13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:32 am
Lash wrote:
Quote:
Instead of candidates vying to attract voters with policies for us, all they have to do is say the other guy is worse.

Leaving aside the falsehood preceding the comma, we can note that Lash herself wrote only three sentences earlier...
Quote:
I don’t think Trump can top Biden’s March to WWIII or genocide a country.
In other words, Biden is worse.

And just a few posts earlier, she wrote...
Quote:
Don’t be still dickering around, campaigning for the dirtiest SOB in American history who brought down the US
In other words, Biden is the worst politico in all of American history.

As I've noted earlier, almost everything Lash posts here is and always has been a demonstration of the intention to denigrate and to promote disaffection with Biden and the Democratic Party.
Frank Apisa
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:34 am
@Lash,
Lash wrote:

hightor wrote:

Quote:
I would never vote for Trump.

(...but I don't care if wins.)

I don’t think Trump can top Biden’s March to WWIII or genocide a country.
But I don’t vote for who I don’t want. The Lesser of Evils bs got us here.

Instead of candidates vying to attract voters with policies for us, all they have to do is say the other guy is worse.

It’s bs.
Don’t help them do that.


I don't get to agree with Lash very often, but on the bolded part of her post...I agree with enthusiasm.

She hit the nail on the head there.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:47 am
@Glennn,
Glennn wrote:

Quote:
I wonder if the power behind Biden/US is ready to grab all the oil in the Middle East.

Don't forget about Gaza's gas fields. Much like Israel's plan to remove the Gazans from their homes permanently, they've also had their eye on that for a long time. Both actions are war crimes.

It's hard to comprehend the lackey mentality that prevents someone from recognizing crimes against humanity when they see it in real time. You can identify them by their refusal to call Israel's war crimes what they are.

I feel your frustration.

But, money insulates some people from having to face these hard facts. If I was loaded, I might not have started looking at these things years ago.

If I could afford good medical care when I needed it; if I’d always had a salary job rather than hourly (like most Americans). If car trouble didn’t cause a financial emergency…. Most of the people here are insulated—and there’s no criticism for that—yet, it makes you live a different life in the same world. It’s the butterfly’s wing draft that causes so many differences in thought / attitude.

However. Now, with the extermination going on 24/7 and watching the reaction of our own govt, the goad to expand the war, Biden’s overriding Congress for extermination—but not the needs of the American people, many more people are beginning to see with the same eyes.





0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:54 am
Rick Perstein
Quote:
You Are Entering the Infernal Triangle

Authoritarian Republicans, ineffectual Democrats, and a clueless media

As a historian who also writes about the present, there are certain well-worn grooves in the way elections get written about by pundits and political journalists from which I instinctively recoil. The obsession with polling, for one. Polls have value when approached with due humility, though you wonder how politicians and the public managed to make do without them before their modern invention in the 1930s. But given how often pollsters blow their most confident—and consequential—calls, their work is as likely to be of use to historians as object lessons in hubris as for the objective data they mean to provide.

Pollsters themselves are often the more useful data to study, especially when their models encode mistaken presumptions frozen in place from the past. In 1980, for instance, Ronald Reagan’s landslide was preceded by a near-universal consensus that the election was tied. The pollster who called it correctly, Lou Harris, was the only one who thought to factor into his models a variable that hadn’t been accounted for in previous elections, because it did not yet really exist: the Christian right.

Polling is systematically biased in just that way: toward variables that were evident in the last election, which may or may not be salient for this election. And the more polls dominate discussions of campaigns and elections, the more they crowd out intellectual energy that could be devoted to figuring out those salient, deeper, structural changes conditioning political reality: the kind of knowledge that doesn’t obediently stand still to be counted, totted up, and reduced to a single number.

Another waaaaay too well-worn journalistic groove is prediction. I have probably read thousands of newspaper opinion column prognostications going back to the 1950s. Their track record is too embarrassing for me to take the exercise seriously, let alone practice it myself. Like bad polls, pundits’ predictions are most useful when they are wrong. They provide an invaluable record of the unspoken collective assumptions of America’s journalistic elite, one of the most hierarchical, conformist groups of people you’ll ever run across. Unfortunately, they help shape our world nearly as much, and sometimes more, than the politicians they comment about. So their collective mistakes land hard.

Just how hierarchical are they? How conformist? Well, one reason Timothy Crouse was able to write the most illuminating book about political journalism ever, The Boys on the Bus (1973), was because he was a playwright, who recognized what he was observing among campaign journalists as a collection of highly ritualized scripts. Like the time, after a contentious candidate debate, when members of the traveling press corps crowded around the man referred to as their “dean,” the Associated Press’s Walter Mears, as he hacked away at his typewriter. One asked, “Walter, what’s our lead?” The rest awaited his answer on tenterhooks. They needed him to tell them what they had just seen.

And how ritualized? Consider one of elite journalism’s most deeply worn grooves: the morning-after declarations, should any Democrat win a presidential election, that the Republican politics of demagogic hate-mongering has shown itself dead and buried for all time—forgetting how predictably it returns in each new election, often in an increasingly vicious form.

In 1964: When the author of the Civil Rights Act, Lyndon Johnson, defeated a Republican who voted against the Civil Rights Act, Barry Goldwater, one of the most distinguished liberal newspaper editors in the South, Sam Ragan of the Raleigh News & Observer, pronounced that all future American elections would be decided “on issues other than civil rights.” His essay quoted the Los Angeles Times’ Washington bureau chief, who affirmed that conventional wisdom by observing that henceforth, whichever party takes the Black vote would be no more predictable than who would win “freckle-faced redheads and one-armed shortstops.”

In 1976: When Jimmy Carter beat Gerald Ford, Washington’s most respected public-opinion expert, Everett Carll Ladd, said that the GOP was “in a weaker position than any major party of the U.S. since the Civil War,” because it had turned itself into an “institution for conservative believers.” He wrote that in a magazine article published in 1977. It came out in book form—poor guy—the week of the opening klaxon of the Reagan Revolution: the 1978 congressional elections, when a passel of New Right Republicans and conservative Democrats upset many of the longest-serving and beloved liberals in Washington.

In 2008: That year, I published a book called Nixonland, an account of Nixon’s brand of demagogic hate-mongering and the resistance to it in the 1960s as a crucible of our own contemporary political divisions. A Clinton White House adviser, Howard Wolfson, auditioning as a centrist pundit in The New Republic, wrote of how Obama’s imminent victory over a pol who “calls Senator Obama a socialist, trots out a plumber to stoke class and cultural resentments, and employs his Vice-President to question Obama’s patriotism by linking him to terrorists” proved that “Nixonland is dead.”
And in 2012, when Michael Lind wrote of Barack Obama’s re-election victory, “No doubt some Reaganite conservatives will continue to fight the old battles, like the Japanese soldiers who hid on Pacific islands for decades, fighting a war that had long before been lost … Any competitive Republican Party in the future will be to the left of today’s Republican Party, on both social and economic issues.”

This particular bias is rooted into elite punditry’s deepest, most dangerous groove of all: a canyon, if you will. On one side of the yawning gulf is the perennial fantasy that America is a nation fundamentally united and at peace with itself, “moderate,” “centrist,” where exceptions are epiphenomena entirely alien to settled American “norms.”

On the other side of the gulf is, well, reality.

The media habits that make it so hard to grasp that reality—that made Trump and his merry band of insurrectionists such a surprise to us—are perhaps as systematic as any foisted upon the public by state media in authoritarian nations. A little more innocent than, say, Pravda, however, because one wellspring of this stubborn fantasy, and why audiences are so receptive to it, is simple psychology. To acknowledge the alternative is to stare into a terrifying abyss: the realization that America has never not been part of the way to something like a civil war.

But suddenly, in 2024, no one can avoid acknowledging that abyss anymore. And that leaves journalism in a genuine crisis.

Generations of this incumbent, consensus-besotted journalism have produced the very conceptual tools, metaphors, habits, and technologies that we understand as political journalism. But these tools are thoroughly inadequate to understanding what politics now is.

According to polls (which, yes, have their uses, in moderation), something around half of likely voters would like to see as our next president a man who thinks of the law as an extension of his superior will, who talks about race like a Nazi, wants to put journalistic organizations whose coverage he doesn’t like in the dock for “treason,” and who promises that anyone violating standards of good order as he defines them—shoplifters, for instance—will be summarily shot dead by officers of the state who serve only at his pleasure. A fascist, in other words. We find ourselves on the brink of an astonishing watershed, in this 2024 presidential year: a live possibility that government of the people, by the people, and for the people could conceivably perish from these United States, and ordinary people—you, me—may have to make the kind of moral choices about resistance that mid-20th-century existentialist philosophers once wrote about. That’s the case if Trump wins. But it’s just as likely, or even more likely, if he loses, then claims he wins. That’s one prediction I feel comfortable with.

Journalistically, this crisis could not strike more deeply. The tools we have for making sense of how politicians seek to accumulate power focus on the whys and wherefores of attracting votes. But the Republican Party and its associated institutions of movement conservatism, at least since George and Jeb Bush stole the 2000 election in Florida, has been ratcheting remorselessly toward an understanding of the accumulation of political power, to which they believe themselves ineluctably entitled as the only truly legitimate Americans, as a question of will—up to and including the projection of will by the force of arms.

Ain’t no poll predicting who soccer moms will vote for in November that can make much headway in understanding that.

Thus the challenge I have set for myself with this column: to conceptualize and practice journalism adequate to this extraordinary state of affairs.

I should say, the challenge I set for ourselves: This project must be plural, or nothing at all. Email me ideas, complaints, corrections, criticisms—and suggested role models, for there are plenty of heroic ones to discover out there; have always been plenty of heroic ones out there—at [email protected].

A political journalism adequate to this moment must throw so many of our received notions about how politics works into question. For one thing, it has to treat the dissemination of conventional but structurally distorting journalistic narratives as a crucial part of the story of how we got to this point.

For instance, the way mainstream American political journalism has built in a structural bias toward Republicans. If one side in a two-sided fight is perfectly willing to lie, cheat, steal, and intimidate without remorse in order to win, and journalists, as a matter of genre convention, must “balance” the ledger between “both sides,” in the interest of “fairness,” that is systematically unfair to the side less willing to lie, cheat, steal, and intimidate. Journalism that feels compelled to adjudge both “sides” as equally vicious, when they are anything but, works like one of those booster seats you give a toddler in a restaurant so that they can sit eye to eye with the grown-ups. It is a systematic distortion of reality built into mainstream political journalism’s very operating system.

A recent example was one of NBC News’s articles in response to Donald Trump’s new turn of phrase in describing immigration. It was headlined: “Trump Sparks Republican Backlash After Saying Immigrants Are ‘Poisoning the Blood’ of the U.S.”

It took exceptional ingenuity for someone at NBC to figure out how to wrench one side’s embrace of race science into the consensus frame, where “both sides” “agree” that major presidential candidates should not imitate Nazis. That frame squeezes out any understanding of how Trump’s provocations rest along a continuum of Republican demonization of immigrants going back decades (“Build the dang fence,” as John McCain put it in 2010), and that most Republicans nonetheless support Trump (or candidates who say much the same things) down the line.

Pravda stuff, in its way. Imagine the headache for historians of the United States a hundred years from now, if there is a United States a hundred years from now, seeking to disentangle from journalism like that what the Republican Party of 2024 is actually like.

There is, simultaneously, another force that functions systematically within our deranged political present to render genuine understanding of encroaching authoritarianism so much more difficult. It is the opposition political party’s complex and baffling allergy to genuinely opposing.

These traditions include Democratic “counterprogramming”: actions actively signaling contempt for the party’s core non-elite and anti-elitist base of support. That’s a term of art from the Clinton years, but it has its origins as far back as the early 1950s, when Adlai Stevenson Sister Souljah’ed a meeting with party liberals by announcing himself opposed to Truman’s goal of a national health care program, derided federal funding of public housing, and came out in favor of the anti-union Taft-Hartley Act.

Another Democratic tradition associates political surrender with moral nobility. Al Gore, for example, had wanted to concede on Election Night 2000, based merely on network projections that had Bush up by 4,600 votes in Florida—and not even wait for the actual initial count, which ending up having Bush ahead by only a few hundred.

A third Democratic tradition imagines that reactionary rage can be sated with technocratic compromise. Like the response from Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer, a Jew, to Donald Trump’s incessant avowals that what Schumer and his party are really after is poisoning true America’s purity of essence: “What Donald Trump said and did was despicable, but we do have a problem at the border and Democrats know we have to solve that problem, but in keeping with our principles.”

Or like what Bill Clinton said upon signing into law Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: “After I sign my name to this bill, welfare will no longer be a political issue.” Leaving office, he told a reporter, “I really believed that if we passed welfare reform we could diminish at least a lot of the overt racial stereotypes that I thought were paralyzing American politics.”

This is the infernal triangle that structures American politics.

In one corner, a party consistently ratcheting toward authoritarianism, refusing as a matter of bedrock principle—otherwise they are “Republicans in Name Only”—to compromise with adversaries they frame as ineluctably evil and seek literally to destroy.

In the second corner, a party that says that, in a political culture where there is not enough compromise, the self-evident solution is to offer more compromise—because those guys’ extremist fever, surely, is soon to break …

And in the third corner, those agenda-setting elite political journalists, who frame the Democrats as one of the “sides” in a tragic folie à deux destroying a nation otherwise united and at peace with itself because both sides stubbornly … refuse to compromise.

And here we are.

All three sides of the triangle must be broken in order to preserve our republic, whichever candidate happens to get the most votes in the 2024 Electoral College. I have no prediction on offer about whether, or how, that can happen. All I know is that we have no choice but to try.
Lash
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:55 am
@Lash,
Since I mentioned a subset of trans people, I want to clarify that the whole alphabet community is loved by me and everyone I encountered when I worked with the Green Party. Inclusivity is #1.

That one small sports question, in my opinion, was almost designed for furor—and I don’t think it was designed organically within the trans community, though I could be wrong.

I will always support the Ls, the Gs, the Bs and any other group of people who want to do their own thing with who they want.

(Two [or more consenting] adults, yannow.)
Glennn
 
  0  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 08:57 am
@hightor,
Nah. Why vote if both trump and biden are disgusting human beings?

But when you're forced to settle on one or the other, you should vote for the one not involved in the commission of war crimes against the Gazans.

When nutanyahu quotes biblical passages about the Amalekites and proposes that the Gazans are the same Amalekites and should be wiped out, that's a red flag for a man consumed by religion and hate. And when biden seconds that proposal with material support for such a deranged man's murderous delusions of fulfilling biblical scripture, it's exactly what it looks like.

In that respect, trump is less disgusting.
izzythepush
 
  5  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 09:20 am
@Lash,
Lash wrote:


That one small sports question, in my opinion, was almost designed for furor—and I don’t think it was designed organically within the trans community, though I could be wrong.


It's absolute bollocks, nobody changes gender to make it easier to get a gold medal.

Where this has been used it's almost always been against thick set cis women.

It's just another exercise in bigotry, all the crap levelled at trans people used to be aimed at other minority groups, notably Gay and Jewish people.

The notion of the much weaker female is Victorian and comes from restrictive clothing and eating disorders.

Trans people take hormones and that makes a huge difference.

The whole sports thing is just terf bigotry.
Lash
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 09:32 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Lash wrote:
Quote:
Instead of candidates vying to attract voters with policies for us, all they have to do is say the other guy is worse.

Leaving aside the falsehood preceding the comma, we can note that Lash herself wrote only three sentences earlier...
Quote:
I don’t think Trump can top Biden’s March to WWIII or genocide a country.
In other words, Biden is worse.

And just a few posts earlier, she wrote...
Quote:
Don’t be still dickering around, campaigning for the dirtiest SOB in American history who brought down the US
In other words, Biden is the worst politico in all of American history.

As I've noted earlier, almost everything Lash posts here is and always has been a demonstration of the intention to denigrate and to promote disaffection with Biden and the Democratic Party.

Biden and the Democrats are horrible.
Biden’s actions and those results ARE worse than anything Trump has done to date.
To see you guys trying to promote him —especially in light of the genocide— is stomach churning.

But, who knows wtf Trump will do if he wins. He’s a Zionist too.
The only good thing about Trump is the media won’t anoint his crimes like they do Biden’s.

bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 09:33 am
@Glennn,
Quote:
In that respect, trump is less disgusting.


So you support the lesser of two weevils.

Ignoring the fact that Biden is no evil. And Trump is born into it. How would feel about Donnie grabbing your daughter, for example, by the hoo ha?

How would you feel about calling your hypothetical war dead dad, brother, uncle, daughter, niece, nephew, best friend, best friend's family member a loser? How might you feel if Donnie becomes a dictator. How might you feel losing your vote?

What war do you think Joe Biden is dragging us into? Arming Ukraine means our word stands for something and it'll prevent US soldiers dying over there later as he moves into other territories he claims - Norway, Poland etc - our Allies?

If you can't support a candidate, don't vote for them: write in a candidate or "none of the above".

Ask your party: Why can't you give me a candidate I can believe in? I do. If enough of us do that, change will come. I've cut off my donations to the RNC years ago. If enough of us do that, change will come.
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 09:39 am
@izzythepush,
No one changes gender to go pee with girls or boys, either.

I think the whole furor about transgendered athletes has to with the ridiculous importance we put on winning at sports. There's too much money riding on sports, including amateur sports.

I know it seems obvious that trans may have a decided leg up in women's sports, but wish there's been studies about how much.
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 10:10 am
@blatham,
Quote:
You Are Entering the Infernal Triangle


Many thanks for posting this.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 10:13 am
Quote:
Trump businesses received millions in foreign payments while he was in office, report finds
Countries including China and Saudi Arabia spent $7.8m ‘often lavishly’ at Trump properties, report by House Democrats says

Businesses tied to Donald Trump received at least $7.8m in foreign payments from 20 countries during his four years in the White House, Democratic congressional investigators said on Thursday.

House oversight committee Democrats said those payments detailed in the 156-page report are probably a fraction of the foreign payments made to the former Republican president and his family during his 2017-2021, single-term administration.

These countries spent – “often lavishly” – on apartments and hotel stays at properties owned by Trump’s family business empire, “personally enriching President Trump while he made foreign policy decisions connected to their policy agendas with far-reaching ramifications for the United States”, the report said.

The countries included China, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Malaysia.

Trump’s re-election campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He is the frontrunner for the GOP nomination for the 2024 election, despite facing 91 criminal indictments in four trials across the US.

Trump, a businessman before his election, broke with US precedent and did not divest from his businesses or put them into a blind trust when he took office, instead leaving his adult sons to manage them.

Shortly after Trump was elected to the presidency in 2016, Congress began investigating conflicts of interest and Trump’s potential violations of the emoluments clause of the US constitution, which bars the acceptance of presents from foreign states by a person holding federal elected office without congressional consent.

The investigation led to a lengthy court dispute, which ended in a settlement in 2022, at which point Trump’s accounting firm began producing the requested documents.

When Republicans took control of the House of Representatives early last year, the committee stopped requiring Trump’s accounting firm to produce documents and a US district court ended the litigation.

The report discussed four properties, less than 1% of the 558 corporate entities Trump owned either directly or indirectly as president. Trump’s accounting firm did not provide documents regarding at least 80% of Trump’s business entities, congressional investigators said.


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/04/trump-businesses-payment-house-investigation-china-saudi-arabia
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 10:39 am
@hightor,
You're very welcome. Perlstein is a treasure (as is Digby at Hullabaloo).

0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 10:55 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
@izzythepush,
No one changes gender to go pee with girls or boys, either.

You and Izzy are both correct. The "issue" of transgendered people in sports is not an actual problem at all. The first instance I came across, about 3 or 4 years ago, where it was presented as it is used in right wing agitprop now, came from Dennis Prager of "Prager U" - which isn't a university at all. As Wikipedia accurately notes...
Quote:
The Prager University Foundation, known as PragerU, is an American 501(c)(3) nonprofit advocacy group and media organization that creates content promoting conservative viewpoints on various political, economic, and sociological topics. It was co-founded in 2009 by Allen Estrin and talk show host Dennis Prager. Despite the name including the word "university", it is not an academic institution and does not confer degrees.

PragerU's videos contain misleading or factually incorrect information promoting climate change denial.[1][2] Historians and political scientists have also criticized PragerU's videos for containing misleading or inaccurate claims about topics such as slavery and racism in the United States, immigration, and the history of fascism. PragerU has been accused of promoting anti-LGBT politics.[3]


This is just a relatively new wedge issue designed to anger conservative-minded citizens regarding changes in culture as previously marginalized persons gain recognition as equals. It's a duplicate of countless previous fear-mongering campaigns from the right such as "Feminazis" or "the gay agenda". The very conservative mind does NOT like change. As William F Buckley described his mission, "To stand athwart history yelling 'Stop'".
Glennn
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 10:56 am
@bobsal u1553115,
Quote:
So you support the lesser of two weevils.

I don't support either of them. But for those like yourself who feel duty bound to participate in such games of choice, vote for the one who is involved in fewer war crimes against innocent men, women and children.
Quote:
Ignoring the fact that Biden is no evil. And Trump is born into it. How would feel about Donnie grabbing your daughter, for example, by the hoo ha?

I wouldn't like it. Why do you ask?
Quote:
How would you feel about calling your hypothetical war dead dad, brother, uncle, daughter, niece, nephew, best friend, best friend's family member a loser?

I wouldn't feel anything. I've never had unrealistic expectations of parasitic politicians, especially one who also grabs his daughter's hoo ha, or one who reportedly showered with his daughter and appears to favor advancing his unwanted physical contact onto young girls.

You must believe that biden will do in a pinch. Ha! That's what she said.
Quote:
How might you feel if Donnie becomes a dictator. How might you feel losing your vote?

Well, if the biden administration is unconditionally supporting Israel's crimes against humanity that go against the grain of the world and shocks the sensibilities of Americans, that makes him kind of a dictator, doesn't it?
Quote:
If you can't support a candidate, don't vote for them: write in a candidate or "none of the above".

If there's one who would put an immediate stop to the soulless infliction of mental and physical torture on innocent Gazans RIGHT NOW, I'd be moved. Know any candidates like that?
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 11:11 am
Quote:
Why vote if both trump and biden are disgusting human beings?

I only find one of them disgusting. But even if I did, I wouldn't have any problem choosing between them. I don't vote for the figure at the top of the ticket. I don't necessarily believe in the campaign promises made by the figure at the top of the ticket. I might even dislike, or in the case of Bill Clinton, distrust the figure at the top of the ticket. I do think about the cabinet that will be chosen. I think about the composition of Congress and how it may influence the president's actions. I think about the possibility of judicial nominations. I look at the coalitions of voters around the candidate and how their interests and expectations comport with my own. I don't vote for the winning smile or against the bad comb-over.

Garry Wills wrote:
The conscientious voter (...) asks where each man stands on the major issues he must deal with.

But how is one to find this out? If there were only one issue to be decided by the President, and only two ways of coping with it; and if the two (and only two) candidates could be found to declare, unequivocally, one for each alternative;if only those concerned about that issue and informed about it were to vote – then, and only then, would a presidential election settle a policy matter. But that never happens. There are a number of issues,and to the extent that a voter is informed and concerned he will find neither candidate agreeing with the whole range of his views on all the issues – and probably not fully representing his views on any single issue.
(...)
(H)ow does the voter express his will on the whole range of issues debated in an election? It would be relatively simple if the voter could say, "There are ten main issues that matter to me, and Candidate A takes my view, or approximates it, on six of them, while Candidate B on only four – so I'll vote for Candidate A." It doesn't work that way. For one thing, certain issues mean more to each voter; so that, to get agreement on one acutely sensitive issue, he might choose a candidate who disagrees with him on most of the other issues, or on all of them. Or a voter might an issue very dear to him, though it is not being formally considered by either candidate; and this issue could still dictate a choice. In 1968, for instance, some on the Left advocated "punitive" vote for Nixon: they wanted to punish the Democratic Party – for the war, for Chicago, for rejecting McCarthy, for Meany and Conally and Daley. They wanted to wreck the old party and build a new one for future elections; and their votes would therefore say nothing on the immediate issues to this election.

Nixon Agonistes – Part IV Chapter 2

(Transcribing this from a book is pretty inefficient with my fat fingers – Wills continues to develop this line of thinking and I highly recommend reading it in its entirety.)
Glennn
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 11:27 am
@hightor,
Quote:
I think about the composition of Congress and how it may influence the president's actions.

Really?
____________________________________________________________________________________

WASHINGTON (AP) — For the second time this month the Biden administration is bypassing Congress to approve an emergency weapons sale to Israel as Israel continues to prosecute its war against Hamas in Gaza under increasing international criticism.
____________________________________________________________________________________

So, how might Congress influence the president's actions that go against his will to supply weapons galore to Israel for the continuation of war crimes against innocent human beings?
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 11:52 am
Quote:
So, how might Congress influence the president's actions that go against his will to supply weapons galore to Israel for the continuation of war crimes against innocent human beings?

1. This is a single issue – congressional influence may not extend to every decision.
2. If emergency powers are being misused, Congress has the option of revoking them.
3. The Department of Defense said in a statement on Friday that Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken had “provided detailed justification to Congress that an emergency exists that requires the immediate sale” to Israel.
4. It looks like opposition to this has been primarily on procedural issues and not on the sale itself.
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 03:05 pm
@hightor,
Delightful to read Wills again. I was thinking of him earlier this week and wondering about his health as he's getting on and had just one contribution to the NYRB in the last year.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Reply Thu 4 Jan, 2024 04:50 pm
Trump businesses accepted more than $7.8 million from foreign states and their leaders during presidency, House Oversight Dems find. HERE
0 Replies
 
 

Related Topics

Obama '08? - Discussion by sozobe
Let's get rid of the Electoral College - Discussion by Robert Gentel
McCain's VP: - Discussion by Cycloptichorn
Food Stamp Turkeys - Discussion by H2O MAN
The 2008 Democrat Convention - Discussion by Lash
McCain is blowing his election chances. - Discussion by McGentrix
Snowdon is a dummy - Discussion by cicerone imposter
TEA PARTY TO AMERICA: NOW WHAT?! - Discussion by farmerman
 
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.17 seconds on 11/24/2024 at 07:33:59