, it undermines the idea that religion is an objective source of moral values. But even if Jefferson was asserting a moral value inconsistently or hypocritically, he WAS asserting a moral value. It holds as a universal principle even if it is not applied universally. And in this particular year, as in the time of the Civil War, the challenge to the universal principle is from those sections of the country that think that freedom means only freedom for them.

And that faction is the one supporting the direct threats to freedom that we face now.

“Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. “

In other words, one does not change the national government lightly or for trivial reasons. Even such problems as exist with the current government are usually preferable to throwing it out. But when “a long train of abuses and usurpations” clearly intends to create an intolerable despotism, overthrowing such is not only a human right but a duty.

“Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world. “

Having established that one only removes a government for valid reasons, we come to the question: What are our reasons for removing ourselves from the current government? Those reasons follow.

“He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.”

At this point in the 18th Century, Parliament was not effectively supreme over the British Monarchy and it was possible for King George to step in to create his own policies, especially where the colonies were concerned. In this system, we technically have an independent legislature, but for all the bills that are passed by the Democrat-majority House of Representatives, few if any are passed by the Republican Senate, because Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is given effective control of the legislative process. This is not something that the current president is actively involved in, but McConnell would be unlikely to pursue a legislative course without the Republican president’s assent.

“He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.”

Donald Trump has specifically threatened the State of Nevada (among others) by withholding federal funds because he says voting by mail is “illegal” (it’s not) thereby denying our own right to representation without succumbing to blackmail over already allocated funds.

“He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.”

Again, we have a complaint which is not directly relevant to the current situation as it concerns administration of an overseas colony rather than domestic policy. There are still parallels. I will address them later.

“He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.”

The focus, maybe the raison d’etre, of the Trump Republican Party is “obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners” and refusing to allow any to come into the country. Except of course, during the initial stages of the coronavirus, when Trump knew that coronavirus had spread to Italy and other parts of Europe, yet only declared a travel ban from Europe more than five weeks after announcing a travel ban from China.

“He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.

“He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.”

The politicization of judicial appointments under both parties has become that much more blatant under Republicans, which is another case where Mitch McConnell takes the initiative when Donald Trump doesn’t. It was of course McConnell who refused to have the Senate address President Obama’s appointment of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, thus not only acting as a veto on the president but on McConnell’s entire chamber. Since being elected president, Trump has made a point of choosing judges only from a Federalist Society approved list, and at lower levels, Trump, with help from McConnell’s Senate, has appointed almost 30 percent of our active circuit court judges in less than four years.

“He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.”

This ties into “He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.” The Trump Organization has become rather infamous for the number of federal offices it has chosen to leave open or with only “active” heads, even though most bureaucracies have to have their administration heads approved by Congress. By this means Trump is able to create a situation where he does in fact administer by decree, since there is no oversight approval, and such “acting” heads can be fired at will. Earlier this year, he criticized pro forma Senate sessions (which were intended by Republicans to limit Barack Obama’s ability to make recess appointments) and said, “The Senate should either fulfill its duty and vote on my nominees or it should formally adjourn so that I can make recess appointments. If the House will not agree to that adjournment, I will exercise my constitutional authority to adjourn both chambers.”

Of course, Trump, unlike Mitch McConnell, always says the quiet part loud.

“He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.

He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:

For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:

For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:”

Especially in the wake of George Floyd’s death, the American public is coming to grips with the militarization of many police departments, which implies a larger militarization of the civil society. One of the steps Trump took in reaction to riots that disturbed even some in Middle America was to have our national monuments occupied by masked, armed men with no unit insignia. In a Politico article about that subject, it was mentioned in passing that “Every year since the 2001 terrorist attacks, the federal government has added to its policing ranks a force larger than the entire Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.”

It has already been mentioned with the concept of qualified immunity, police departments are in effect given permission to commit acts (including killing) which would guarantee prosecution were they committed by civilians. This is why Black Lives Matter and other groups have demanded that the federal government act to ban qualified immunity. Democrats included such a ban in recent legislation, but refused to vote for a Republican Senate bill that did not include the ban.

This is to say nothing of Trump’s own attempts to render “his” troops unaccountable. The most notorious example is the case of Eddie Gallagher, a Navy SEAL who had been charged with ten offenses under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, for among other things murdering an ISIS prisoner in custody, taking a photo of the corpse and sending it to friends. This was the one charge he was actually convicted of. Since Gallagher had already served the stated amount of time on his sentence, he was released. However, Donald Trump personally intervened to insure that Gallagher’s pre-discharge rank be reinstated (to protect his retirement benefits) and that his SEAL pin be restored, against the verdict in the court martial.

Make no mistake: If he had his way, Donald Trump WOULD run everything by fiat. And if you are voting for Donald Trump, you, like the Republicans who acquitted him in the Senate, are voting to approve conduct that Thomas Jefferson thought was tyrannical and worthy of revolution. You are working against everything Jefferson wanted to achieve.

“For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:

For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:”

On this score, I refer to the libertarian argument: A tariff is a tax on the consumer.

“For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury:

For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences

For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies:

For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:

For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.”

This part, unfortunately, has less to do with Donald Trump in particular and more to do with the general trend of government under both parties, a trend where Donald Trump is more a symptom than a cause. In the wake of our “War on Terror”, both the Bush and Obama Administrations were criticized for the practice of “extraordinary rendition” where the US government arranged for or accommodated the transfer of suspects to countries outside the United States, where torture is specifically illegal and “enhanced interrogation” techniques can be investigated.

Similarly, it was under the Obama Administration that there was a drone strike on Anwar al-Awlaki, an American expatriate who advocated for jihad in Yemen. When Awlaki was killed in 2011, he became the first US citizen to be targeted by drone strike, effectively execution without trial.

This is the sort of thing that libertarians have been going on about for years. But if there was reason to criticize a government that abandoned the principles of our founding simply out of expedience or neglect, the danger is that much greater when the people in charge of government are deliberately acting against that principle because they are against the principles of our founding.

“He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.

He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.”

As with many Trump initiatives, the current president may not have actively declared war, but he has withdrawn protection and aid, not only in the general case of the coronavirus but in the specific case of Puerto Rico, which is not a State but whose residents ARE American citizens. This has had the effect of ravaging the coasts, towns and livelihoods of that people.

“He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat [sic] the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.”

In context, this refers to King George’s recruitment of mercenaries from Hesse (Germany) and other areas to suppress the already active American rebellion. The Republicans’ corps of mercenaries are homegrown.

“He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.

“He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.”

[Okay, this is the part that hasn’t aged well, college kids.]

“In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

“Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our Brittish [sic] brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends.”

In the 18th Century, there was technically a means of redress of colonists’ grievance through the British Parliament, which is why the Founders had at first tried to make their case to the British government rather than advocate for radical separatism. But the Parliament was partisan for Britain, with only a few exceptions. This in itself was a cause for alienation from the mother country.

Similarly there is a mechanism in the Constitution for removing an unfit chief executive, called impeachment, but just as the ruling class of Britain decided that their job was to protect their own and not the people of the Colonies, the Republican majority in Senate of the United States decided that its goal was to protect their own rather than the country. And just as Parliament’s alienation from the Americans served to alienate this nation from the mother country, the Republican Party’s choice of sides has served to further alienate them from America. Especially since every thing that Donald Trump has done to America since the end of impeachment is something that Republicans were warned about. In acting to protect Trump, they took on responsibility for his actions, and in choosing Party over country, chose to antagonize the country.

“We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor. “

And how well did that work out?

For the most part, very well. Again, however hypocritical and self-serving it was for white colonials to insist that only all (white) men are created equal, that was a revolutionary declaration for the time. The American Revolution was a direct inspiration for the black people of Haiti and the white Hispanic revolutions in Spanish America. It also set a precedent for the more radical French Revolution, which created its own changes to the structure of Europe, even as Britain’s Parliament passed reforms and became a more democratic body. As with the contradiction of American slavery, Western civilization’s conquest and exploitation of the rest of the world also spread its liberal ideas to other lands and demanded a resolution of the contradiction, which ended Europe’s colonial empires.

None of which changes the fact that we have lived in contradiction from the beginning, a contradiction that caused many white Americans, including those whose ancestors came here after the Civil War, to think that a declaration of freedom for white men meant ONLY freedom for white men. We have survived this long because we have basically agreed to disagree. We have passed incremental reforms to voting laws and acclimated people to the idea of equality for different races and genders.

The problem is not with the people who critique this government because it is untrue to the classical liberal ideas of its foundation. That has always been the libertarian and conservative critique, alongside the leftist arguments that Jefferson was self-serving or didn’t go far enough. The immediate threat to America is not conservative but reactionary; it is from the people who do not simply disagree as to the ultimate meaning of Jefferson’s words, but who are against Jefferson’s declaration itself. The threat to America is from the people whose concept of good government is regressed even further back than King George, whose ideal is not parliamentary monarchy but absolute monarchy. And review of Jefferson’s grievances from 1776 only makes it more clear that for all the progress we have made, we are ending up in much the same situation.

So this year especially, I have to ask: What is the point of America?

What was the point of our Revolution?

What was the point of all this if you want to go back to a tyranny that even the British themselves would not tolerate in their modern government?

If your whole concept of patriotism is “America Fuck Yeah” (unironically) or “Trump That Bitch”, then you really need to look at our founding documents and ask yourself if you would have chosen the wisdom of Thomas Jefferson or the madness of King George.

Liberty And Coronavirus

“Every government in history has been run by assholes. The beautiful thing about democracy, is that in a democracy, the assholes are us.”

-P.J. O’Rourke

I was trying to find exactly where P.J. O’Rourke said that quote. It turns out he used a marginally less offensive version that became the title of Parliament of Whores: “Every government is a parliament of whores. The trouble is, in a democracy the whores are us.” The version I remember was way, way back in the old days when P.J. O’Rourke was still writing for Rolling Stone and he was doing this takedown of Senator Joe Biden’s previous attempt to run for President. Another line I remember from that article was in reference to Biden stealing speeches from British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock: “That’s like stealing lyrics from LL Cool J.”

But another thing O’Rourke said in one of his books that is at least as relevant to the current time is this: “There is only one basic human right, the right to do as you damn well please. And with it comes the only basic human duty, the duty to take the consequences.”

Here’s the reason I bring this up. About a week ago I saw this Facebook post from the handle “Quarynnetine Valente” saying “The pandemic has managed to do what so many couldn’t: just completely disprove libertarianism and all it’s brethren – No, people will not do the right thing if left to their own devices without the government. They won’t even do so much as wear a small piece of cloth over their faces.”

I’d also seen a Reason article about how even a necessary element of Federal coronavirus response was screwed up, where the GAO reported that at least a million of the coronavirus stimulus checks were actually sent to dead people. And I’d quoted that woman’s post in commentary: “Liberal comment today on Facebook: ‘this crisis completely disproves libertarianism! We can’t even trust people to wear masks without government telling them!’
Government: [cuts off regular recipients and gives COVID checks to billionaires and dead people] “

And a Democrat partisan friend responded, “No, (she’s) right. Libertarians like to concentrate on the handful of government failings and utterly ignore the sea of benefits. One of the reasons I have a hard time taking you seriously some times.” And I responded: “This is why I don’t take government seriously some times.”

I’m serious. It was private citizens and businesses who did more to encourage the shutdown in the first weeks of coronavirus spread than anything the national government has done – indeed, while the New York City and State governments both fell down at first, they started to create serious public health policies while the Trump Organization still refuses to do so.

Monday in The Atlantic, David Frum presented a damning timeline of events that conclusively demonstrate that Trump is not only refusing to take coronavirus seriously, he is actively encouraging the spread of the disease among the public. This is less by what he is doing than what he is not doing – notably not wearing a mask and not encouraging social distancing, even though Mike Pence and even Mitch McConnell now do appear in masks. It’s as though Trump were acting to do the exact opposite of what a president should, which ties into the other recent controversy that continues to bleed out, where reporters continue to investigate credible stories that Russia offered the Taliban bounties to kill our troops in Afghanistan and that Trump was aware of this and continued to take Vladimir Putin’s side on the world stage, for example, continuing to push for Russia to be re-invited to the G7 summits.

This all makes a lot more sense if you just assume that Trump is a Putin bitch whose specific job is to do everything he can to destroy America and everything it stands for. An idea which with every passing week becomes less and less conspiracy theory and more and more Occam’s Razor. But I digress.

In the last, perfunctory coronavirus task force hearing – at which, notably, Trump did not appear – reporters asked Vice President Pence why the Administration, specifically Trump, was encouraging people to gather in large crowds for Trump rallies and not follow experts’ advice to practice social distancing and use masks in public. And Pence started his response by saying: “The freedom of speech and the right to peaceably assemble is enshrined in the Constitution of the United States.” Yes, and in Die Hard With A Vengeance, John McClane had the free speech right to walk around Harlem wearing a sandwich board with the N-Word on it. That didn’t make it good for his continued health.

This Tuesday I was watching one of the talking-heads shows on MSNBC, and Jacob Frey, the Mayor of Minneapolis spoke in reference to the subject of police reform and said, “Culture eats policy for breakfast.” For someone who has done so much to undermine American soft power, Viceroy Trump does understand how to use it, by using the power of his office to shape the public culture. It was bad enough when the “liberal” media gave Trump free airtime that they never would have given a Libertarian or Green candidate because they wanted Hillary’s ride to the coronation to be less boring. But since he is now president, the dysfunctional people who follow him have that much more justification for their beliefs. It is largely for fear of offending them that those governors who had instituted coronavirus controls started to retract them before all, or even any, states had met the White House’s own guidelines for re-opening. So now, for SOME reason, there seems to be a huge surge in virus cases, even in states like California and Nevada that seemed to have it under control. So now in Nevada, Governor Steve Sisolak made it mandatory to wear a mask in public. And I’ve had at least one friend tell me that Sisolak can kiss their ass, but really, what do you expect? Trusting that people would do the right thing without being forced didn’t work.

So Quarantine Valentine or whatever her fucking name is is right about that, but it’s not quite as simple as “Government Good Liberty Bad.” And even then, it’s not like it matters. This Sunday I had to go out and stopped to get gas and got out of the car, and realized I hadn’t brought my mask from the house. I was kind of ashamed of myself, and then I realized that none of the other customers at the gas station were wearing a mask either. And this week I went to get my car looked at, and was at the garage for over two hours, and for half of that time, I was the only one with a mask on.

If I am a libertarian, and I think that a lot of regulations are just a bureaucratic power-grab to micromanage transactions that previous generations never had to micromanage, why does this matter to me? Why do I wear a mask and encourage others to do so? Because I see the need for it, because I educate myself, and I know (from my own recent brush with sickness in March) what the stakes are. I have what is perhaps mislabeled as common sense.

To me, a large part of libertarianism is the impression that government can get in the way of common sense. And what we are seeing in America’s approach to “liberty” is that the opposite of common sense is getting in the way of government.

And all this gets to a larger point. Libertarians might not like government much, but the fact of the matter is, the reason it got as big and intrusive as it has is because people saw a need for it. Sometimes that need is even genuine. In the case of this pandemic or any other genuine emergency, you need an authority who is going to be able to coordinate resources and set policies. And then there are other cases, like the entire Transportation Security Administration, where you have government micromanaging things that we were perfectly happy doing for ourselves before 9-11. And the uselessness of the TSA is only reinforced by the fact that government policy was deformed by the shock of 9-11, yet the 9-11 attacks had an immediate death toll of 2,977 plus the hijackers, yet our government has let over 120,000 die from coronavirus, and the Republicans who demanded a security state after 9-11 don’t bat an eye.

And yet we do need a government, because we need to have some kind of treatment for coronavirus, precisely because we as a collective of individuals cannot micromanage our public lives and private behavior to contain casual contact indefinitely, we cannot get even the most authoritarian government (for example, China) to micromanage individual behavior indefinitely and we sure as Hell cannot get THIS government to manage public behavior.

Government is on some level an admission of social failure. If the Facebook poster is correct in saying that we as a people cannot be trusted to put on a stupid mask to stop the spread of disease, anything government does to encourage that will be imperfect at best. But people are still going to ask for government, because the alternative default is unacceptable. If one advocates for libertarianism, then by definition you cannot create a more libertarian society with more government and more force. It means changing the culture so that we do not need as much government, so that people do the right thing without having to be told. Because again, government cannot do everything, even if we thought that was a good idea. And changing the culture so that people are more capable of self-government requires education and socialization.

In March, I’d said: “The Trump Administration is what you get when you combine class privilege with the government’s monopoly on force. Trump himself is the natural result of a system that pretends to capitalism but actually relies on social capital – what Randians would call ‘pull’ and we in Las Vegas call ‘juice’ – in order to avoid the checks and balances that are supposed to be inherent in the capitalist system, in much the same way that party solidarity has destroyed the checks and balances written into the Constitution.” You can see this in how anti-Trump commentators go on about how Trump has undermined the “rule of law”, which as we can see in retrospect is less a rule than an agreement from all parties to follow the law. It doesn’t matter how strict the law is if the people in charge of enforcing it allow it to be broken, or ARE the lawbreakers. Which gets to the point that what we’re dealing with is psychological as much as political. If all government is just a matter of social agreement, then the same thing applies to every other social arrangement, including business. Which also means that a right-wing “anarcho-capitalism” would not work any better than a left-wing anarchy, because there is no such thing as trade without rules and enforcement of rules, and there is no such thing as common property because resources have to be administered. It doesn’t matter whether you call that administration a government or not, it will come to exist by default. And that means it doesn’t matter if things are administered through officials acting in the public sector or the private sector if they all grew up with the same expectations as to what is acceptable.

They’re the SAME FUCKING PEOPLE.

And if that ought to give pause to a libertarian who thinks that people can be trusted to do the right thing without government forcing them, it really ought to give pause to a statist who thinks government can be trusted to tell people what the right thing is.

I Was In The Pool

Ironically, Viceroy Donald Trump has something in common with Bill Maher, Stephen Colbert, and the other professional Trump-haters on late-night TV: Their jokes go flat without a live audience. And if you watch Colbert (and I’m not sure why I still do) you know he’s very vocal about wanting to get back in front of a crowd. So if it’s that bad for him, how bad must it be for Trump, who craves attention the way a tweeker craves meth?

Last Saturday, the answer proved to be: Pretty fuckin’ bad.

How must it feel to sell your soul for success? There have been many stories of making a deal with the Devil for power or fame, for example, becoming a world-famous songwriter only to die in an elevator and find out that Hell is the elevator playing Muzak versions of your songs for eternity. But for at least three years, Donald Trump got damn near every thing he wanted. He got elected president with everyone telling him it was impossible. Even after various financial and corruption scandals were exposed, nobody could touch him, because Republicans protected him. And that’s because Trump has, or at least had, a cult of fanatics who really would vote for him if he shot somebody on 5th Avenue.

But then coronavirus happened. And it happened because Trump thought that doing anything at all about it would depress the stock market. And even when that downturn proved to be short-lived, Trump refused to create a national policy or announce tests because the virus seemed to be hitting hardest in “blue” states with Those People. And the need to create public health measures meant that primary elections had to have a lot of polling places shut down, especially in economically disadvantaged areas, which to Trump and his Party is a feature and not a bug. But then the George Floyd case happened, after the Breonna Taylor case happened, after the Ahmed Arbery case happened, and the reason the Floyd case caught fire when the others didn’t might have had something to do with the fact that a whole bunch more people were quarantined or unemployed than might have been a few months ago. So a lot of those people ended up on the streets, which led to both civilian riots and police brutality, which led to Trump ordering the crowds around Lafayette Square to be gassed and dispersed so he could walk to St. John’s and hold a Bible, which was his biggest public relations fiasco until the next one. In the face of rocketing coronavirus numbers both nationally and in Oklahoma, Trump decided to hold his first big time America Is Back rally on the weekend of Juneteenth, in the safe, heavily Republican state of Oklahoma, in Tulsa, for some reason. It should have been a sign when both the pro- and anti-Trump crowds outside the venue were much smaller than expected. Then it turned out that no less than six staffers in Oklahoma already tested positive for the virus by Saturday June 20. Then by the time Trump got to Tulsa, they had to cancel the speech at the outside overflow podium because there WAS no overflow. As it turned out, a venue that had a capacity for 19,000 ended up with about 6,200 Trump fans. So by the time Trump came out to take the stage, he was the happiest man on Earth. And then, did you see the picture of Trump stomping back to the White House with his tie off, clutching a MAGA hat in his hand? Wow. He looked like Vladimir Putin paid him for an hour.

How must it feel to know that this is the price of the deal? That no, as a matter of fact, not everyone is going to love you so much that they would risk sickness and death for you? That maybe you’re NOT invincible forever?

And did anyone even care what Trump had to say about politics? All this week, all the talking heads could deal with was how Trump spent over ten minutes making excuses for why he needed to drink water with two hands. Just to prove he could, he drank water with one hand and threw the glass away, and THAT was the biggest cheer of the night, which only proves where Republican standards are. Then he went on about having to walk slowly down a ramp at West Point cause he was so afraid he was gonna slip. And this is another reason he’s losing against Joe Biden: The more he tries to ridicule Sleepy Joe and prove he’s the roughest, toughest man in the room, the more he comes off like George Costanza.

“I was in the pool! I WAS IN THE POOL!!”

But really, we’ve all gone on along enough about Trump’s greatest self-own (until the next one). The problem is, it may not matter. In fact, the shrinkage of Trump’s crowd size may not really be good news for Democrats.

What we have here is a moment that separates the men from the boys, so to speak. All of us, but especially Trump Republicans, have to face the possibility that we may not be alive to vote in November if we don’t wise up now. Half the reason Trump retained such popularity he had is because the economy was good, and now that’s endangered. But he’ll still have a certain core of cultists who support Trump because they look at the Book of Revelations and think that he might bring about the Last Days. Not that Trump is the Antichrist. Lucifer actually IS a man of wealth and taste.

But it is now proven that 12,800 people who “should” have been at the Tulsa rally chose self-preservation instead. That doesn’t mean they all became Biden voters. It means they realize they can’t vote for Trump in November if they don’t practice self-preservation. It also doesn’t mean they want the government to do anything about the coronavirus; after all their main regret about Trump, if they have one, is that “he’s not hurting the people he needs to be hurting.” It never occurred to them until now that the people he’s doing the best job of hurting are them. But he’s still doing a bang-up job of undermining the rest of the country, and since they hate this country, that’s what matters.

The dilemma, as was always the case, is having a government that lasts long enough to destroy the liberal status quo ante without being so stupid and incompetent that it destroys itself first. In the most recent primaries, Republican voter registration has actually gone up from the midterms in which Democrats made gains. The Hill: “In 2018, both parties (in Georgia) had gubernatorial primaries, and turnout was 555,000 in the Democratic primary vs. 607,000 in the Republican primary. This year, even though there were no contested statewide contests on the Republican side, almost a million voters cast ballots in the GOP Senate primary and almost 1.2 million voted in the Democratic Senate primary. That’s an increase of more than 120 percent in the number of Democratic primary voters and more than 60 percent in the number of Republican primary voters compared with 2018.

“This year, for the first time since 2008, more voters took a Democratic primary ballot than a Republican primary ballot. In the Senate primary, 53 percent of voters took a Democratic ballot — and this does not seem to have been a result of the absence of a contest on the Republican side. In the Seventh Congressional District, where the Republican incumbent is retiring, there were hotly contested primaries in both parties, and 57 percent of voters took a Democratic primary ballot. Likewise, in the Sixth District, the Democratic incumbent, Lucy McBath, was unopposed while Republicans had a contested primary to choose her challenger; yet 58 percent of voters chose a Democratic primary ballot.”

According to the Intelligencer of Charleston, West Virginia: “As voters turn in absentee ballots, turn out for early voting or prepare for the June 9 primary election, more Republicans and unaffiliated voters are registered to vote than Democratic voters this election in West Virginia. “According to voter registration numbers released Thursday by the Secretary of State, the number of voters registered with the Democratic Party as of the close of the primary election registration period on May 19 was 474,961, or 38.63 percent of the state’s 1.2 million registered voters.

“The number of voters registered with the Republican Party as of May 19 was 425,008, or 34.57 percent. The number of unaffiliated voters was 281,587, or 22.9 percent. The May 19 voter registration totals put the Republican Party just 4 points away from tying the Democratic Party in voter registration.

“If this pace continues in just over 24 months, Democrats will lose their long-held voter registration advantage,” said Melody Potter, chairwoman of the West Virginia Republican Executive Committee.”

Republicans are scared. They will not admit that they’re scared of coronavirus, but in Tulsa, they voted with their feet. And of course, they’re even more scared of Democrats. And while they may not consciously realize this (a huge part of modern ‘conservatism’ is being reactionary rather than conscious), in order to have a chance to destroy “the deep state” (formerly just ‘the state’) and create the government of their liking, they have to keep Republicans in charge of government. And that means that they have to save Trump from himself.

Just because they now realize they can’t follow Trump into the ditch, doesn’t mean Republicans have quit negative partisanship or the motivation of Trump’s cult of personality. They just have to tactically withdraw from it right now. Because as in 2016, all the opinion polls don’t matter as much as the general election vote, and in 2020, you don’t get to vote in the general election if you’re dead. Don’t look at the polls. Look at how many Republicans are registered, and look at who’s winning their primaries.

So, with all this in mind, Trump is hardly knocked out, the Biden Democrats can still make a mistake and Republicans can still pull through. All Trump has to do is focus, grasp the moment, and not be lazy, stupid or incompetent!

…In other words, Trumpniks, see you next year in Commie Muslim Transmanistan.

NOW Liberals Want A Smaller Government

In the last week or so, events have indeed been moving very quickly. For a few days, we were looking at a resurgence of the coronavirus, and “conservatives” expressed concern that Black Lives Matter protestors were violating quarantine to march, even though a few weeks ago they thought that white people marching together with guns and no masks against coronavirus restrictions were just defending their civil rights. (I wonder what changed?)

But the big news right now is a social movement/hashtag to #DefundThePolice. Since I’m more of a bleeding-heart-libertarian, some might ask what my opinion is on the idea to pull money and power away from a part of government most people actually like.

My reaction is, “Great! Can we do the Pentagon next?”

Given that libertarians have been saying for QUITE some time that police have far more paramilitary firepower than most districts need, and that much of the history of our increasingly federalized and militarized law enforcement is an attempt to clamp down on black people in particular, the question is why this idea, which is not really that new, is only now suddenly becoming popular. Maybe because the party that always thinks government is the best solution is finally starting to realize that it isn’t. Meanwhile the right-wingers who claim that government can’t do anything right suddenly change their tune when it comes to beating people up.

Well, on the bright side, in the increasingly likely event that the November elections wipe the Republican Party like the fecal matter it has become, “conservatives” might suddenly remember that libertarianism is about maintaining a healthy skepticism towards government in general, and not just giving intellectual support to the ulterior motives of Koch Industries.

But on another level, “Defund the Police” is just another example of the Left failing to pitch its ideas beyond their own audience because they assume that everyone is on the same page. Like how we had to start saying “climate change” because the Right were able to joke about freak snowstorms in May as an example of “global warming.” Or how they use “white privilege” to describe the normal state of affairs – not getting harassed by police, not being disadvantaged in applying for a loan, going out to vote, et cetera, as though this was a “privilege” that is unearned and needs to be ended instead of a set of rights that ought to be extended to all. Just as white people see “privilege” as normalcy, most of us see the police as functional and constructive (at least until very recently), and using the shorthand phrase without defining what we mean by “police” and what we mean by “defund” is what allows the Party of Trump to sell us-vs.-them rhetoric that would otherwise not be feasible. Some people hear “Defund the Police” and think “Who’s gonna protect me from armed robbery?”

I may seem flippant, but this is a serious moment. Just as Viceroy Trump in trashing the “norms” that the duopoly held to as a substitute for Constitutional government has thrown out the idea that the standards in Washington are fixed and unchangeable, events in Minneapolis are moving towards historic change. There is now a very strong likelihood that at least one major city will in fact end its police force as they had previously known it. This is not a hypothetical. If you’re going to end a major part of local government, what does that mean, and what follows it?

Some of what I’m getting at was well-addressed in a column from Jim Wright, no Ayn Rand fan he:

https://www.stonekettle.com/2020/06/down-with-sogans.html?fbclid=IwAR38OVX__Rm9xzEaaWch_8TDUaB63ClQuNcPZzoyEgaROCGpdY1EavoSw8U

Most of this extremely extended piece is basically Jim posting and referring to the various idiots he has debated this issue with on Twitter, but I direct you to skip towards the later part, where he says: “The current government of America is a pretty good example of what happens when you don’t demand the details up front.”

I have gone over this more than once, and I’m gonna have to do it again: During the Obama Administration, Republicans spent at least six years hopping mad about “socialist” Obamacare, they spent six years voting for repeal after repeal that they knew would get vetoed, and they had six years to come up with a plan that would be better (since even liberals, or especially liberals, knew the ACA has much to be desired). They had a successful candidate for President who asked that the Republican-run Congress give him an Obamacare repeal and replacement that he could sign on Day One. And of course, they didn’t do that. And as I’ve also said, that lack of policy is not simply unhelpful, it is actually harmful to the political movement. Rather than “repeal and replace,” Republicans clearly want to get rid of the current healthcare system without having a serious alternative in mind other than going back to the status quo ante, and if people liked that, we never would have had the Affordable Care Act. And once it became obvious that Republicans planned to kill one of the few parts of government that everybody (including their senior citizen constituents) actually liked, this position became a liability to Republicans in the midterms, and one reason they lost the House in 2018. Similarly, if the other faction of duopoly gets taken over by its scalphunter contingent, and they push an agenda that they have not defined and don’t really know how to pass, they will be in the same fix as the Republicans – either let the institution (in this case, local police) hobble along in a crippled state, which becomes a liability to them as the party in power, or try to outright eliminate one of the few institutions that (however imperfect) most people still want to have. The third alternative, which Republicans never had the imagination to work on, would be to have an actual repeal-and-replace program.

And there are ideas for that. The Movement for Black Lives site says that “communities most harmed by destructive policing (should) have the power to hire and fire officers, determine disciplinary action, control budgets and policies, and subpoena relevant agency information.” It also mentions (under ‘End The War On Black People’) “an end to zero-tolerance school policies and arrests of students, the removal of police from schools, and the reallocation of funds from police and punitive school discipline practices to restorative services” as well as “An end to money bail, mandatory fines, fees, court surcharges and ‘defendant funded’ court proceedings”, “the end to the use of technologies that criminalize and target our communities (including IMSI catchers, drones, body cameras, and predictive policing software) ” and “An immediate end to the privatization of police, prisons, jails, probation, parole, food, phone and all other criminal justice related services.”

Yeah, but… we get into details. In particular, body cameras and software are ostensibly intended as a means of making police more accountable to the public, and, as with having police in schools, would require rethinking some of the security procedures that were already instituted by public demand, and admitting that maybe they aren’t working.

Moreover, as with rethinking an “education” system whose funding is largely dependent on local property values, we need to recognize how much of this bullshit law enforcement system is based on a need to fund government, or make it self-funding as in the case of privatizing services. It is certainly not news that institutions seek to perpetuate themselves, and as with ticket quotas and adding fines and fees for things that previously didn’t used to require such, we create more, not less, incentive for government to be intrusive and oppressive. You could certainly add more income and property taxes into the system so that the funding isn’t so regressive, but that simply shifts the issue and raises the question of how many of these government “services” we actually need.

It’s almost as if, in seeking to remove only one support pillar of a system that seems especially problematic, we find out how many other parts of the system need to be questioned!

In summary, leftists: Be careful what you wish for, smash the state, and thank you for boosting libertarianism!

Trump Is The Knee On America’s Neck

When I said these protests could spread to Washington in November, I underestimated them.

The George Floyd protests already had the city of Minneapolis on edge, but violence really started on May 28 when the 3rd Police Precinct was burned, along with several businesses. The local government’s inability to stop the violence led to the Governor authorizing the National Guard. Over the weekend the protests became national, and then global. In response to the growing outrage, Viceroy Donald Trump threatened Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey if he couldn’t get control, and said, among other things, “when the looting starts, the shooting starts!”

(Trump also said, ‘less talk, more rock’, ‘the more cushion, the less pushin’, and ‘It puts the lotion on Its skin, or else It gets the hose again.’)

For some reason all this bluster failed to impress. It got to the point where protesters in Washington DC rattled the White House barricades and almost reached the perimeter, prompting staff to turn off the visible lights on the property and haul Trump off to the facility’s bunker (hashtag: #bunkerbitch). This made King Dick Who Be The Most Macho and Tremendous of Dicks look even less impressive. So after yelling out a virtual conference of governors on June 1 for not being “tough” enough, he announced himself as the “law and order” president and then, 25 minutes before the mayor’s curfew was to start, got the police forces to disperse a peaceful crowd so he could walk out to the historic St. John’s Episcopal Church, which had just been vandalized by rioters. This also served to demonstrate Trump’s potency by proving he can still walk about a tenth of a mile without a golf cart. At least one Episcopal priest serving at the church was among those tear-gassed. And at the site, Trump held aloft a Bible as though he had never seen a Bible – or a book – before, and posed for the cameras with an expression that was almost cartoony in its sourness, a frown whose gravity created its own singularity. It was the face of a mean little boy who had finally gotten to stick a live M-80 up a cat’s ass to see it run off screeching into the night, only to realize that he was still unhappy.

It would be one thing if Trump had just blustered about The Insurrection Act and casually violated local laws and American legal traditions. Or as we call it in America, “Monday.” But even as the forces of authority, officially led by Trump, focused on the looters and people who assaulted civilians and police, there have been numerous incidents recounted by journalists of police forces actively initiating violence. Indeed, while protests in places like Las Vegas were fairly civilized and even friendly between population and police, SOME motherfuckers decided they had to cause grief. And then there were several social-media documented cases where police not only initiated violence, in their haste to beat on marchers, they moved away from neighborhoods and businesses that the Right has been so upset about getting looted, and which of course DID get looted because the police had higher priorities.

It’s almost as if the government was more about protecting its own privileges than protecting the public!

Not only that, you have at least one Republican Senator openly agitating for American elite military units to shoot civilians, and wouldn’cha know, the 82nd Airborne has just been deployed near the capital!

Make no mistake: What we are watching is authoritarianism’s dry run for November. Assuming of course that the Trump Organization and its enablers will wait that long.

I’ve said before that unless the Democrats have a complete blowout victory on Republicans in November – or maybe even especially if they DO – Trump is gonna come up with some weasely, bullshit excuse that the election was “rigged” or “fake” or “unfair” and all the Republicans in Congress are gonna goosestep in line to approve his ascension, half of them because they truly want a dictator and half of them because they just don’t want the responsibility of doing their jobs. And I get the impression that a lot of Democrats would go along with it, because their public posture over a generation is learned helplessness, and a lot of them just don’t want the responsibility of doing their jobs.

This becomes that much more likely because of coronavirus, and just as the powers that be discovered the wisdom of curfews only after poor black people went out in public, the states and Federal government will use the barriers that were already in the way of voting and smooth elections to justify not doing anything about those barriers, which would make votes that much less likely to be counted, which the Banana Republican Party would see as a feature and not a bug. Why do you think they’re so desperate to stop certain state initiatives to vote by mail?

What can the average civilian do if the shooting starts? Not a whole lot, frankly. Which is why we need to contain this to the political realm while we still can.

Now, just as Joe Biden doesn’t have control of a military, he has also been restricted by the coronavirus. But now that Our President has given us leave to break quarantine by going back to golf, Joe seems to be going out more. So he might be in position to make a political gesture that will raise the stakes for Trump without any sacrifice on his part.

All Biden has to do is to announce the obvious, that Trump’s actions have gone beyond the pale and violate his oath of office, the recent period being only the most noxious example, and as a result he must resign. Biden should then ask Mike Pence to take over according to Constitutional procedure, and say that this is the only way to save the Trump Administration, and the Republican Party.

Because it is.

It’s not like anyone in the lickspittle Banana Republican Party will take up the offer. I’ve gone over all the reasons why they’ve aligned with Trump; he has probably done more to adapt to them than the other way around. He is the figurehead and personality cult that they need to foist ideas that would otherwise be even less popular than they are. Not only that, the minute Trump is no longer President, he is subject to investigation, indictment and prosecution in state and Federal courts, and let’s face it, he’s too pretty for jail.

What this maneuver would do would be to undermine the legitimacy that the Trumpublicans would need for a serious takeover. Because as blatant as the thugs are being, all they need, just as in 2016, is a perception of legitimacy or a perception of the enemy’s illegitimacy, in order to sway the undecided. That’s why the thugs are staging riots and agitation. They know that fearful people who don’t pay much attention will cry out for Law and Order ™ and they’ll be more than happy to oblige.

Declaring that Trump has made himself illegitimate would shift the focus back to him. It would be merely stating the obvious. And at this point, somebody HAS to state the obvious. Somebody has to say this “Emperor” is no longer clothed in legitimacy. And the beautiful thing is that for Biden to do such would be to shift the burden onto the Banana Republicans at little or no cost to himself. After all: he’s the designated major-party opponent to the incumbent. He’s EXPECTED to oppose him. Saying “Don’t listen to Sleepy Joe, cause he’s a meanie, and he hates me, and he’s a meanie hater” isn’t going to count with people who aren’t already in the choir. The rest of the country will have to ask: Is he wrong? Does the president need to resign?

Saying that Trump needs to make way for Pence, again, is the correct Constitutional process. For one thing, it attacks the Trumpnik dogma that non-Trumpniks are just mad that they lost the 2016 election and want to overturn it. To me, at least, Trump won the Electoral College fair and square and if Clinton couldn’t figure out the victory conditions, that’s her fault. Trump is illegitimate not because he beat Queen Hillary the Inevitable, but because of everything he’s done since being inaugurated. And what all that means is that by retaining a Republican from the winning ticket, the election is not in question. The person who has abused his office is in question. The Trumpniks should not get away with saying otherwise.

Here’s the other element of this: this puts the focus on the Banana Republican Party as a whole. It has been said, and exhaustively demonstrated, that Republicans always choose Party over Country. But it really goes beyond that. Ultimately they choose Trump over Party. After US v. Nixon, certain Republican Senators like Barry Goldwater went up to the White House to tell President Nixon that he would not have Republican support in an impeachment trial. That was why he resigned. Most would say that the Senators chose country over party, which is true, but pragmatically, they chose party over Nixon. They did get shellacked in 1974 and 1976, but they came back in 1980 under Reagan. And that’s partly because at least they retained enough legitimacy to create a transition, and of course it was Nixon’s successor, Gerald Ford, who was able to pardon him. If Nixon had rode it out, it would have been that much worse for the Party, and there wouldn’t have been that many people in place to rehabilitate him.

When the Banana Republicans acquitted Trump in impeachment, making it as obvious as possible that they weren’t going to hear the evidence, Susan Collins of Maine said that Trump had learned his lesson. He sure did. The lesson he learned is that he can do anything he wants and his Party won’t do anything to stop him. That means that every thing he has done and will do since that time is on them. We all know that the Banana Republicans are not going to back a plea for their sweet, innocent little boy to resign, but in opposing such a plea, their own legitimacy is called into question. They have to be asked if they support a call to have federal troops shoot civilians just because The Most Americanest President Evar said so. If he’s bluffing, that threat becomes a campaign issue for them. If he’s not – they can’t assume that everyone in the military, or even every Second Amendment fan, is on board, and those people will hold them accountable if Trump’s pussy-power-grab goes Tango Uniform.

The Party of Trump serves him because they see it as in their interest to do so. He is more of an asset than a liability. They choose not Party over Country but Trump over Party because they don’t see a Party outside of Trump. They have to be made to understand the stakes. Trump is one man who will not live forever. They COULD survive Trump, just as the Democrats survived being the Party of the Confederacy- but if they choose to tie their fates to his, they will not.

And this is the nasty part: The more Republicans are made to confront the reality of their choice, the more they will have to reconsider their loyalty. And if Biden makes such a challenge publicly, that means Trump will have to reconsider the loyalty of his troops. I keep saying: a man who has no external sense of reality besides consensus and the media is more vulnerable to gaslighting than the liberals. But at the same time, they know how much The Leader hates even the perception of disloyalty, and the more on edge they will be. The more America is forced to confront the obvious, the more the Party of Trump will have to do so, and the less the Party and Trump will be able to trust each other. After all … he can sacrifice any number of them to the mob. They only need to sacrifice one man.

So with one maneuver, Biden’s campaign can challenge Trump’s telegraphed coup, challenge the legitimacy of his government and plant a seed of discord between Trump and his institutional followers.

Of course, I have no belief that Biden or his people would do something like this, because they are at pains not to be evil and Machiavellian, and even if they wanted to, they wouldn’t know how. But then again while the Trumpniks are evil, most of them wouldn’t know Machiavelli from a macchiato.

That’s my idea, anyway. But we ought to discuss tactics, because I get the feeling that things are going to be moving very quickly.

What’s Wrong With Being Anti-Fascist?

If you’re not with me… you’re my enemy.”

“Only a Sith deals in absolutes.”

I see a whole bunch of people reacting to Viceroy Trump’s attempt to label “Antifa” a terrorist organization, despite the fact that it technically doesn’t exist. And I see a whole lot of these people posting on their Facebook walls saying “I am anti-fascist.”

So let me get something straight.

I am NOT anti-fascist.

I am anti-collectivist.

I am pro-liberty, pro-individualism and pro-thinking for yourself.

And that means, IN ADDITION TO being anti-fascist, I am also anti-communist. Among other things, this means I am against people who rationalize the crimes of Castro’s Cuba by saying the Castros “gave people free education and healthcare”, which is on par with the old Right saying “at least Mussolini made the trains run on time.”

Not all anti-fascists are the same. STALIN was anti-fascist. I am also anti-Stalinist. And because I am anti-collectivist, I am ALSO anti-racist and anti-fascist. Specifically, I am against anybody who acts like National Socialism or the Confederacy were good for anybody, including their ostensible support base.

That means I am against any “conservatives”, “libertarians” or “freedom lovers” who talk a good game about protecting the Second Amendment to make sure citizens can defend against a tyrannical government but when they see REAL people getting shot by THIS government, they go, “Yay! Finally, Law and Order!”

It means I am against any white boys, leftist or white nationalist, who turn peaceful protests into excuses for violence, because more than fascism or communism they hate “normie” government and just want an excuse to hurt people.

It means I am against the Republican Party, a pagan cult of the state that used to be the Party of Lincoln, which worships a gold-plated calf because they know the rest of the country is against them, and the only way they can maintain their power is through force and fraud.

It means I am against cultists who worship an “anti-communist” who praised President Xi on January 24 for containing the coronavirus in China, and who previously came out of a closed-door meeting with Vladimir Putin slumped over and walking funny.

And it means that I am against any attempt to brand “Antifa” as some kind of Enemy of the State, because if the leftists are correct and the Trump Organization’s declaring war on anti-fascism means that they have implicitly identified with fascism, that is quite likely what they are counting on, because apparently all you need to do is change people’s programming is to change the labels they use, to define censorship as “free speech,” violence as “peacekeeping”, the Electoral College as “democracy” and Trump as “your president.” And because the Right is that much more reductionist and simple-minded than the Left.

Basically, I am against any bullshit attempt to use labels to foist a package deal of ideas that are anti-liberty, anti-individual, and anti-thinking for yourself.

What They Can Get Away With

There are two serious problems in this country that might not seem to be related, but they are.

On May 25 in Minneapolis, a black person, George Floyd, was arrested – apparently for trying to pass a $20 counterfeit bill – and during the arrest, officer Derek Chauvin, guarded by three other police, restrained Floyd by putting his knee to Floyd’s neck, a maneuver that most police departments disavow precisely because it is likely to cause breathing problems. The incident was caught on video and the officers were yelled out at the time. As a result of his restraint, Floyd was pronounced dead by paramedics after they got him to the hospital.

The Minneapolis Police Department did immediately fire the four officers involved in the arrest, but outrage in the city continued to build as Chauvin was not arrested, even after the Mayor said that should happen, and the FBI had a Thursday press conference to announce an investigation. It got worse when it turned out that Chauvin in his time as a police officer has had at least 12 complaints against him, including use of excessive force.

(It turned out that in at least one of these incidents, Amy Klobuchar was the state prosecutor who declined to press charges on Chauvin, and this revelation has made it a bit less likely that she will be Joe Biden’s running mate, which would be a crying shame.)

The public outrage might seem to be an overreaction, IF one believes this is an isolated incident.

Thursday on Facebook I saw a clip from 2019 about a case that actually occurred in 2016. The Dallas Morning News posted it in 2019 because it took them three years to get the records in court. In the incident, a disturbed man – a white man – named Tony Timpa called the police himself in an adult store and told them he was off his meds and couldn’t control himself. By the time the cops got there the site security had already handcuffed Timpa and got him on the ground. However rather than simply wait for the paramedics, the cops first pushed Timpa down, keeping him in a “controversial” hold and lying on his chest. Paramedics then gave him a sedative. After a few minutes they realized Timpa was unconscious. A few minutes later they got him in the ambulance, but he died afterward.

Which is ultimately proof that the cops don’t JUST fuck with black people. They fuck over whomever they can get away with fucking over.

Most free speech advocates – and other people who study how democracies become authoritarian – have observed that if we do not think of rights as universal, if we can say that “certain people” don’t deserve them, then certain people become test cases and legal precedents for what the authorities can get away with. This is why anybody who thinks that all lives matter – or that their lives matter – ought to think that black lives matter, because if the authorities don’t have to care about black lives, there is no reason, other than social conditioning, why they have to care about yours either. And on a political level, such authoritarians often start with an unpopular target whose punishment would have some level of popularity, in order to make an example of them and show that they can do so.

Which leads to the second serious problem: Donald Trump.

The Heather-in-Chief, as part of his snitfit feud with Joe Scarborough and Mika Brezinski on MSDNC, continued to make sleazy insinuations on Twitter that Scarborough was behind the death of an aide, even as Brezinski claimed she was talking with Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey over the subject of Trump’s tweets. And so, possibly because letting the issue go on might end up in legal liability for either Twitter or Trump, Twitter announced this week that it was going to post fact checks in questionable tweets. This outraged Trump, which is perfectly understandable, cause it’s not like Dorsey had EVER imposed Twitter’s own standards on him before. And yet, after Trump twitted out another misleading statement that vote-by-mail leads to voter fraud (since after all, it would not be subject to hacked ballot machines or coronavirus health orders), Twitter did in fact post links, not censoring Trump’s words, but saying in so many words that this position was incorrect. In response, Trump cried like Lucille Ball and said that Twitter was violating his “FREE SPEECH!”

So, in order to (ahem) protect free speech, Trump excreted an Executive Order declaring the authority to review and revise protections given to social media, attacking Twitter specifically because social media outlets have “unchecked power to censor, restrict, edit, shape, hide, alter virtually any form of communication between private citizens or large public audiences.”

Which is to say: “Not treating Your President, Donald Trump, as an omniscient, omnipotent GOD whose every word is objective Truth and whose every desire is an unbreakable law of Nature, at least until I change my mind again.”

By at least January, Trump knew from government contacts in China that the Chinese hadn’t contained the Wuhan virus. He didn’t stop travel from China until the virus was already a pandemic in Europe, so when he closed travel there, it was like closing the barn door after the horses had run out. We have never had federal containment orders. We have (officially) 100,000 dead and counting from coronavirus. We STILL don’t have a national testing regime.

But Twitter puts a fact check link on just two of Trump’s tweets, and they get an executive order in 48 hours.

I ask again: How DID this man sire five kids with that mosquito dick?

Pretty much every news article is saying that Trump’s premenstrual political maneuver is not going to get anywhere in the courts, but most of them are saying that’s not the point. Jack Shafer said in the centrist Politico: “Even if a state attorney general assures a governor that Trump can’t legally punish his defiance, what governor wants to force the test match? No less a liberal luminary than Gretchen Whitmer, the Democratic governor of Michigan, who has been savaged by Trump, just admitted she censors herself when talking about him publicly.

“Trump doesn’t pay a political price for his threatmanship for a couple of reasons. First, even though we act like we think Trump means all of the wild things he says, 3½ years of his presidency have conditioned us to understand that much of what he says is bluster and that we should wait for action before we scramble the jets. Second, we tend to let many of the outlandish things Trump says slide because the last thing Democrats want to do is hold his feet to the fire and force him to make good on his threats. In a weird sort of gentleman’s agreement, Trump gets to say wild things and the Democrats get to shout back their displeasure until the portable outrage generator runs out of fuel and a peaceful silence returns. Except for when it doesn’t.”

The implication that Shafer doesn’t spell out is that even when the “portable outrage generator” doesn’t do anything concrete, Trump’s caterwauling sets a precedent that allows him to do what he wants, even if legally he can’t. Part of this is simply because he’s the president, and we are all technically obliged to treat him as the president, which means that his job (ostensibly) is to protect the government and the country, as opposed to screaming like a retarded ape-boy that he is the Most Exalted Potentate while acting as though he were the paid stooge of a hostile power whose real job is to fuck this country in every manner possible. And part of that means that the government officials underneath him are obliged to take his Jackson Pollock-meets-Dada art and translate it into geometric forms. So even if legal experts tell us that Trump’s whim has no more enforceability than the hormone shifts of a teenager, it’s kind of the government’s job to make what the president wants enforceable. There’s a good piece on Trump’s Executive Order in Reason’s website: “Somehow, out of Trump’s several paragraphs of paraphrasing Section 230 with random erroneous asides, federal officials are supposed to intuit a new paradigm and “apply section 230(c) according to the interpretation set out in this section.”

“The FCC is also tasked with defining this bit of Trumpian gobbledygook: the conditions under which content moderation will be considered “the result of inadequate notice, the product of unreasoned explanation, or having been undertaking without a meaningful opportunity to be heard.”

@jess_miers

If you’ve ever wondered why Internet companies don’t follow their own rules, this is it. The one time Twitter attempts to elevate social discourse by experimenting with moderation that goes outside the binary leave up/takedown scheme, it’s met with an #executiveorder.

195

6:23 PM – May 27, 2020

Which gets to the point that Trump is gaming the system just as much as Twitter is. He can say that none of his twits are an official presidential statement (ex cathedra, so to speak), because they’re on his personal Twitter account. But Jack Dorsey will never enforce the same Code of Conduct on Trump that applies to other users, cause he’s the president, so what he says is newsworthy!

Well, in this brain-dead celebrity culture, Kylie Jenner is newsworthy. Does she get to quote the Protocols of the Elders of Zion as fact without being called on it?

Of course, as Jello Biafra might say, we’ve got a bigger problem now. On Thursday, after 8 pm local time, the police protests in Minneapolis turned violent. There is no report on if anyone has died, but there is a tremendous level of property damage and the 3rd Precinct police building was put to flames. And if Mayor Jacob Frey seemed to be a bit deer-in-the-headlights at his press conference and unwilling to use the National Guard, certain other authorities seem a little TOO willing to use force.

Libertarians like me are often criticized – usually by the Left – because we don’t give enough deference to government. But at times when people lash out in reaction to something that is the fault of government, and in their nihilism destroy their own neighborhoods, it’s the “conservatives” and “liberty lovers” who complain that libertarians are anti-police because we don’t give enough deference to government. If anything, Americans on the whole give too much deference to government. And actually, that’s because in order for government to even work, there needs to be a certain level of deference to it. We understand that the police have a tough job. You never know who’s got a gun. And we know how important the national government is, even if we might want it to be smaller. A national disaster, like the spread of a pandemic to this country, is something beyond the power of a state government to handle, and you would want to assume in such case that the federal government is run by competent and conscientious people, as opposed to a tweezer-dick Putinya suka who literally doesn’t care about anything but himself.

People like me are cynical because as much as we want and need government to be run by competent and conscientious people, they are likely to be run by the worst of us: People who see public responsibility as a means of using the public to their will. And they prey on the herd need for order and stability by holding us hostage to their malice and incompetence. They game the social contract in order to expand the range of what they can get away with.

But the political bargain assumes that those with a monopoly on force are better than us. When it becomes clear that they are not, and that they will not follow the rules they enforce on the rest of us, people start to realize that there is no reason for the public to follow the rules either. You can only game the system for so long before there is no longer a system to game.

In 2014, it was Ferguson. In May, it is Minneapolis. In November, it may be Washington DC.

Declare Victory And Go Home. Except You Are Home.

I’m just tryin’ to protect my stacks

Mitt Romney don’t pay no tax

-Kanye West, “To The World”

If the current occupant of the White House wishes to see himself as a “wartime president,” the results help explain why libertarians and some liberals are so leery of the government’s attempts to phrase every major government endeavor as a “war.” Not just because “war is the health of the state”, but because as with the Energy Crisis, the War On (some) Drugs and the less-rhetorical War On Terror, the main results of our war on coronavirus seem to be spending gigantic amounts of money that mostly goes to people and companies that already have money and government influence while the population at large get crumbs at best, and our personal liberties and standard of living all continue to erode… for the sake of “freedom.”

It’s been mentioned by quite a few people that we can’t keep up coronavirus shutdown, or quarantine, or whatever you want to call it, forever. And so after two months of a haphazard, half-assed, containment regime that is more state-by-state than federal, more governors are starting to open their states, greatly aided by Russian Viceroy Donald Trump riling up his redcaps to “liberate” their states from the majority who wanted to keep things locked down. Of course, just because we call America a democracy doesn’t mean that the majority rules. This week the same Wisconsin Supreme Court that mandated a physical state election in the face of the coronavirus and poll shutdowns also decided that they would approve a Republican legislative challenge against Democrat Governor Tony Evers’ stay-at-home orders.

Not that other countries have been able to keep up a containment regime indefinitely, but they were doing a better job of it than we were, and even they are experiencing their own virus resurgence as they start to relax controls. But the mostly (not entirely) Republican leaders in state government, following their Leader, don’t even have that level of patience, and knowing we haven’t gotten anywhere close to beating this virus, have decided that America is going to declare victory and go home.

Except we already are home. If we had achieved victory, we could leave.

It might be that the Trump Organization thinks they can live with this because unlike some people, they could actually live with this. They have a regular coronavirus testing regime in the White House and for Vice President Pence, even as they have refused to standardize testing for the nation, since, as Trump put it, “by doing all this testing we make ourselves look bad“. But Trump said that last Thursday, and this was a day after one of the presidential valets, a military man not identified, was confirmed as positive for coronavirus. Trump was reportedly “lava level mad” when he heard about this, and you know what? I would be TOO! The whole purpose of presidential security is so that the President and Vice President are protected from immediate danger. And yet less than 24 hours after this, Mike Pence’s aide, Katie Miller, tested positive for coronavirus just before his plane was about to take off, delaying his schedule by an hour. Miller is the wife of Trump advisor Stephen Miller. It is not yet determined if Stephen Miller himself got the coronavirus, because that would require a second jump between species. In response to this, Trump said, “She’s a wonderful young woman, Katie, she tested very good for a long period of time, and then all of the sudden today she tested positive. She hasn’t come into contact with me. She’s spent some time with the vice president. This is why the whole concept of tests aren’t necessarily great.” So because a prophylatic measure isn’t necessarily perfect, better not to use it at all. I think Stormy Daniels said this was pretty much Trump’s approach to condoms.

But if this is the level of security that the elites can expect in their ivory house… how safe is anybody?

Memo to Donnie: Sanitary measures to contain the spread of coronavirus, in addition to washing hands and surfaces, wearing masks in public and practicing social distancing, also include not walking around with your thumb up your ass for over two months.

But here’s the thing, whatever sense of Schadenfreude I might feel at Trump’s suffering is counterbalanced by the fact that it wouldn’t do any good. I mean really, he’s already wheezy, coughy, discolored and suffering obvious circulation problems, so if he got coronavirus, who would know? If he got it – which at this rate might be inevitable – he would either continue in oblivious denial or do what he usually does and make his position the standard that all the other Republicans have to follow if they want to stay in the Real American Patriot He-Man Woman Haters Club.

“Oh yeah, I’ve got a doozy of a virus. Nobody’s sicker than me. You see that lung I just coughed out. Ooh, that’s a beautiful lung. That I can tell you.”

Again, if even governments that don’t have their thumbs up their asses can’t contain the virus under normal conditions, we need to get serious about treating it rather than declaring victory or wishing it away. Let’s look at another issue that’s got everybody’s undies in a wad. There’s supposed to be an impending meat shortage that has already affected prices in most markets – and thus the business chances of those restaurants that are re-opening. Why is that? “It’s actually not a supply problem. It’s really more of a production issue,’ said Katherine Jacobi, President of the Nevada Restaurant Association.” Last month, Smithfield Foods had to close a major meat-processing plant in South Dakota because nearly 300 employees tested positive for COVID-19. This isn’t because the industry is getting shut down. The governor of South Dakota is a Trump supporter. Viceroy Trump, no vegetarian he, actually bothered to use the Defense Production Act to mandate that meat plants stay open, when he was reluctant to do so to boost the manufacture of testing supplies. (Or as I like to say: ‘Priorities.’) The production issue isn’t that the industry was shut down. The meat industry is essential. It’s still running. There is no evidence that the virus can be spread through packaged meat. The problem is that as plants have continued to run at the same or higher pace, more people have been getting the virus and spreading it, and plants have been shut because it is no longer feasible for those people to work. This is exactly what you would expect to happen at the current rates of infection if we do nothing, which we basically are. And that means that what happens at meat processors will happen in other industries. So rather than “recover” the economy and then deal with the virus, we need to deal with the virus and then re-open the economy. If the virus wasn’t already undermining the economy, we wouldn’t have shut it down in the first place.

In the immortal word of Billie Eilish: “Duh.”

Which leads to another private industry that a lot of people think should be public. Even before the coronavirus pandemic, hospitals were closing across the country, especially in the rural areas where Trump has usually been strongest. And part of that is because hospitals are private businesses that operate on profit motive like everything else. Part of this is that the public system is state funded and a lot of states are not funding Medicaid services. By contrast, urban hospitals rely largely on “elective” procedures to cover their margins and most of their patients are covered by employer plans, whom they can charge more than Medicare/Medicaid services. But now those hospitals are swamped with COVID-19 cases. It doesn’t help that health coverage is also a for-profit business, which for practical reasons is tied to employment for most people, and the economic shutdown means tens of millions have lost their health insurance along with their jobs.

When liberals disparage the concept of libertarian government or public services, they usually say something like “let’s privatize the fire department.” And actually, we can see from the current clusterfuck that we would be better off with a stronger, more organized federal approach to medical care and redistribution of resources. The problem is that the real reason why we would be better off also reveals why a lot of libertarians would rather privatize the fire department. The point of having less national control over everything is not that things wouldn’t be more organized under a stronger government, it’s that that would only work depending on who’s doing the organizing. A privatized fire department would in theory be worse than a public one that is not built around profit incentives. But even if the public institution were acting on profit incentives, it would make a difference if the company is run by Bill Gates versus Donald Trump. And the fact is that Trump is not a president who just happens to be a businessman, he is a businessman who just happens to have the world’s largest government in his portfolio. Because that’s the way he runs it. And putting a public resource under such a businessman means that rather than socializing our resources, you’ve taken the worst-case scenario of privatization and applied it to the entire country.

The liberal conceit is that we not only can socialize resources, but must do so, and it’s a conceit because it assumes that everyone in government is going to be civic-minded. The premise of libertarianism and (former) conservatism is that we cannot and should not socialize everything because we CAN’T trust that everyone would be civic-minded, and since there is nothing inherently different between humans in the private and public sectors, any person who would be corrupt and vicious in the private sector would be corrupt and vicious in the public sector, only in their case they would have the government’s monopoly on force and authority.

For instance, this week the Supreme Court has been hearing a case between prosecutors in the state of New York and Mr. Trump (using the Justice Department basically as his defense team) in which the prosecutors are asking for the defendant’s financial records and the defendant saying he should be immune to subpoena simply because he’s the president. A legal question which Trump’s old buddy and predecessor has already decided.

If the business sector is corrupt and out of control, there’s a balance against that: the government. But what if the government is corrupt and out of control, and is in fact taken over by corrupt businessmen? Vote them out! But what if the majority vote against the (more) corrupt party doesn’t matter due to the Electoral College? “It’s a republic, not a democracy!” And if what’s left of our checks-and-balances try to hold the corrupt Administration accountable to existing laws and standards? “They’re thwarting the will of the people who elected Our President!!”

Not like it’s going to matter, because the screaming incompetence of government under Trump is going to lead to an even bigger government under Joe Biden, in the increasingly more likely event that he’s elected. A recent New York Magazine focus takes excerpts from Biden’s brainstorming while sitting in quarantine, such as “he said he would forgive federal student-loan debt – $10,000 per person, minimum – and add $200 a month to Social Security checks.” Author Gabriel Benedetti: “And while 2009 shows that spending unprecedented amounts of money alone doesn’t necessarily make a presidency transformational, the pandemic and the economic collapse it has produced have expanded Biden’s sense of not just how much relief will be required but what will be possible to accomplish as part of that recovery. … While it’s impossible to tell where the country is headed, Biden’s camp is in the disorienting position of scaling up its laundry list of proposals to match the ambition, and the political appetite, he thinks the American people – desperate for relief – will have in January.”

And any Republican wails against all this will be taken as just more bad faith from the same people who wail about Tara Reade after over four years of worshiping Monsieur Coup de la Pousse’. These same people will look at the new New Deal, or Great Society, or whatever it’s going to be called, and they will invoke “checks and balances” and the “rule of law”, and all the Democrats will have to do is play the tapes of Adam Schiff at the impeachment trial invoking “the rule of law” to Republican Senators while they sneered and played with fidget spinners.

Thanks to “conservatives” who would rather identify with Russian autocrats than American liberals, most non-Trumpniks see any calls for “freedom” and “states’ rights” as meaning only some people’s freedom to do what they want regardless of who gets hurt.

All the Trumpniks, even the former conservatives whom I know have good brains, have rationalized their worship of the gold-plated calf as a “lesser evil” because he’s supposed to be the only thing protecting American capitalism from a takeover by socialism. Yet as we’ve seen, the capitalist economy, which Trump can only take credit for insofar as he passively chose to not interfere with what he inherited from Obama, is now ruined because of Trump’s active policy of confusion and incompetence. And his ultimate legacy, in creating a need for government assistance, government healthcare, and organized government policy, is that Donald Trump will end up doing more to create socialism in America than any president since FDR.

And that’s if he loses in 2020.

If he wins re-election, of course Trump will do that much more to turn America into a socialist country. Of course, since Trump is a self-described nationalist, his Socialism would be more of the National type.