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LINK Letters From An American 10/02/2022

Heather Cox Richardson

There’s a moment in Representative Adam Schiff’s 2021 book Midnight in Washington that jumps out. The book centers around the first impeachment of former president Trump for withholding congressionally approved funds for Ukraine to fight off Russian incursions. In managing the impeachment trial before the Senate, Schiff (D-CA) and his team had prepared thoroughly and carefully to demonstrate that Trump had, in fact, withheld the money in order to force Ukraine’s new president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to help Trump rig the 2020 election.

Trump’s team wanted Zelensky to announce that he was launching an investigation into Hunter Biden, whose father, Joe Biden, was the opponent Trump most feared for the 2020 presidential election. The media would jump at such an announcement and chew it over until by the time the election came around, voters would associate Biden with criminality, just as they had condemned Trump’s 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton, over her use of a private email server.

As Schiff prepared to summarize the powerful testimony that supported the case for impeachment, a member of his staff stopped him. Schiff recalled the staffer telling him: “They think we’ve proven him guilty. They need to know why he should be removed.”

Schiff interpreted that question to mean that senators wanted to know why they should remove him. After all, he was giving them the judges they wanted and permitting them to run the country as they wished.

Schiff’s masterful summary of the case both at the trial and in his book answered that question, explaining that senators should have taken on themselves the responsibility for removing Trump from office because he threatened the country’s national security and, if not checked, would continue to abuse his power.

In the end, only Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) voted to convict Trump of abuse of power (but not obstruction of Congress), but that one vote from “one brave man,” Schiff recalled, “had validated my belief and that of the Founders, that the people possessed sufficient virtue to be self-governing.”

But there is another interpretation of the reason senators wanted to know why Trump should be removed even though they admitted he was guilty of trying to rig an election with machinations that hurt the country’s national security: The leaders of the Republican Party had abandoned the rule of law.

After World War II, political philosopher Hannah Arendt explained that lies are central to the rise of authoritarianism. In place of reality, authoritarians lie to create a “fictitious world through consistent lying.” Ordinary people embraced such lies because they believed everyone lied anyhow, and if caught trusting a lie, they would “take refuge in cynicism,” saying they had known all along they were being lied to and admiring their leaders “for their superior tactical cleverness.” But leaders embraced the lies because they reinforced those leaders’ superiority, and gave them power, over those who did believe them.

That pattern, in which lies undermine the rule of law, seems to be going around these days. It is in the news internationally as Russian president Vladimir Putin is directly challenging international law both by taking Ukrainian territory by force and by committing war crimes. He justifies that destruction of the rule of law by claiming that sham referenda in four regions of Ukraine have made those regions Russian, and that any attempt of Ukrainians to reclaim their territory will be an attack on Russia that may require a nuclear response.

The rejection of the rule of law is also in the news at home, as Republican leaders appear to be following Trump’s lead. Tonight, New York Times reporters Edgar Sandoval, Miriam Jordan, Patricia Mazzei, and J. David Goodman explained the lies behind Florida governor Ron DeSantis’s dumping of migrants at Martha’s Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts last month.

Since Biden took office, Republicans have tried to make unauthorized immigration a key election issue. In June 2021, Texas governor Greg Abbott and Arizona governor Doug Ducey invoked the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, an agreement that lets states send aid to each other after a governor has declared a disaster or an emergency. Abbott has declared a disaster and Ducey an emergency over the influx of migrants to the U.S.-Mexico border, saying that the Biden administration is “unwilling or unable” to secure the border. They called for governors of other states to send “additional law enforcement personnel and equipment” to “arrest migrants who illegally cross the border into our territory.”

Iowa governor Kim Reynolds, Nebraska governor Pete Ricketts, and Florida governor Ron DeSantis all pledged to send law enforcement to Texas and Arizona; South Dakota governor Kristi Noem one-upped them by announcing that she would send 50 South Dakota National Guard troops to the U.S.-Mexico border and that billionaires Willis and Reba Johnson from Franklin, Tennessee, would pay for the troops.

Florida’s budget this year—signed in June—continued this trend with a $12 million fund “to facilitate the transport of unauthorized aliens out of Florida.” According to Douglas Soule of the Tallahassee Democrat, that money came from interest on the $8.8 billion Florida got from the American Rescue Plan to address the coronavirus pandemic. Because it was interest, rather than principal, it was not covered by the federal requirement to address Covid-19, as the federal money itself was.

The idea was to highlight federal transportation of “unauthorized” migrants into Florida, but by August the money was untouched because there actually weren’t large groups of migrants coming to the state. So DeSantis focused instead on Texas, where a woman the New York Times reporters identified as Perla Huerta, a U.S. Army veteran who was a combat medic and a counterintelligence agent for two decades before being discharged last month, recruited destitute migrants to go north with the promise of work. Vertol Systems, which charters airplanes and is well connected with Florida Republican politicians, was paid more than $1.5 million, but how they were hired and by whom is not clear.

The people the operation targeted were legal asylum seekers, who were provided with fake maps and misled about where they were going.

Putin has to reckon with reality, in the form of Russian men fleeing the country, protests in Dagestan and elsewhere, the international community standing firm on the law, and Ukrainian forces continuing to gain ground. Less than a day after Putin announced he had taken the Ukrainian regions, Russian troops fled from the key transport city of Lyman.

Whether DeSantis and the Republican Party will have to reckon with reality in 2022 remains unclear. But it seems unlikely that any reality check will come from Republican leaders. Just this weekend, they have refused to comment on Trump’s inflammatory statement about Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), which seemed to encourage violence against him and included a racist smear against McConnell’s wife, Trump transportation secretary Elaine Chao.

In the Washington Post, columnist Karen Tumulty concluded that while Trump was outrageous, “there is plenty of fault to go around. The Republican Party’s refusal to denounce him makes them complicit.”

HippieChick58 9 Oct 3
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Trump’s inflammatory statement about Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), which seemed to encourage violence against him

It did include a racist comment but I don't see where it encourage violence. I'll stick to the crimes since 1/5/21 as topics concerning 45's wrongdoing. He is one of those famous "Evil doers."

TBH, I have not seen Democrats ever give 45 any credit for anything so it appears, to me, that they have demonstrated exactly the same demonizing of an opponent that gop does to Democrats. In fact, this is also the case with most gop politicians outside Adam and Liz. I vote a Democratic ballot as the opposition to religion so am not as blind to the behavior of Democrats as the larger tribe. As such, I worry about the piling on effect (especially over non-crime related "events" ) becoming counter-productive. Maybe even outright destructive for Democratic chances in November. As proof I'll offer how Democrats should be walking away with this election (if we can't beat extremism of this nature then it seems obvious that we are not as hip/smart/loved as we believe ourselves to be) but polls say that we are not. IMO, we should stop pointing our fingers at them and start navel gazing.

I liked 45's tariffs on China and steel. I liked his idea to try causing change in NK by befriending Kim since hard-lining was doing no good. 45 blew any chance of that by saying they were in love. That must have turned Kim's stomach but I think 45 did that intentionally. As a gay man I remembered Fauci's mistakes with HIV, in the beginning of it, so also scoffed when it came out that he was protecting the mask supply rather than relating "The science" so the RW had a point. It got wildly out of hand because of Democratic support for Fauci. If we like it they must oppose it (just like us for them).

Somehow this will get interpreted as my having turned red and excusing 45. That's because only full discretization of someone is acceptable in the Internet age. I think it was before this age, too, but not as widely seen. Nothing can be further from truth except all The Big Lie shit. I do think Democrats could sell that truth if we were more objective about other shit, though. Just my two cents.

Trump said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has a “death wish” for supporting Democrat-sponsored bills. Inviting his followers to kill McConnell was what was interpreted as encouraging violence.

@racocn8 I don't agree with this interpretation. "Death wish" is a pretty common phrase, and a movie title, and could be said to mean political death. Of the things to concern one, Mitch's health (politically or otherwise) is not one of mine. That last sentence would get me jail time on Daily Kos.

When did Trump ever say to "Hang Mike Pence"? That's the whole point of using mafia jargon.

@racocn8 Yeah. It certainly looks that way but many, if not most, humans simply talk this way. I do. Therefore, I'm worrying more about the effect piling on might bring (up to and including disenchantment with Democrats for simply being the same as they are). I phone bank and have these conversations with younger folks and hear this complaint so I'm not making it up. If nothing they do can please us, if it's all deplorable, then how are we being more reasonable than them? It's just a thought. Votes are all I care about, not just beating them up, and people need to be finessed. Simple logic and history alone doesn't seem to be getting them.

Once upon a time, politicians were more circumspect. Trump destroyed whatever was left after Newt Gingrich. Votes don't matter anymore either now that GQP have fully embraced fascist techniques of overturning elections. That also argues against anything that resembles false equivalences.

@racocn8 Maybe. I think we still have a hope of pulling this out, because POTUS Joe and M.L. Chuck are doing so well, but the light is not strong. If we lose both Chambers of Congress I will agree with you. Even then, however, I tend to think our populace will erupt in violence and all bets are off if that happens. Violence is unpredictable so one can't speculate on outcome. If Dems lose only one Chamber then gridlock might stop the violence but not if Dems also lose in 2024. This Nov is only important for how it helps decide 2024. IMO.

The thing with the tariffs on China for me was the blow back to farmers - hog, soy and corn. Contracts with American farmers that had been worked out over years were canceled. PLUs, the gop (or at least right wing media) were selling the bullshit that China pays the tariffs when in reality it is the American consumer as it's all passed on to them.
I do understand your point but trump as a president was so far outside the norm most of the bashing was pretty justified.
I also hear ya about when you point out to dems that the dems are not all lily white. Been there myself with fellow dems.

@rainmanjr I grew up in NJ - the mob speak is every where but mostly is not well known out west.

@silverotter11 I think the tariffs largely served to piss China off. It was a psychological dig at them and that may have been useful. It may not have been. At the time China was starting to assert itself so it was a bully pushing a bully. As to who pays them you are right. As to the Farmers, most of them are Big Agra and, despite great love for John Mellencamp, fuck the whiny Farmers. They can give back some of those subsidies.

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Denounce Trumpty? They kiss his ass and lick his shit encrusted boots..

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