The pseudonym "Philo Vaihinger" has been abandoned. All posts have been and are written by me, Joseph Auclair.
Showing posts with label AOC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AOC. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2020

But would that make it Trump v. Harris?

If Joe, for whatever reason, dropped out.

Bernie and his supporters would sure as heck question that, I think, if Joe was out before the convention anointed anyone.

Anybody might question that, given the GOP might well run better against a woman of color not so well known they can't paint her as a crazy radical, which they are already doing without too much trouble.

Interesting question which way AOC and the Squad would jump.

Of course, Bernie actually is a crazy radical, but he's an old and well known white guy as well as a crazy radical, and that's probably a better combination for white voters Trump needs in battleground states than a relatively little known woman of color.

Though if Bernie bumped her off the ticket that might cost him nearly all the black support he would absolutely have to have to win.

Fox News host baselessly claims that 'something's going to happen' to Joe Biden

She just went a little over the line, maybe, in course of playing her part in Fox's propaganda onslaught that Old Dodderin' and Sleepy Joe is just a Trojan horse for flaming, insane radical black woman nutjob Kamala Harris.

All of Fox's talking heads are fairly shouting it's really Trump vs Harris and Joe is at best a signature monkey for the craziest, darkest (heh, heh) elements of the "Democrat Party".

More of that by now infamous Republican projection, I'd say.

Claiming Joe will not even make it to election night is just making the prospect all the more terrifying, eh?

The Fox News opinion host Jeanine Pirro baselessly suggested on Wednesday evening that "something's going to happen" to the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Joe Biden, and that it would cause the former vice president to be removed from the ballot during the presidential election in November.

"For some reason, I just have this feeling that Joe Biden isn't going to be on the ticket," Pirro said during a Fox News segment.

"I have a sense that something's going to happen before the election and he's not even going to be on the ticket, so don't even ask me if he's going to make the four years," she added.

So far as I can tell, she actually is further to the left than Joe B, and she was that at the beginning of the campaign, at the end of the campaign, and in response to the Floyd killing, protests, and riots.

And as she so painfully and forcefully pointed out during the debates, she was and all but incontestably still is to his left of racial matters.

I am truly not sure where that puts her relative to registered Democrats or Democrat-leaning independents.

But she is definitely to the left of this guy, my very own Democratic Congressman, and apparently also to the left of my Democratic Senator.

Friday, February 7, 2020

Perhaps a successor to Michael Harrington

Ocasio-Cortez Testifies: There's A 'State Of Denial' About Poverty In US

AOC lays it down: "We do not want to recognize the level of poverty in this country because if we did, it would be a national scandal."

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Watching Bernie clips on You Tube

AOC in Iowa, campaigning for Bernie, is urging an agenda of the working class and working class power.

Socialism is the opium of lots of people, but anybody who has the balls to campaign for working people (Bernie, AOC, etc.) rather than "the middle class" has my attention.

The agenda is what it is, a modest dose of social democracy that is of immense value to tens of millions of ordinary Americans that will cost the plutes of America much more than they ever thought they would have to pay for social peace.

They are the authoritarian, almost fascist plutes.

And they pretend to be terrified by the socialism of AOC, Bernie, and an entire wing of the Democratic Party when they are merely enraged by it.

The threat is not AOC, Bernie, or their "socialism".

The threat is the billionaires who might rather sink the republic than see such advances for the working people of America, with its consequences for everybody above them in the social scale.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Bullshit and camouflage

Gene Debs was exactly the kind of socialist who knew exactly what he was about, public ownership of all or nearly all means of production, the very opposite of the capitalist market system of private ownership of all or nearly all means of production.

Bernie and many others have been lying about what socialism is, not about their campaign agendas but their background ideology and aims.

Like this guy.

Millennials support socialism because they want to make America great — but for everyone

The truth is all this talk of socialism is not doing the Democrats much good and is for sure doing them harm, playing straight into Republicans' scare propaganda.

They have since the Great Depression campaigned against progressive innovations as socialism, communism, and Marxism and campaigned against advocates or defenders of them as socialists, communists, and Marxists.

They even did that to Obama.

With them, it's always time for a new red scare.

Trump and his minions have already started on this, most conspicuously at his most recent state of the union address.

There is no significant upside and too much downside to embracing even the word "socialism" when socialism is not on the Democrats' agenda and their misuse of the word to describe what is on it only validates Republican propaganda that does the same.

Friday, December 27, 2019

So, the presidency actually is an entry level job?

AOC for president? The buzz has begun

What, now?

Nah.

In the future, after some years or a decade or so in federal elective office, sure.

A little bit of the cursus honorem is good for a would be president.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

A brilliant and learned specialist in an oddly forgotten history

Anne Applebaum, Communism, and the Cold War

Take a look at her write-up on Scammell's bio of Arthur Koestler.

And at this marvelous review of Spies.

And here is something we might share with AOC, given her personal concern with the matter.

Friday, July 12, 2019

This is Trump trying to help AOC and The Squad undermine Pelosi

Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez 'should treat Nancy Pelosi with respect': Trump

President Donald Trump on Friday renewed attacks on freshman Democratic lawmakers Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar and came to the defense of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Trump lashed out at Ocasio-Cortez for her recent remarks responding to Pelosi's criticism of the "Squad" -- the group of four freshman including Ocasio-Cortex and Omar. 

She had said Pelosi was “singling out” Democratic women of color for criticism, calling it "disrespectful."

"I think Cortez is being very disrespectful to somebody who's been there a long time," Trump said to reporters as he left the White House for fundraisers in Wisconsin and Ohio. 

"I deal with Nancy Pelosi a lot and we go back and forth and it’s fine, but I think that a group of people is being very disrespectful to her. 

"And you know what, I don’t think that Nancy can let that go on."

"But Cortez should treat Nancy Pelosi with respect,” Trump added. 

“She should not be doing what she’s doing. 

"And I’ll tell you something about Nancy Pelosi that you know better than I do. She is not a racist, okay. She is not a racist. For them to call her a racist is a disgrace."

Ocasio-Cortez told CNN Thursday that Pelosi is “absolutely” not a racist.

Phooey.

She played the race card against NP even more egregiously than KH did against Joe B.

The president was also critical of Omar saying that he doesn’t believe she should be in office.

“I'm looking at this Omar from Minnesota and If one-half of the things they're saying about her are true, she shouldn't be in office.”

By sticking up for her T makes NP's position more uncomfortable, to say the least, though he is in fact absolutely right.

Are you listening, Arwa Mahdawi?

But why?

Why is his defending her good for him and good for Republicans?

Disarray among congressional Democrats?

Making the Democrats' leadership in both houses less effective?

Heightening the visibility and power of a minority of Democrats whose loathing of "the system," of the republic, of the "deep state", of capitalism, and of the generality of white people is worn on their sleeves and utterly rejected by as close to all Republicans and Independents as makes no difference, and by most Democrats into the bargain?

Highlighting the insubordination and arrogance of a quartet of ignorant and completely inexperienced freshmen who demand that the far more experienced leadership, and indeed the majority of congressional Democrats, cave in and dance to their tune?

Helping enhance the role in the Democratic Party of people who know their agenda and their rhetoric and their legislative choices cannot win but are willing to lose and lose and lose, again, so long as they can take over the Democratic Party?

You really don't see why a Republican president might want to do these things?

Monday, July 8, 2019

These guys have chosen purity over possibility. And they clearly have no idea of respecting seniority.

By no means only on this one issue.

The Squad

Congressional approval for funds for the Trump administration to spend at the southern border has triggered open warfare between a “squad” of high-profile progressive House Democrats and party leaders they accuse of caving to a White House determined to mistreat migrant children.

Pelosi and most Democrats voted for it.

But it was close.

Ninety-five Democrats voted against Thursday afternoon's bill, while 129 supported it. 

Seven Republicans opposed the measure, with 176 in favor.

The Squaddies were by no means alone on the vote.

But they probably tweeted only for themselves.

The split became brutally evident late last month when Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts – together known as “The Squad” – voted against when Pelosi moved to pass a Senate bill that provided $4.59bn in border security funding.

. . . .

Responding on Twitter, Omar said: “A vote for Mitch McConnell’s border bill is a vote to keep kids in cages and terrorize immigrant communities.”

Tlaib declared: “If you see the Senate bill as an option, then you don’t believe in basic human rights.”

Ocasio-Cortez said: “Hell no. That’s an abdication of power.”

On Saturday, Pelosi responded in a New York Times interview, taking aim at The Squad for voting against “our bill”.

“All these people have their public whatever and their Twitter world,” she said. 


“But they didn’t have any following. They’re four people and that’s how many votes they got.”

Referring, I think, to a different vote.

In a tweeted response, Ocasio-Cortez said: “That public ‘whatever’ is called public sentiment. And wielding the power to shift it is how we actually achieve meaningful change in this country.” 


She also defended her use of social media.

The progressive-moderate split is becoming more evident and bitter.

“If the left doesn’t think I’m left enough, so be it,” Pelosi told the Times.

Referring to her long career and past defeats for progressive policy priorities, the speaker, 79, added: “As I say to these people, come to my basement. I have these signs about single-payer [healthcare] from 30 years ago.

“I understand what they’re saying. But we have a responsibility to get something done, which is different from advocacy. We have to have a solution, not just a Twitter fight.”


. . . .

“Leadership is driven by fear,” Corbin Trent, a spokesman for Ocasio-Cortez and a co-founder of Justice Democrats, told the Washington Post. 


“They seem to be unable to lead.”

“The greatest threat to mankind is the cowardice of the Democratic party,” Trent added.

Ocasio-Cortez told the Post fear of losing is beside the point for new party members.

“What’s important isn’t just winning but fighting,” she said. 


“I don’t care about losing in the short term, because we know we’re fighting for the long term.”

She is too young to appreciate that in the long run we are all just dead.

Politics is about a sequence of short runs that add up, together, to a longer run.

On Sunday, Tlaib disputed claims by acting homeland security secretary Kevin McAleenan that the additional funds are a way to get children out of CBP custody. 

But she soon turned her fire on Pelosi.

“It is very disappointing that the speaker would ever try to diminish our voices in so many ways,” she told ABC’s This Week.

Tlaib called on Pelosi to “honor the fact we are there, that 650,000 people are represented by each and every single one of us” and that “all of us have these experiences that I think have been missing in the halls of Congress. Honor that, respect that, put us at the table. Let’s come up with a solution together.”

She said she would not “support anything that is broken and that dehumanizes people”.

Pelosi, Tlaib said, should “uplift the women, especially the women of color, within your caucus … because I’ll tell you more people like us, more people like me that come out to vote, we win, all of us win.”


Just as I said: no respect for seniority.

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Personally, I'm a fan of the Speaker

Maureen Dowd:

It’s Nancy Pelosi’s Parade

“With all due respect, the press likes to make a story that is more about Democrats divided than the fact that Mitch McConnell doesn’t care about the children,’’ she [NP] said, referring to what she called “trash” stories about a supposed rift between her and Chuck Schumer. 

She also accused the press of “constantly enabling” Trump by allowing him to suck up all the oxygen and says journalists are “accomplices to their own denigration.”

“You would think that within a couple of days, 48 hours or so, of seeing that little child with her father, there would have been some challenge of conscience,’’ she said of Republicans. 


“But understand this: They don’t care.”

. . . .

The speaker, who is trying to keep the party center left, must know that getting Trump out of office is a goal that could be jeopardized by the fact that the Democrats lurched so far left in the first debates, with bilingual pandering and talk about busing and decriminalizing illegal border crossings and abolishing private health insurance.

This is the pol whose name was synonymous for decades with extreme San Francisco liberalism. 


(A “Saturday Night Live” sketch in 2006 depicted Pelosi, played by Kristen Wiig, talking to a pair of chain-and-leather-clad aides, one with a ball-gag in his mouth.) 

Now, astonishingly, the woman formerly scorned as a pinko is the voice of moderation, urging the kids to turn down the music and slow their roll or risk having a second unbearable helping of Trump.

“If the left doesn’t think I’m left enough, so be it,” she said, breezily. 


“As I say to these people, come to my basement. I have these signs about single-payer from 30 years ago. I understand what they’re saying. But we have a responsibility to get something done, which is different from advocacy. We have to have a solution, not just a Twitter fight.”

. . . .

Pelosi is womanly — often surrounded by her children and grandchildren — and yet she seems blithely unencumbered by insecurity about her gender.

This is in marked contrast to Hillary Clinton, the only other woman who rose to these heights in American politics. 


She was certainly tough enough, brainy enough and experienced enough to take on Trump. 

But she was always getting wrapped around the gender axel, ignoring Tina Fey’s advice to take a bad-ass “bitch is the new black” approach.

. . . .

Her experiences with the last two Democratic presidents were not exactly a stroll down the Embarcadero.

Bill Clinton upended his party with his reckless, selfish affair with an intern.


She must have loathed that fathead; I certainly did.

But it started when he betrayed his own party the first [and, admittedly, lesser] time, saying "The era of Big Government is over."

Barack Obama never could have scooted past Clinton Inc. without Pelosi’s well-manicured thumb on the scale for him, and he certainly could not have passed the Affordable Care Act without her muscle. 

But in the midterms that followed, Pelosi lost 63 of her foot soldiers and her gavel; some in the party felt that President Obama had failed to supply enough air cover for the members who had gone out on a limb for him after Pelosi cajoled and prodded in a manner that L.B.J. would have admired.

. . . .

If combating an inhumane Trump requires a superhuman effort, Pelosi may be just the woman to do it. 


Her staffers tell the story of how, last April, Pelosi was with a congressional delegation in Dublin, about to deliver a major address to the Irish Parliament. 

As she got into her Suburban in the motorcade, a 300-pound armored car door was accidentally closed on her right hand, crushing it in the locking mechanism.

The attending physician could offer her only ordinary Band-Aids to stop the bleeding from the wounds on her hand and Advil for a tear so bad that doctors who stitched her up afterward said that she could have lost her fingers.

Pelosi not only managed to get through the speech. She shook hundreds of hands without flinching.

When I asked her about it, she was only rueful that she couldn’t concentrate enough to speak the Gaelic she had practiced.


The show must go on, eh?

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Gingrich the Fox-beloved projector

What could or should she say but "I know you are, but what am I?"

Newt Gingrich: Ocasio-Cortez is vicious, cruel and dishonest – And determined to destroy the America we know

The entire article is nothing but lies from beginning to end, most of them being projections as well of the facts about him and his party upon her and hers.

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

This is how much Bozo and his Republican nazi emulators care about nonwhites or people not white enough

Ocasio-Cortez details 'horrifying' conditions at migrant detention facility

What Ocasio-Cortez saw inside the facility, which has been plagued by recent reports of abusive treatment of detained children, was “horrifying”, she tweeted.

She reported officers forcing women to drink out of toilets.

. . . .

With serial visits by Democratic presidential candidates and elected officials to migrant detention centers in recent days, the Trump administration has forcefully rejected claims of systemic abuse of detainees, calling them “unsubstantiated”.

. . . .

As Ocasio-Cortez visited the Texas facility, NBC News revealed an internal Department of Homeland Security report that said conditions inside an El Paso center were so dire that as early as May, border agents were arming themselves against possible riots.

Inspectors at the facility noted “only four showers were available for 756 immigrants, more than half of the immigrants were being held outside, and immigrants inside were being kept in cells maxed out at more than five times their capacity”, NBC reported.

“A cell meant for a maximum of 35 held 155 adult males with only one toilet and sink. The cell was so crowded the men could not lie down to sleep,” the report went on. “With limited access to showers and clean clothing, detainees were wearing soiled clothing for days or weeks.”

The Department of Homeland Security did not reply to a request for comment.

. . . .

However, the California congresswoman Judy Chu, also on the trip with Ocasio-Cortez, said she met a woman who had been told by a border agent: “If you want water, just drink from a toilet.”

“These are the same CBP personnel who threatened to throw burritos at members of Congress,” Chu tweeted. “Changes must be made.”

Ocasio-Cortez tweeted that migrants were being treated “like animals”.

She wrote: “This has been horrifying so far. It is hard to understate the enormity of the problem. We’re talking systemic cruelty [with] a dehumanizing culture that treats them like animals.”

Thursday, June 20, 2019

How to lie when you tell the truth, and walk away all innocent like

Ocasio-Cortez compares ICE detention to 'concentration camps'

"The United States is running concentration camps on our southern border and that is exactly what they are," Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said Monday night in an emotional Instagram live video. 

"They are concentration camps," she reiterated to her viewers, who flooded the feed with comments.

Check a dictionary.

She is strictly correct, on the most general and innocuous definition of the term.

So used, the expression does not mean "death camp" and there is no necessary implication of any particular inhumanity of fact or intention.

And in truth our border detention centers seem to compare well with refugee camps in Europe or elsewhere, packed with illegal migrants as they are.

But dictionaries also note the term is sometimes used specifically to refer to the Nazi death or work camps or camps just as bad, or more generally to camps in which conditions are notably harsh and inhumane.

And from her remarks that is the sort of meaning she intended, and she extended the claim to cover the US internment camps where the Japanese were held during WW2.

And that makes her an egregious liar about both the border camps and the internment camps.

A flap ensued, with her devout left-winger defenders doubling down stupidly, ignorantly, or just fatuously.

The more she runs her mouth the more absurd she reveals herself to be and the less I like her.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

He's doing it again

Evasively and contemptuously disguising a lifelong hatred of capitalism so intense he spent the Cold War making excuses for and defending communist regimes because they expropriated the expropriators in the name of the working masses, instituting socialism - yes, that means public ownership of the means of production - by revolution and by force.

Better that than not at all, eh?

And all the while grudgingly admitting the crimes of red totalitarian dictatorship, usually insisting on mixing in condemnations of America and capitalism in the same paragraph, if not in the same sentence.

It is no accident that his political hero is not and never was the social democrat Clement Attlee, but the socialist Eugene Debs who came to admire Bolshevik Russia.

Not to mention Castro, Che, the Sandinistas, and a host of others.

Bernie Sanders to Deliver Defense of His Democratic Socialist Philosophy

I really despise this cowardly fraud - specifically for his cowardly fraudulence.

And I have no doubt AOC and the other soi-disant democratic socialists of the Democratic Party feel pretty much the same way as he does.

I have met many people who have called themselves "democratic socialists" in my years, and every one of them hated capitalism and, during the Cold War, defended communist regimes against US opposition.

Harrington, a sincere democratic socialist who was also sincere in his hatred of communism and support for American opposition to them during those years, was a rare exception and, anyway, I never personally met him.

Friday, April 5, 2019

That's the spirit!

In a major policy speech, Senator Elizabeth Warren is calling to end the Senate filibuster. 

She is the first major presidential candidate to endorse ending the Senate’s historic [in my view unconstitutional- PV] rule which requires 60 votes to pass legislation.

Warren made her announcement at the National Action Network today. 

It came just two days after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell used the  “nuclear option” to reduce debate time of presidential nominees. 

This allowed Republicans to railroad through huge numbers of conservative judicial picks made by Donald Trump.

Now, according to Senator Warren, it’s time for Democrats to “fight back.”

“I’m not running for President just to talk about making real, structural change. I’m serious about getting it done. And part of getting it done means waking up to the reality of the United States Senate,” Warren said, before adding:

“So let me be as clear as I can. When Democrats next have power, we should be bold and clear: we’re done with two sets of rules — one for the Republicans and one for the Democrats.”

“That means when Democrats have the White House again, if Mitch McConnell tries to do what he did to President Obama, and puts small-minded partisanship ahead of solving the massive problems facing this country, then we should get rid of the filibuster.”

Warren said before that eliminating the Senate filibuster should be a topic of discussion. She wants to have a debate in the 2020 presidential campaign about whether to keep it or not.

But with Democrats like Warren talking about big ideas like the Green New Deal, Medicare for All and new tax plans, it’s become more and more clear that a minority of GOP senators could stop them, even if Democrats sweep the 2020 election, taking the House, the Senate and the presidency.

Republicans have this power because there’s no way for Democrats to put together 60 seats in next year’s elections.

. . . .

"For generations, the filibuster was used as a tool to block progress on racial justice. And in recent years, it’s been used by the far right as a tool to block progress on everything,” Warren said. 

“I’ve only served one term in the Senate — but I’ve seen what’s happening. We all saw what they did to President Obama. I’ve watched Republicans abuse the rules when they’re out of power, then turn around and blow off the rules when they’re in power.”

Other presidential candidates have not supported Warren’s position. Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) don’t want to change the filibuster.

But Warren’s endorsement today of ending the filibuster in the Senate will be sure to add it to the debate in the 2020 presidential campaign.

So Sanders wants his agenda to fail?

Because if the senate keeps the filibuster the AOC/Bernie agenda will be DOA.

On the other hand, arguably it will fail anyway.

A goodly piece of the Democratic majorities in house and senate that we hope for will be made up of people who will not support Medicare for All or Bernie's tuition plan.

People who ran in districts in which even Nancy Pelosi seems too far left, and she is not on board for the AOC/Bernie agenda, either.

Nancy Pelosi says Obamacare is best path to ‘quality, affordable’ health care

But even to get through helpful legislation those Democrats would support will be impossible against a filibuster.

And then what do they do, what does anybody do, if the courts give Bozo what he's asked for and declare every bit of the ACA unconstitutional?

Time for court packing?

Sunday, March 24, 2019

So often frank, so often right.

Forthright AOC explained in an interview how Republicans in general and Reagan in particular have used racism.

“One perfect example – a perfect example – of how special interests and the powerful have pitted white working-class Americans against brown and black working Americans in order to just screw over all working-class Americans is Reaganism in the '80s," Ocasio-Cortez said during an interview [at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas.]

In a TYT video on YouTube, the folks expand on the point, making reference to his campaign speech at Philadelphia, Mississippi, the county seat of Neshoba County notorious as the site of the murder of three civil right workers, a place at which he could have no other reason to speak than to send a very clear signal that white racists exasperated by the Democrats' support for Afro-Americans' civil and voting rights would be welcome in the GOP.

Per Wikipedia,

During his speech, Reagan said:
I still believe the answer to any problem lies with the people. 
I believe in states' rights. 
I believe in people doing as much as they can for themselves at the community level and at the private level, and I believe we've distorted the balance of our government today by giving powers that were never intended in the Constitution to that federal establishment.
And what earlier Republican, an idol of Reagan's, had taken just this sort of tack?

Why, Barry Goldwater, of course.

AOC also referred to Reagan's diatribe against "welfare queens".

"So you think about this image, 'welfare queens,'” Ocasio-Cortez continued, “and what [Reagan] was really trying to talk about… 

"He's painting this really resentful vision of essentially black women who were doing nothing, [who] were sucks on our country, right? … 

"That's not explicit racism, but it’s still rooted in racist caricature. It gives people a logical — a ‘logical’ — reason to say, 'Oh, yeah, no. Toss out the whole safety net.'"

Per Wikipedia,

The idea of welfare fraud goes back to the early-1960s, when the majority of known offenders were male.

Despite this, many journalistic exposés were published at the time on those who would come to be known as welfare queens. 

Readers Digest and Look magazine published sensational stories about mothers gaming the system.

Additionally, Ronald Reagan employed the trope of the "Welfare Queen" in order to rally support for reform of the welfare system. 

During his initial bid for the Republican nomination in 1976, and again in 1980, Reagan constantly made reference to the "Welfare Queen" at his campaign rallies.

Some of these stories, and some that followed into the 1990s, focused on female welfare recipients engaged in behavior counter-productive to eventual financial independence such as having children out of wedlock, using AFDC money to buy drugs, or showing little desire to work. 

These women were understood to be social parasites, draining society of valuable resources while engaging in self damaging behavior.

Despite these early appearances of the "Welfare Queen" icon, stories about able-bodied men collecting welfare continued to dominate discourse until the 1970s, at which point women became the main focus of welfare fraud stories.

The term was coined in 1974, either by George Bliss of the Chicago Tribune in his articles about Linda Taylor, or by Jet Magazine.


Neither publication credits the other in their "Welfare Queen" stories of that year. Taylor was ultimately charged with committing $8,000 in fraud and having four aliases.

She was convicted of illegally obtaining 23 welfare checks using two aliases and was sentenced to two to six years in prison.

During the same decade, Taylor was additionally investigated for murder, kidnapping, and baby trafficking.

Stories of her activities were used by Ronald Reagan, starting with his 1976 presidential campaign, to illustrate his criticisms of social programs in the United States.

I think nowadays we see a little better what that Bitburg visit was all about, too.

TYT also mentioned Reagan's removal of sanctions on the Apartheid regime of South Africa, a regime ardently defended back in the day by William Buckley and his National Review, and his bitter private opposition to the creation of Martin Luther King day, a measure he signed only because it was passed with veto-proof majorities.

When Reagan was reelected I was plunged into gloom for days.

See this for more.

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Capitalism with a human face.

Bernie has indeed been a transformative figure.

He has made the Democratic Party more insistent on furthering progressive reforms that are mostly of the sort that have lived in the hearts of progressives since TR's run of 1912, and in the hearts of liberals since the New Deal.

The broad masses of the Democratic Party are in love with his and AOC's agenda, though the bulk of the party's office holders have not yet entirely embraced it.

But he did not, will not, and has not even tried to transform the Democratic Party into a rerun of the old Socialist Party USA.

About that Douthat is wrong.

Bernie Sanders, Socialism’s Reagan?

Bernie Sanders' hero is Gene Debs, the SP candidate of 1912, and not TR and not Wilson.

And despite his dishonest reticence his socialism is the real thing, public or collective ownership of the means of production, and his hatred of capitalism is real, too.

Probably, AOC is the same way, though her heroes are likely more Latin American that his.

All the same, the AOC/Bernie agenda is not about abolishing capitalism in America, and though it is very widely popular among Democrats those same Democrats are no more interested in the abolition of capitalism than Howard Schultz or Michael Bloomberg.

But despite the dishonesty of Bernie and of many of his supporters, most Americans already know what socialism really is, and the further we get into the campaign the more the Republicans will gladly inform those who don't yet actually get it.

And the more Americans who get it, the more unpopular with actual voters the word "socialism" will be.

So what we Democrats need is a Democratic nominee who embraces the AOC/Bernie agenda without embracing either socialism or "socialism".

Because what Democrats and a whole lot of other people actually want is not socialism but capitalism with a human face.

Of course, if Bernie is the nominee I will absolutely vote for him.

But I would rather someone else carried our water.

Someone who knows better than to honestly campaign for that agenda while campaigning to dishonestly rehabilitate socialism by lying about both it and "socialism".

That is a mug's game and does no good while playing into the hands of lying Republicans who always tell the same lies Trump and the White House and even Douthat are already telling.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Embracing the baloney

For a reality appetizer video, go here.

After which, read on.

'This primary is going to be a choice between socialism and a more just form of capitalism'

Chris Cillizza surrenders to the rhetorical strategy that emerged during the campaign of 2016, draining "socialism" of its actual meaning and using it as a label not only for the more progressive candidates for the Democratic nomination - actual and self-professed democratic socialists - but also for their more progressive agenda.

Some talking heads on MSNBC back then decided that owning the word and insisting it refer to any public ownership of any organization providing any good or service, at all, rather than public ownership of all the means of production, was the best way to deal not only with resurgent and false right wing denunciations of Democrats, their current agenda, and all the achievements of more than a century of progressive politics, as socialists and socialism but with Bernie's open profession of socialism.

They repeatedly cited public ownership of schools, hospitals, fire departments, police forces, bridges, and roads, calling each of these instances of socialism.

In this way they explained politics could be thought of as in part a matter of quarreling over what means of production ought to be in public hands rather than private, "all" and "none" being at the communist and libertarian opposite ends of a spectrum representing differing ratios or mixtures of the two - differing dosages of socialism and capitalism.

This move was dishonest then and is so now in that both Bernie and AOC have a well-known history with the DSA and routinely claim to be democratic socialists, meaning by that the real thing, and definitely not meaning the watered down Marxism and even post-Marxism of European Social Democracy, nowadays just a more advanced progressivism than our own, that both have urged America needs a greater dosage of.

And most actual socialists historically have referred to any economy featuring anything much less than public ownership of all the means of production as capitalist and sometimes to those in which some of the means were publicly owned as "mixed economies".

Democrats in general, whether or not they embrace all or part of the Bernie/AOC agenda and however appalled they might be at Republican projects of privatization of schools, roads, and prisons, overwhelming are not socialists and reject both socialism and "socialism".

The increasing acceptance of "socialism" among the young, including young Democrats, is doubtless due in some part, perhaps entirely, to the increasingly widespread use of "socialism" as those MSNBC talking heads used it.

And while those talking heads consistently endorsed the spreading tendency they had themselves helped to create to understand "socialism" in that way, they also agreed with Bernie's and AOC's assertions that America needs a significant dose of European Social Democracy.

Though apparently accepting their usage of "socialism", Chris Cillizza does not seem quite on board for Social Democracy or the Bernie/AOC agenda.

Actually, the environmentalist parts aside, the Bernie/AOC agenda itself is not much different from what TR ran on in 1912.

TR was not the Socialist Party candidate, nor was his the socialist agenda, of that year.

That distinction belonged to Bernie's professed political mentor and personal idol, Gene Debs, who advocated actual socialism, public ownership of all the means of production, or at the very least what was then called "the commanding heights" of the economy, including but not at all limited to the entire financial, transportation and steel industries.

But neither Bernie nor AOC is running on that agenda, nor have they said a word about it, though last time out Bernie did often give angry vent to his evident and sincere loathing of capitalism, in that way at least revealing his continued adherence to the real socialism of his mentor, usually at the same time denouncing the Democratic Party and the American political "system" with equal fervor.

TR flat out rejected socialism, and did so by its name, and was probably the most progressive of the other three candidates that year, and Taft the least.

In any case, since nobody is actually running on an agenda of flat out socialism, the primaries will not be a choice for Democrats between socialism and "a more just form of capitalism".

It will be, so far as the agendas go, a choice among different visions of the latter, with differing doses of concession to feasibility in a divided country and a divided congress.

But so far as candidates go, yes, it will be a choice between supporters, at least in their hearts, of out and out socialism on the one side and supporters of capitalism - "a more just form of capitalism" - on the other.

No, it's not President Donald Trump. 

(You probably figured that out from the "more just form of capitalism" part of it.)

It's actually from former Maryland Rep. John Delaney, who has been running for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination since, approximately, 1991. 

And while Delaney is a long shot to be a long shot in this race, he's not the only one who is thinking about the two lanes of the Democratic primary fight that way.

"I will tell you I am not a democratic socialist," California Sen. Kamala Harris said during a campaign stop in New Hampshire on Monday. 

And in a CNN town hall on Monday night, another Democrat, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, was careful to make her skepticism of things like "Medicare for All" and the "Green New Deal" very clear.

What you see in all of that is a clear line being drawn between Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who announced his presidential bid formally on Tuesday, and the looming figure of New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez on one side, and the likes of Klobuchar and, assuming he runs, former Vice President Joe Biden on the other.

All the other candidates in the race fall somewhere along that spectrum -- roughly like this:

Sanders   Warren   Gabbard   Castro   Gillibrand   Booker   Harris   Klobuchar   Biden

Actually, with her wealth tax and her idea of putting workers on corporate boards, Warren's agenda is as aggressive as theirs and maybe in some ways more so.

And given she has shown as much as or more rhetorical heat denouncing "the system", it's possible she deserves the label "socialist" as much as Bernie does.

I don't know enough about the others from Booker leftward on the list to say.

What about Sherrod Brown?

From Booker leftward, the candidates are, broadly speaking, in favor of the "Green New Deal" and "Medicare for All." 

 . . . .

From Harris rightward, there is a healthy skepticism of the practicality (and political savvy) of backing those massive government programs.

Still, the Republicans and the conservative movement did invite this, what with their endless denunciations of all things progressive as socialism, Marxism, cultural Marxism, and even communism since the days of the New Deal.

The young and the ignorant for whom the actually existing Communism is ancient history were perfectly set up by the revival of that sort of rhetoric during the campaign of 2016.

Chris Hayes, Lawrence O'Donnell, and the others had an easy time of it selling their redefinition.

MSNBC just now talked about how thousands of Bernie supporters in key states Hillary lost went for Trump instead of her.

Not really a surprise, considering how both of them yelled about the rigged economic system, the evils of free trade, the rigged political system, and the stagnation of the working class.

And how much both of them claimed the two major parties were corrupt and in cahoots with a free trade loving plutocracy that cared only for itself.

Too, it was during his visits to Pennsylvania that Trump promised to strengthen both Medicare and Social Security, and denounced the Democrats for wanting to subvert them.

PS.

Of course, even the two most popular items on the original Bernie agenda, tuition free education at public colleges and universities and Medicare for All, are impossible without undoing pretty much all of the Republican tax cut, removing the cap on the Social Security tax (or is it the Medicare tax?), and boosting way up the marginal income tax rate for the higher and highest brackets.

And all of it is impossible without getting rid of the filibuster.

Politicians and the voters at large have to learn that elections have consequences, for real.

As for the wealth tax, all of the good it might do and less of the harm can be accomplished by putting the government back into breaking up too large corporate entities into smaller entities less willing or able to extravagantly reward their executives or their owners.

And just say no to worker-control.

Monday, February 4, 2019

Head Scratcher

If Trump wins in a three way race that means he and Schultz together draw a majority of the votes.

That would work for Schultz, whether or not he would rather put himself in the White House than Bozo, since it's pretty clear he entered the race primarily to keep the Bernie/AOC agenda out of the White House.

But it is bizarre given that same Bernie/AOC agenda enjoys the support of large majorities of the American public.

So who are the American supporters of the Bernie/AOC agenda who would prefer either Schultz or Bozo to a Democrat wedded to that very agenda?