I would have thought the reason Graham, McCarthy, et al clung to Trump is because they're sharp enough to realize their own voters like Trump one helluva lot more than them, and those voters would NEVER FORGIVE them if they didn't suck up to Trump whenever ordered to do so. I mean, it's not as if those voters believed Graham, McCarthy, . . . had spines.
It must be nice, as a politician, to just be able to make stuff up and have your voters nod along to whatever crazy bullshit you decide to blab. Other politicians might have to do research, or read stuff, or have a team of employees and interns who spend their days looking up facts.
No the modern Republican party. Just say whatever comes to mind. Invent conspiracies. Accuse aliens. Blame Mecha-Satan.
LOL! The ultra-right's "savior" for Twitter has changed his mind and won't buy Twitter. Lord, the right's grifters just keep conning the people dumb enough to believe them.
I remember during Trump's tenure when people were arguing about whether it would be best for Trump to be impeached (for, say, obstruction of justice, or one of his other myriad abuses of power) or voted out of office, the general consensus seemed to be the latter. A lot of smart people made eloquent defenses for this position - I particularly recall James Comey as a prominent example, among many.
I, however, strenuously disagreed with this position. Ironically, this was where the whole idea of "we're a republic, not a democracy" was supposed to apply, despite how often this principle is abused in Trump's defense.
The United States is indeed a republic, as is basically every real-world democratic nation, and that means that elected representatives have a duty, as Edmund Burke once noted, to exercise judgement on behalf of the people who elected them. They are not there to be a vessel for every ignorant notion to which the people fall captive. Our Founding Fathers, in particular, were clear-minded about the importance of this.
In particular, the United States has long been relied upon for foreign policy continuity, if not complete consistency, despite the inherently volatile nature of politics in a democracy. Obviously different administrations have come to different conclusions about specific actions and points of focus, and some of our most critical decisions have been worthy of a great deal of criticism, to say the least.
But the broad strokes of our philosophy have been consistent - America is the leader of the free world and has long been the principle benefactor and guarantor of the global international order. Even presidents like Obama and Biden who have sought to diminish our influence in some areas (the Middle East) have sought to bolster it elsewhere (the Pacific rim). We successfully kept short-sighted isolationists out of office for years before Trump, despite there undeniably being a constituency for such an outlook.
Domestically, the strength of our democracy had long belied the volatile nature of our polity, the American swagger and indivudualistic character, and the hot-headed arrogance and bold disruptiveness of many of our most visible public figures. In part this had been due to our superior standard of living in the world - talk is cheap, and rocking the boat unnecessary when you've got it good.
But a big part of our stability, both domestically and internationally, has been the strength of our institutions. They had long been the marvel of the world, with our unblemished record of peaceful transitions of power from one presidential administration to the next being among their more impressive accomplishments. They were the buffer against the destructive, raw passions of a democratic polity, and we relied on them for this, despite all of our most populist political rhetoric.
In the end, this is why I thought Trump needed to be impeached. Our people already had the chance to make the right choice, and failed. Granted, it was a minority of our people, aided by one of our most dysfunctional institutions (the Electoral College) at that. But this was all the more reason why it was important to demonstrate that the strength of American institutions and constitutional guardrails was undiminished in the face of a populist demagogue. That we weren't so easily usurped by a con-man with a devoted following, that we weren't doomed to four years under someone manifestly unfit for office because of a fluke election result, that other American institutions could still compensate for a breach of one of the more vulnerable ones.
Yes, ultimately the American people voted Donald Trump out of office. Barely. But we disgraced ourselves in the eyes of the world by failing to prevent this man from running for office after committing the most obviously impeachable act in our nation's history. Once again, our institutions proved feckless and not up to the task of defending us from a clear threat to our democracy. The world sees Donald Trump waiting in the wings again and continues to eye us with suspicion, or at best, guarded optimism. And who can blame them? The "American people" are still a danger to the world.
Today, I am jealous of our friends across the pond. They handled their business, the way we should have. Like a republic, not a democracy.
"He spouts falsehoods “like he’s breathing,” this adviser said—so much so that his own campaign stopped believing him long ago.
“He’s lied so much that we don’t know what’s true,” the person said, adding that aides have “zero” trust in the candidate. Three people interviewed for this article independently called him a “pathological liar.”
Gee, Herschel sounds just like his godfather. A real chip off the old block.
Ummm….. does this mean it’s safe to hope we are not all doomed? That feels dangerous like Lucy and the football. Hard to imagine the world without the Trump doom cloud hanging over it, sucking all the hope out of the world. One ray of hope after seven years of doom. Maybe still a little soon. But it opens the possibility…….
Last I checked, the Constitution doesn't mention sex. Considering how randy some of the Founders were, I think the ultra-conservatives would be shocked how liberal they were!
The "Ground Truths in Ukraine" message is correct, which is why I said we should have Kuwait '91ed all of Putin's forces in Ukraine in March. We didn't do that, and now we have the inflation, and the resulting interest rates and food/energy crises associated with them. We reap what we sow folks.
One big difference is that the Ukraine doesn't have oil coming out of the ground. While I agreed in principle with Kuwait, that George Bush had the sense to limit it, unlike his son!
Seems to me Ukraine believed their 'Putin ain't gonna attack us' hype 'til Putin's troops crossed into Ukraine territory, even though it was insanely obvious what Putin was gonna do.
The US and her allies had to wait, too, to send Ukraine much needed defensive weapons until Putin invaded Ukraine simply because any extra materiel movement on our part would've forced Putin to start his invasion sooner.
Once he invaded we couldn't just bomb the shit out of the Russians, primarily out of fear of what ol' Vlad's potential response would be.
Now, if Ukraine were a NATO member, we'd have been justified in doing just that. All for one, one for all...
But they weren't, so our hands were, once again, tied.
The inflation and the banking stuff was gonna happen no matter what (because of the world's economic recovery from COVID), and the food/energy stuff were contingent solely on the whims of ol' Vlad.
And Europe really needs to take the lead in this because they will die next (before us, iow).
But it is more than time for a few stray bombs to hit Russian towns or Vlad's palaces. This won't stop until there are a few such mistakes to get people's attention. The thing is, this is "you can fight now or you can fight next" with people who only understand fighting.
Kuwait wasn't a NATO member, yet there we were. Neither was Somalia. Neither was Bosnia. Neither was Yugoslavia. Neither was Libya. And neither of those countries carried the degree of economic consequences that Ukraine did. We've justified non-NATO intervention against aggressor nations/groups jussssssttt a time or two before. A country need not have the cloak of Article V protection to warrant US--or even NATO--intervention on their behalf. Our history proves that.
That was the projected scenario for Iraq and Afghanistan in 2003, too. We could add Vietnam since many NCOs said the US could have won that war in jiffy if the military was actually allowed to fight the war.
I really don't want to be fair to this Masters idiot, but:
"Also on the CrossFit chat room, Mr. Masters, then 20, argued that Iraq and Al Qaeda did not “constitute substantial threats to Americans.”
Depends on the definition of 'substantial' of course, but compared to Russia and right wing extremism, I'd say he actually wasn't wrong in what looks like 2006.
Since 2006 Iraq hasn't and isn't in a position to threaten global security or induce a famine that could claim millions of lives. And Al Queda, for all the trouble they've caused since then couldn't even dream of breaching the US capital and almost toppling democratic government in the US, nor do the seem capable of carrying out terror attacks on about a monthly basis on US soil.
For the rest, to hell with that guy and everything he is and represents.
I guess all those political consultants working for Blake Master, Hershel Walker and the rest of the "Island of Misfit" GOP candidates need to read Tim Miller's book.
On a different subject, when did the media anoint Bill Bradley to be Bill Clinton's Democratic successor in 2000? It didn't happen. Sure, Bradley enjoyed an impressive lead in primary polls against Gore. But once Team Gore focused, they beat Bradley by 2 points in New Hampshire and, despite a close loss to a sitting Vice President, the media left Bradley for dead. Yup, I was for Gary Hart (1984 vintage), before I was for Bill Bradley and I do think we'd be in a better place if either were elected (warts and all).
David French wrote this week that liberals are concerned about men being too toxic and conservatives are responding with, let me show you toxic masculinity. The right is now obsessed with power for power's sake and then using that power to squash the libs. Not for making America great, with first rate infrastructure, education, and quality of life (I am using the term literally, not in its MAGA usage), but just to be petty.
I could pick out the most noxious far-left pronouncements and declare that "many liberals have thought the same thing for decades" even if they haven't said it -- but I wouldn't do that, because it isn't intellectually defensible.
Reagan gave a states' rights speech in Phildelphia MS. Nixon had the Southern Strategy. HW pretended rap caused crime. Buckley said segregation was good. Buchanan gave an openly racist speech at the 1992 GOP Convention. Limbaugh and Carlson embodied conservative media. Conservatives elected Trump too
You know, I have to wonder what the coattails on other GOP candidates folks like Walker, Oz, Masters, and to a lesser extent Vance will have? Each is problematic in their own, perverse, normally politically toxic way...will that lead to damage to downballot republicans? Can only hope
I would have thought the reason Graham, McCarthy, et al clung to Trump is because they're sharp enough to realize their own voters like Trump one helluva lot more than them, and those voters would NEVER FORGIVE them if they didn't suck up to Trump whenever ordered to do so. I mean, it's not as if those voters believed Graham, McCarthy, . . . had spines.
Re: RonAnon
It must be nice, as a politician, to just be able to make stuff up and have your voters nod along to whatever crazy bullshit you decide to blab. Other politicians might have to do research, or read stuff, or have a team of employees and interns who spend their days looking up facts.
No the modern Republican party. Just say whatever comes to mind. Invent conspiracies. Accuse aliens. Blame Mecha-Satan.
Sounds relaxing, honestly.
LOL! The ultra-right's "savior" for Twitter has changed his mind and won't buy Twitter. Lord, the right's grifters just keep conning the people dumb enough to believe them.
I remember during Trump's tenure when people were arguing about whether it would be best for Trump to be impeached (for, say, obstruction of justice, or one of his other myriad abuses of power) or voted out of office, the general consensus seemed to be the latter. A lot of smart people made eloquent defenses for this position - I particularly recall James Comey as a prominent example, among many.
I, however, strenuously disagreed with this position. Ironically, this was where the whole idea of "we're a republic, not a democracy" was supposed to apply, despite how often this principle is abused in Trump's defense.
The United States is indeed a republic, as is basically every real-world democratic nation, and that means that elected representatives have a duty, as Edmund Burke once noted, to exercise judgement on behalf of the people who elected them. They are not there to be a vessel for every ignorant notion to which the people fall captive. Our Founding Fathers, in particular, were clear-minded about the importance of this.
In particular, the United States has long been relied upon for foreign policy continuity, if not complete consistency, despite the inherently volatile nature of politics in a democracy. Obviously different administrations have come to different conclusions about specific actions and points of focus, and some of our most critical decisions have been worthy of a great deal of criticism, to say the least.
But the broad strokes of our philosophy have been consistent - America is the leader of the free world and has long been the principle benefactor and guarantor of the global international order. Even presidents like Obama and Biden who have sought to diminish our influence in some areas (the Middle East) have sought to bolster it elsewhere (the Pacific rim). We successfully kept short-sighted isolationists out of office for years before Trump, despite there undeniably being a constituency for such an outlook.
Domestically, the strength of our democracy had long belied the volatile nature of our polity, the American swagger and indivudualistic character, and the hot-headed arrogance and bold disruptiveness of many of our most visible public figures. In part this had been due to our superior standard of living in the world - talk is cheap, and rocking the boat unnecessary when you've got it good.
But a big part of our stability, both domestically and internationally, has been the strength of our institutions. They had long been the marvel of the world, with our unblemished record of peaceful transitions of power from one presidential administration to the next being among their more impressive accomplishments. They were the buffer against the destructive, raw passions of a democratic polity, and we relied on them for this, despite all of our most populist political rhetoric.
In the end, this is why I thought Trump needed to be impeached. Our people already had the chance to make the right choice, and failed. Granted, it was a minority of our people, aided by one of our most dysfunctional institutions (the Electoral College) at that. But this was all the more reason why it was important to demonstrate that the strength of American institutions and constitutional guardrails was undiminished in the face of a populist demagogue. That we weren't so easily usurped by a con-man with a devoted following, that we weren't doomed to four years under someone manifestly unfit for office because of a fluke election result, that other American institutions could still compensate for a breach of one of the more vulnerable ones.
Yes, ultimately the American people voted Donald Trump out of office. Barely. But we disgraced ourselves in the eyes of the world by failing to prevent this man from running for office after committing the most obviously impeachable act in our nation's history. Once again, our institutions proved feckless and not up to the task of defending us from a clear threat to our democracy. The world sees Donald Trump waiting in the wings again and continues to eye us with suspicion, or at best, guarded optimism. And who can blame them? The "American people" are still a danger to the world.
Today, I am jealous of our friends across the pond. They handled their business, the way we should have. Like a republic, not a democracy.
"He spouts falsehoods “like he’s breathing,” this adviser said—so much so that his own campaign stopped believing him long ago.
“He’s lied so much that we don’t know what’s true,” the person said, adding that aides have “zero” trust in the candidate. Three people interviewed for this article independently called him a “pathological liar.”
Gee, Herschel sounds just like his godfather. A real chip off the old block.
Ummm….. does this mean it’s safe to hope we are not all doomed? That feels dangerous like Lucy and the football. Hard to imagine the world without the Trump doom cloud hanging over it, sucking all the hope out of the world. One ray of hope after seven years of doom. Maybe still a little soon. But it opens the possibility…….
Off topic - Supreme Court - been listening to a lot of discussion that Dobbs decision opens up review on gay marriage, contraception, etc.
Does the Constitution spell out our (heterosexual) right to have sex at all? Masturbation? Sex outside of marriage?
Last I checked, the Constitution doesn't mention sex. Considering how randy some of the Founders were, I think the ultra-conservatives would be shocked how liberal they were!
The articles by Reuben F. Johnson in today's Bulwark and Mark Liebovich in the Atlantic are outstanding. Many thanks for the heads-up.
Possible typo, Charlie: "This does mean that Masters is actually a Nazi, Chait writes."
It doesn't seem to fit the context of the block quote that follows it. It's also scary as shit, accurate or not, but that's another show.
The "Ground Truths in Ukraine" message is correct, which is why I said we should have Kuwait '91ed all of Putin's forces in Ukraine in March. We didn't do that, and now we have the inflation, and the resulting interest rates and food/energy crises associated with them. We reap what we sow folks.
One big difference is that the Ukraine doesn't have oil coming out of the ground. While I agreed in principle with Kuwait, that George Bush had the sense to limit it, unlike his son!
Seems to me Ukraine believed their 'Putin ain't gonna attack us' hype 'til Putin's troops crossed into Ukraine territory, even though it was insanely obvious what Putin was gonna do.
The US and her allies had to wait, too, to send Ukraine much needed defensive weapons until Putin invaded Ukraine simply because any extra materiel movement on our part would've forced Putin to start his invasion sooner.
Once he invaded we couldn't just bomb the shit out of the Russians, primarily out of fear of what ol' Vlad's potential response would be.
Now, if Ukraine were a NATO member, we'd have been justified in doing just that. All for one, one for all...
But they weren't, so our hands were, once again, tied.
The inflation and the banking stuff was gonna happen no matter what (because of the world's economic recovery from COVID), and the food/energy stuff were contingent solely on the whims of ol' Vlad.
And Europe really needs to take the lead in this because they will die next (before us, iow).
But it is more than time for a few stray bombs to hit Russian towns or Vlad's palaces. This won't stop until there are a few such mistakes to get people's attention. The thing is, this is "you can fight now or you can fight next" with people who only understand fighting.
Kuwait wasn't a NATO member, yet there we were. Neither was Somalia. Neither was Bosnia. Neither was Yugoslavia. Neither was Libya. And neither of those countries carried the degree of economic consequences that Ukraine did. We've justified non-NATO intervention against aggressor nations/groups jussssssttt a time or two before. A country need not have the cloak of Article V protection to warrant US--or even NATO--intervention on their behalf. Our history proves that.
I am not sure that countries outside NATOs area of operation should be used as examples of non-NATO countries for purposes of this discussion.
None of the countries you mentioned are/were members of the Nuclear Bomb Club, are they?
When's the last time the US/NATO bombed the army of a nuclear power?
Your proposal would be the first, wouldn't it?
Ol' Vlad has mentioned, more than once, that he has a nuclear arsenal and that he ain't afraid to use it.
Is he bluffing?
Who knows...
But the threat has been issued, so that merits caution.
Right?
US Navy SSNs/SSGNs could clean that pond up quicker than a Libyan coastline. Just sayin'
That was the projected scenario for Iraq and Afghanistan in 2003, too. We could add Vietnam since many NCOs said the US could have won that war in jiffy if the military was actually allowed to fight the war.
I really don't want to be fair to this Masters idiot, but:
"Also on the CrossFit chat room, Mr. Masters, then 20, argued that Iraq and Al Qaeda did not “constitute substantial threats to Americans.”
Depends on the definition of 'substantial' of course, but compared to Russia and right wing extremism, I'd say he actually wasn't wrong in what looks like 2006.
Since 2006 Iraq hasn't and isn't in a position to threaten global security or induce a famine that could claim millions of lives. And Al Queda, for all the trouble they've caused since then couldn't even dream of breaching the US capital and almost toppling democratic government in the US, nor do the seem capable of carrying out terror attacks on about a monthly basis on US soil.
For the rest, to hell with that guy and everything he is and represents.
I guess all those political consultants working for Blake Master, Hershel Walker and the rest of the "Island of Misfit" GOP candidates need to read Tim Miller's book.
On a different subject, when did the media anoint Bill Bradley to be Bill Clinton's Democratic successor in 2000? It didn't happen. Sure, Bradley enjoyed an impressive lead in primary polls against Gore. But once Team Gore focused, they beat Bradley by 2 points in New Hampshire and, despite a close loss to a sitting Vice President, the media left Bradley for dead. Yup, I was for Gary Hart (1984 vintage), before I was for Bill Bradley and I do think we'd be in a better place if either were elected (warts and all).
Poor Kevin McCarthy. He’s still not going to be Speaker even with all the Trump asskissing. Elise Stefanik is going to snatch it from him this time.
Heaven help us. She’s smarter and more manipulative than he, not to mention grasping and ruthless. He’s merely a simpering fool without a spine.
David French wrote this week that liberals are concerned about men being too toxic and conservatives are responding with, let me show you toxic masculinity. The right is now obsessed with power for power's sake and then using that power to squash the libs. Not for making America great, with first rate infrastructure, education, and quality of life (I am using the term literally, not in its MAGA usage), but just to be petty.
American conservatives have been this way since at least the Know Nothings
The AZ Nazi is just saying aloud what many conservatives have thought for decades
I could pick out the most noxious far-left pronouncements and declare that "many liberals have thought the same thing for decades" even if they haven't said it -- but I wouldn't do that, because it isn't intellectually defensible.
Reagan gave a states' rights speech in Phildelphia MS. Nixon had the Southern Strategy. HW pretended rap caused crime. Buckley said segregation was good. Buchanan gave an openly racist speech at the 1992 GOP Convention. Limbaugh and Carlson embodied conservative media. Conservatives elected Trump too
You know, I have to wonder what the coattails on other GOP candidates folks like Walker, Oz, Masters, and to a lesser extent Vance will have? Each is problematic in their own, perverse, normally politically toxic way...will that lead to damage to downballot republicans? Can only hope
I’m hoping between Oz and Mastriano not a Republican anywhere in PA wins.
If fracking only