Is too so a victory for hatefulness

Nov 11th, 2016 11:47 am | By

Another way I don’t agree with Robert Reich’s take. This piece is in AlterNet and it’s either identical to the one in the Guardian or almost identical.

What happened in America Tuesday should not be seen as a victory for hatefulness over decency. It is more accurately understood as a repudiation of the American power structure.

I wish.

For one thing – what sense does it make to claim it’s more accurately understood as a repudiation of the American power structure when Trump exploited that power structure to get rich as fuck?? Just being vulgar doesn’t make you not part of the power structure. Just being “an outsider” in the sense that you’ve always worked for your own profit doesn’t make you not part of the power structure. Being sexist and racist and a hateful bully doesn’t make you not part of the power structure. Trump is part of that power structure, and he’s certainly not any kind of friend of the powerless. He calls powerless people losers.

For another – again, average income of Trump voters is higher than Clinton’s, not lower, so how would that work exactly?

For another – many Trump fans may have thought they were striking a blow against the American power structure, but that doesn’t rule out their being also up to their eyes in hatefulness.

For one more, Trump’s conspicuous noisy relentless hatefulness didn’t prevent him from being elected, so yes, in fact, his election is a victory for hatefulness. That’s a major reason it is such a bad terrible horrifying thing.



Different

Nov 11th, 2016 10:47 am | By

Apposite.



Backsies

Nov 11th, 2016 10:10 am | By

President Pussygrabber tweets again.

Nine hours between the two. I suppose somewhere in those nine hours one of his handlers reminded him he needed to start acting presidential now.

Good save.



These anarchists

Nov 10th, 2016 5:58 pm | By

Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke has been rejoicing at Trump’s win and denouncing protesters on Twitter. He’s a candidate for head of the Department of “Homeland Security.” Another very bad man.

Wrong. We’re allowed to protest, and Sheriff Clarke doesn’t get to decide whether our reasons are legitimate or not. We’re allowed to protest and that’s all there is to it.



The wages of cruelty

Nov 10th, 2016 5:24 pm | By

Another reason Trump’s win is so distressing – the fact that being relentlessly horrible didn’t cause him to lose. I’ve realize that the reason I was feeling so cheerful in the last few weeks was because I thought his hatefulness was causing him to lose. It looked that way.

But no. His hatefulness was exhaustively documented, and he won anyway. He won because of it.

That makes me feel sick, and profoundly alienated.

Cruelty and bullying should cause people to turn away in disgust. They did many, of course, but to many others they were like catnip to a cat.

He’s demonstrated that cruelty and bullying are rewarded. That’s very bad news.



How he won on fear and bile

Nov 10th, 2016 5:00 pm | By

Garrison Keillor says Trump voters aren’t going to like what Trump does.

Raw ego and proud illiteracy have won out, and a severely learning-disabled man with a real character problem will be president. We are so exhausted from thinking about this election, millions of people will take up leaf-raking and garage cleaning with intense pleasure. We liberal elitists are wrecks. The Trumpers had a whale of a good time, waving their signs, jeering at the media, beating up protesters, chanting “Lock her up” — we elitists just stood and clapped. Nobody chanted “Stronger Together.” It just doesn’t chant.

The Trumpers never expected their guy to actually win the thing, and that’s their problem now. They wanted only to whoop and yell, boo at the H-word, wear profane T-shirts, maybe grab a crotch or two, jump in the RV with a couple of six-packs and go out and shoot some spotted owls. It was pleasure enough for them just to know that they were driving us wild with dismay — by “us,” I mean librarians, children’s authors, yoga practitioners, Unitarians, bird-watchers, people who make their own pasta, opera-goers, the grammar police, people who keep books on their shelves, that bunch. The Trumpers exulted in knowing we were tearing our hair out. They had our number, like a bratty kid who knows exactly how to make you grit your teeth and froth at the mouth.

Or like Twitter trolls, 4chan, Reddit, Breitbart.

But the mayhem Trump will cause is going to hit the Trumpers harder than anyone else, he says. He also points out that cruelty is bad.

We all experienced cruelty back in our playground days — boys who beat up on the timid, girls who made fun of the homely and naive — and most of us, to our shame, went along with it, afraid to defend the victims lest we become one of them. But by your 20s, you should be done with cruelty. Mr. Trump was the cruelest candidate since George Wallace. How he won on fear and bile is for political pathologists to study. The country is already tired of his noise, even his own voters. He is likely to become the most intensely disliked president since Herbert Hoover. His children will carry the burden of his name. He will never be happy in his own skin.

I hope that’s true, but I doubt it.



Frankly

Nov 10th, 2016 4:51 pm | By

From the New Yorker:



How it’s gonna be, peasants

Nov 10th, 2016 1:26 pm | By

Giuliani on election day decided to pose in front of Trump Tower with a few heavily armed terrorists. Telling us resistance is futile, I guess.



Chief of Breitbart

Nov 10th, 2016 1:20 pm | By

Oh dear god – the Breitbart guy might be chief of staff. Breitbart. Twitter trolls running the country.

Steve Bannon, the conservative provocateur and Mr. Trump’s campaign chief, is now a leading candidate to become White House chief of staff, but he’d have to beat out another campaign veteran in the running, Reince Priebus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, according to two people with knowledge of the discussions.

Mr. Bannon, the executive chairman of the conservative website Breitbart News, who took a leave to help manage the final weeks of Mr. Trump’s campaign, is well liked among Mr. Trump’s circle of overlapping advisers, who see him as a favorable influence on the president-elect.

What’s a “favorable influence”? I have no idea what that means.

After the White House, it was on to Capitol Hill to meet with Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, and the speaker of the House, Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin. Mr. Ryan only reluctantly endorsed Mr. Trump, called his attack on a judge of Mexican heritage the “textbook definition” of racism, and then stopped campaigning for him after a video emerged of the candidate bragging about sexual assault.

On Thursday, it was all smiles.

“Donald Trump had one of the most impressive victories we have ever seen, and we’re going to turn that victory into progress for the American people,” Mr. Ryan said, “and we are now talking about how we are going to hit the ground running to get this country turned around and make America great again.”

One of the most impressive victories? What’s he talking about? It was a squeaker, and he didn’t even get the popular vote.

Mr. Trump added: “We had a very detailed meeting, and we’re going to lower taxes, as you know, health care, we’re going to make it affordable. We are going to do a real job on health care.”

How?

How are they going to make health care “affordable”? And what does that mean anyway, when different people have different incomes? What’s affordable to President Pussygrabber isn’t affordable to me.

Kris Kobach, the Kansas secretary of state and an ardent opponent of immigration, has been added to Mr. Trump’s transition team, according to local news reports.

Mr. Kobach, who provided guidance on immigration policy to Mr. Trump during the campaign, will help the president-elect in the weeks before he takes office, according to The Wichita Eagle.

He told the paper he did not expect to get an offer to serve in the Trump administration, but just having him in a formal role in the new Washington could send shudders through the nation’s immigrants. Mr. Kobach has been one of the loudest anti-immigration voices in the Republican Party for years. He added Mr. Trump’s call for a border wall along the southern tier into the party’s platform over the summer.

Great. What’s David Duke going to be doing?



White supremacists celebrate

Nov 10th, 2016 1:06 pm | By

A collection of tweets from Day 1.

https://twitter.com/ManikRathee/status/796408766518292480

https://twitter.com/Chris_Weatherd/status/796384091260207104

https://twitter.com/ShaunKing/status/796750646196191233



Hater-in-chief

Nov 10th, 2016 12:58 pm | By

It’s strange, I’ve just noticed, having a soon-to-be president who has expressed angry, loud, hostile contempt for most of the population.

You’d think someone campaigning for the job would think of that and decide it might not be such a good idea.

I realize he endeared himself to a segment of angry white people, but he did it at the price of wholly alienating massive demographics. That’s not usually how presidential campaigns play out. We get candidates who seem brutally indifferent to our concerns and needs, but not ones who get up at 3 a.m to express furious contempt for us.

I don’t see this working out well. He’s lit a whole bunch of fuses, and he has no plans to stamp them out, and we can’t forget that he’s the one who lit them.

We haven’t done this before. Maybe Nixon was a little like that. You got the feeling that Nixon hated everyone, but you didn’t have hours of tv footage or hundreds of tweets in which he told us so.

No, I just can’t see this working out well.



Steps missing

Nov 10th, 2016 11:11 am | By

Robert Reich points out that the Clintonistas abandoned the working class. I agree with him about that, but I still don’t see how it translates to voting for Trump. He lays out a lot of true claims, but doesn’t explain the ===> Trump part.

Recent economic indicators may be up, but those indicators don’t reflect the insecurity most Americans continue to feel, nor the seeming arbitrariness and unfairness they experience. Nor do the major indicators show the linkages many Americans see between wealth and power, stagnant or declining real wages, soaring CEO pay, and the undermining of democracy by big money.

Median family income is lower now than it was 16 years ago, adjusted for inflation. Workers without college degrees – the old working class – have fallen furthest. Most economic gains, meanwhile, have gone to [the] top. These gains have translated into political power to elicit bank bailouts, corporate subsidies, special tax loopholes, favorable trade deals and increasing market power without interference by anti-monopoly enforcement – all of which have further reduced wages and pulled up profits.

Yes. I know. But how is that a reason to vote for Trump? Trump benefits from that system too, and he doesn’t share any of his gains with people who don’t.

The Democratic party once represented the working class. But over the last three decades the party has been taken over by Washington-based fundraisers, bundlers, analysts, and pollsters who have focused instead on raising campaign money from corporate and Wall Street executives and getting votes from upper middle-class households in “swing” suburbs.

I know. But Trump doesn’t represent the working class either. The fact that he’s a racist pussy-grabbing abuser doesn’t make him working class or a champion of the working class. He’s a filthy rich racist pussy-grabbing abuser. He’s deeply vulgar, granted, but that doesn’t make him working class either.

Bill Clinton and Obama also allowed antitrust enforcement to ossify – with the result that large corporations have grown far larger, and major industries more concentrated. The unsurprising result of this combination – more trade, declining unionization and more industry concentration – has been to shift political and economic power to big corporations and the wealthy, and to shaft the working class. This created an opening for Donald Trump’s authoritarian demagoguery, and his presidency.

I don’t see it. I don’t see what work “an opening” does there.



Civil war

Nov 10th, 2016 9:49 am | By

Racists are feeling empowered.

In his acceptance speech on Nov. 9, US president-elect Donald J. Trump made a pledge of unity, promising to be a leader for “all Americans.”

But some of his supporters have not heard that message. Even as Trump was speaking, one person in the audience yelled “Hang Obama,” and online commentators spewed a steady stream of racist, sexist, and anti-Semitic messages on a YouTube livestream, directed to “Anti-whites,” “Killery,” and “Jews in Congress.”

It’s grotesque that Trump said that. He’s a man who boils with hatred and contempt, and spits it out whenever the mood strikes him, which it does every few minutes. He despises women, black and brown people, Mexicans, foreigners, Muslims, Jews, “losers,” liberals…That doesn’t leave many people.

Trump’s victory, which he achieved with 279 electoral college votes but without taking the popular vote, appears to have emboldened some of the white supremacists who support him offline too. Self-identified Trump supporters are harassing minorities, and calling for more organized white supremacy.

Near Boston, MA, at Wellesley College, where Clinton went to school, two men from a neighboring college drove around the campus flying a Trump flag from their pickup truck, according to students who posted videos on Facebook. One wrote:

They laughed, screamed and sped around campus. Then, they parked in front of the house for students of African descent, and jeered at them, screaming Trump and Make America Great Again. When one student asked them to leave, they spat in her direction.

This is the new reality. This is what Trump’s America is going to be like.

Utah high schools have several reports of Latino students being bullied, according to a local Fox News channel. One student whose parents are Mexican immigrants said she was told, “You wetbacks need to go back to Mexico.”

Racist slurs and pro-Trump slogans were scrawled at high school in Minnesota:

Erin Cichanski on Facebook

Obama is meeting with Trump now to help him with the transition. Obama is meeting with the guy who spent years saying Obama was born in Kenya. Obama is meeting with the guy who was endorsed by the KKK last week.



Revenge on Wellesley

Nov 10th, 2016 8:49 am | By

The new world we live in:

Two people who drove through Wellesley College on Wednesday waving a Donald Trump flag were removed by campus security for being “disruptive” to students at Hillary Clinton’s alma mater.

Lisa Barbin, chief of the Wellesley College campus police, sent a campus-wide e-mail informing students of the incident.

“This afternoon there were reports of two disruptive individuals driving through campus in a pickup truck with a Donald Trump flag,” Barbin wrote. “We want you to know that College leadership, Campus Police, and Wellesley Town Police were informed, and the individuals were asked to leave College property without incident. As always, your safety is our first priority.”

They hadn’t yet identified the two “people” – but a follow-up story has more:

Babson College said it was two of its students who drove through Wellesley College on Wednesday waving a Donald Trump flag just hours after one of the women school’s most famous graduates, Hillary Clinton, conceded defeat in the bitter presidential campaign.

Lawrence P. Ward, the vice president of student affairs at Babson, said his school is working with Wellesley College public safety officials to identify the two male students who then could face discipline under the student code of conduct.

Ward said in a letter to the Babson community that “two Babson students ‘[on Wednesday] drove around campus in a pickup truck, waved a Trump flag, and antagonized students. Their actions, as reported to me and other college officials, were highly offensive, incredibly insensitive, and simply not acceptable.’’

It’s BullyWorld, and we’re living in it.



Who are these “liberal elites”?

Nov 10th, 2016 8:28 am | By

Guest post by Josh Spokes.

“Liberal elites”. “Liberal elites.”

Who are they, New York Times and mainstream media? Who are these horrible super rich people who want women to have birth control, who want poor people to have food stamps and medical care (even poor people who super HATE them some “elites” but still want health care)?

Who are these villains that you say, again, are responsible for Trump’s victory? What ever did they do to make the people actually effected by Republican policies—no job stability, promises to take away their healthcare—hate them?

Fucking shut up. Do some real world analysis or shut up.

Racism and misogyny won Trump the election. Not my middle class ass. Not my “liberal elite” friends who work in human services, organize town clean ups after floods, who work to help poor people sign up for Medicaid.

We didn’t fucking do this. We actually try to HELP people. We do help people. We’re not perfect, but we haven’t done anything to deserve this stupidity.

And if one you puts up a quote from that self-regarding hick version of David Brooks, JD Vance, I’ll boot you out. I’m shocked at how many smart people have been taken in by his facile and obviously wrong headed diagnosis.



Huckabee, Gingrich, Giuliani, Carson, Palin

Nov 10th, 2016 8:13 am | By

The Cabinet

Donald Trump‘s transition team has prepared a preliminary list of potential Cabinet members for his upcoming administration.

The list, obtained by BuzzFeed News, reveals a number of familiar faces including Ben Carson, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Mike Huckabee, Newt Gingrich and others being weighed for multiple positions.

In total, the list includes 41 names and covers 14 different departments. A source told BuzzFeed that the list is not final and will likely be changed in the future.

Attorney general picks include Chris Christie, Jeff Sessions and Rudy Giuliani.

Newt Gingrich, John Bolton and Bob Corker are listed as potential picks for the secretary of State.

Ben Carson is under consideration for Secretary of Education.

Christie is also being weighed for secretary of Homeland Security, and Carson, Gingrich and Florida Gov. Rick Scott are potential picks for secretary of Health and Human Services.

Sarah Palin also makes a surprise appearance on the shortlist, mentioned as one of seven potential candidates to become the secretary of the Interior.

Nothing but the best.



There were contacts

Nov 10th, 2016 8:04 am | By

Now it can be told

Russian government officials had contacts with members of Donald Trump’s campaign team, a senior Russian diplomat said Thursday, in a disclosure that could reopen scrutiny over the Kremlin’s role in the president-elect’s bitter race against Hillary Clinton.

Facing questions about his ties to Moscow because of statements interpreted as lauding Russian President Vladi­mir Putin, Trump repeatedly denied having any contact with the Russian government.

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov, in an interview with the state-run Interfax news agency, said that “there were contacts” with the Trump team.

Speaking to Bloomberg News, ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that Russian embassy staff met with members of Trump’s campaign, which she described as “normal practice.” Democratic Party contender Hillary Clinton’s campaign refused similar requests for meetings, she told the agency.

Probably a sign that it’s not so normal, yes? Or is it just that Clinton’s people are too shy to talk to strangers?



You must try to see the wisdom of the crowd

Nov 10th, 2016 7:51 am | By

Tasneem Khalil on Facebook:

5 rules: How to write about Trump, his supporters and nationalists

1. Never use words like racists and bigots to describe racists and bigots. When people vote in overwhelming numbers to keep “Polish vermin” out of the United Kingdom or “Mexican rapists” and “Muslim terrorists” out of the United States, you must try to see the wisdom of the crowd. That is the beauty of democracy. If you deviate from this rule, some people will get really offended.

2. Refer to the abandoned white working class. Do not look at exit poll data that would show the working class in the United States actually voted for HRC and most of the Trump voters are actually among the richest people on this planet. Talk about how the white people are the real victims of a system that survives on blood and toil of black and brown labour.

3. Propose that we listen to the concerns of angry white men wearing red caps — the kind shouting “Kill Obama!” and “lock her up!” during the pussy-grabber-in-chief’s victory speech. Psychoanalyse them as much as you can. For this analysis, you can rely on hundreds of newspaper profiles and interviews of such men. However, always remember to propose that the media has failed to grant enough attention to the said demographic.

4. Blame the elite; mention the crisis of inequality; and, note the role of capitalism. What we are looking at is actually a revolution of sorts — the masses had enough with the elite, capitalist bastards, and now they have elected Donald J Trump as their president.

5. Always remember: Most of the nationalists are decent people with decent concerns about foreigners, people with different skin colours and religions. This, as opposed to the feminist, LGBT-loving, refugee-hugging, weed-smoking liberal elite tree-huggers “who just don’t get it!”

He’s so right. There is so much bullshit of that kind flying around and it’s all so wrong.

I especially detest #1. Yeah it’s not “elitist” to say that people who shout and wear and wave racists slogans are being racist. It’s not “elitist” to say that bragging about grabbing women by the pussy is misogynist and rapey. It’s not “elitist” to say that a guy who has cheated his workers is not a friend of the working class.



Buy stock in prisons

Nov 9th, 2016 5:35 pm | By

One of the first headlines I saw this morning –

Private Prison Stocks Are Surging After Trump’s Win

Oh, of course they are. Obviously our massive prison population should be an opportunity for somebody to make a yuuuge amount of money by giving prisoners bad food and worse medical care. What could possibly go wrong?

Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential elections helped shares of Corrections Corp. rise as much as 60 percent before paring their surge to 34 percent by 10:14 a.m. in New York, while GEO Group Inc. was trading 18 percent higher by the same time.

Those moves mean the stocks have recouped some of the losses they’ve registered since August, when the Department of Justice said it would start phasing out privately run jails. Analysts say President Trump would be likely to reverse that policy, and see an added windfall to the companies stemming from the difficulty of implementing his deportation agenda.

Isn’t that wonderful? Isn’t the US a glorious country? We throw millions of people, most of them black and brown, into prison for drug offences, and thus provide an opportunity for corporations to gouge profits out of their misery and maltreatment.

“Private prisons would likely be a clear winner under Trump, as his administration will likely rescind the DOJ’s contract phase-out and ICE capacity to house detainees will come under further stress.” analysts at Height Securities LLC wrote in a note published this morning, referring to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement body by its acronym. Mass deportation of illegal immigrants would be likely to run into legal obstacles, “further necessitating a sizable contract detention population,” the analysts said.

Maybe by this time next year a third of the population will be in prison, clocking up the dollar bills for the stockholders.



On a precipice

Nov 9th, 2016 5:08 pm | By

The Times’s editorial summary of what we face:

So who is the man who will be the 45th president?

After a year and a half of erratic tweets and rambling speeches, we can’t be certain. We don’t know how Mr. Trump would carry out basic functions of the executive. We don’t know what financial conflicts he might have, since he never released his tax returns, breaking with 40 years of tradition in both parties. We don’t know if he has the capacity to focus on any issue and arrive at a rational conclusion. We don’t know if he has any idea what it means to control the largest nuclear arsenal in the world.

Here is what we do know: We know Mr. Trump is the most unprepared president-elect in modern history. We know that by words and actions, he has shown himself to be temperamentally unfit to lead a diverse nation of 320 million people. We know he has threatened to prosecute and jail his political opponents, and he has said he would curtail the freedom of the press. We know he lies without compunction.

He has said he intends to cut taxes for the wealthy and to withdraw the health care protection of the Affordable Care Act from tens of millions of Americans. He has insulted women and threatened Muslims and immigrants, and he has recruited as his allies a dark combination of racists, white supremacists and anti-Semites. Given the importance of the alt-right to Mr. Trump’s rise, it is perhaps time to drop the “alt.” David Duke celebrated Mr. Trump’s victory on Tuesday night, tweeting, “It’s time to TAKE AMERICA BACK!!!”

The Ku Klux Klan endorsed him, don’t forget. White racists are all for him.

When Mr. Trump has looked beyond our borders, he has said that he would tear up the agreement to prevent Iran from building nuclear arms and that he would do away with the North American Free Trade Agreement. He has said that he would repudiate last December’s Paris agreement on climate change, thereby abandoning America’s leadership role in addressing the biggest long-term threat to humanity. He has also threatened to abandon NATO allies and start a trade war with China.

We know that, with Republicans controlling both houses of Congress, Mr. Trump would be able to restore a right-wing majority by filling the Supreme Court seat that Republican senators have held hostage for nine months.

Republicans will soon control every branch of the federal government, in addition to a majority of governorships and statehouses. There is no obvious check on Mr. Trump’s vengeful impulses. Other Republican leaders, including his running mate, Mike Pence, have largely made excuses for his most extreme behavior.

By challenging every norm of American politics, Mr. Trump upended first the Republican Party and now the Democratic Party, which attempted a Clinton restoration at a moment when the nation was impatient to escape the status quo. Misogyny and racism played their part in his rise, but so did a fierce and even heedless desire for change.

That change has now placed the United States on a precipice.