The Crocodile Tears of Neoconservatives

Reading Max Boot’s column (The GOP is Now the Party of Neo-Confederates) this morning in the Washington Post gave me occasion to revisit a piece I wrote on May 7, 2016 called The Resurrection of the Paleoconservatives. Donald Trump had effectively captured the Republican Party’s nomination on May 3rd when he won the primary in Indiana and Ted Cruz dropped out of the race. My paleoconservative piece was a first effort to understand what it would mean for Trump to be the GOP standard bearer.

On the whole, you could say my analysis was too optimistic, as I was explaining why significant party factions would never reconcile themselves to Trump’s leadership, with the strong implication that this lack of unity would be fatal to Trump’s chances of winning the presidency. But I’m actually quite pleased with the paleoconservative piece because I think it presciently predicted that the neoconservative faction would revolt and join the opposition.

Also, in fairness to me, I wasn’t attempting to explain a possible path to victory for Trump in that article. I had already done that with pieces on July 2, 2013 (The GOP is moving in the Wrong Direction), May 5, 2014, (A Deal With the Devil), and December 9, 2015 (Trump and the Missing White Voters), which all examined a possible attempt to overcome structural deficits by reordering the presidential electorate based on appeals to white identity.

Whatever their other faults, neoconservatives were pro civil rights from the inception of their movement in the Vietnam Era. They were always unlikely to align themselves with a party based on Neo-confederatism.

Here is how I sketched out the divisions in the party as I contemplated Donald Trump’s general election campaign:

There are elements of paleoconservativism that overlap with the progressive left, most prominently a skepticism about military adventurism and opposition to free trade. This is why some progressives will nod their heads in agreement when Trump makes certain critiques of the Democratic Party and the Washington Establishment. But the core of paleoconservatism is white and cultural supremacy with an accompanying panic about nonwhite immigration and a reactionary opposition to modern sexual mores. This not only limits the appeal of a paleoconservative candidate to a subset of the cultural right, it means that the philandering sexual objectifier Donald Trump is an imperfect representative of paleoconservatism.

From a historical perspective, you can consider Dwight D. Eisenhower to have marginalized paleoconservatives when he defeated the isolationist Ohio Senator Robert Taft at the 1952 Republican convention. As for more mainstream conservatives, they sidelined the paleos when William F. Buckley and the National Review ostracized members of the John Birch Society from the movement.

The elimination of the Jim Crow south further eroded their respectability, and the rise of neoconservatism in the 1970’s and their strong influence over the Reagan administration provided the paleos with a more powerful rival.

The presidential runs of Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot were a kind of last gasp, but skepticism about sexual liberation and free trade, as well as an isolationist foreign policy inclination, and white supremacist views have always had a wider appeal than just on the right.

For paleoconservatives who have been marginalized for over sixty years, Trump seems like a vindication and a revival of their worldview and their power.

This is also how the other factions of the Republican Party see things. The Eisenhower Republicans are nearly extinct, but they’re completely repelled by Trumpism. The neoconservatives consider the paleos to be anti-Semitic, which is usually true, and they’re utterly opposed to their isolationism. The business community has always hated their opposition to expanding markets along with the exercise of military and diplomatic muscle that makes those markets accessible. That the paleo politicians can sometimes adopt a smidgen of economic populism, for example (in Trump’s case), opposing cuts to entitlements that benefit Wall Street, is another reason they aren’t welcomed by the business community or Paul Ryan.

Donald Trump has personality quirks that turn off a lot of conservatives. His business model offends a lot of conservatives. Others just think he’s unelectable and bad for their brand. But these are all just added reasons why he cannot unite the Republican Party.

In my opinion, Trump has never understood all this history or the factions in the GOP, but he identified a weakness within the party that was ripe for exploitation. And it turned out that he was inadvertently taking up the banner of the paleoconservatives.

He might not have realized just how marginalized this faction has been or how long they’ve been marginalized. But even if Trump was an upstanding, polite, well-informed and prepared citizen, his policies would badly divide the Republicans. While the paleos have always been a part of the Conservative Movement, the ascendant and well-financed elements of the Movement have, in important ways, defined themselves in opposition to them. Trump represents a massive reversal and defeat.

It’s true that the Movement’s massive failures have brought this defeat on themselves, but that doesn’t mean they will reconcile themselves to it. When combined with Trump’s personality defects and transparent lack of preparedness for the job of the presidency, this party will not unite.

It turned out that the party did not have to unite since it could instead be reordered to appeal more to white identity. I had foreseen that the conservative movement might go in this direction as early as 2013, but I never envisioned that it would or could be done by someone like Trump.

The administration of George W. Bush had countless flaws, but chief among them was the influence of neoconservatives in foreign policy which led directly to the War on Terror and the catastrophic invasion of Iraq. When combined with the collapse of the housing market in 2007-8 and the ensuing Great Recession, the neoconservatives’ massive failures provided a massive opening for a revival of isolationism, trade protectionism, and (ultimately) Trump’s version of American First white nationalism. As a prominent and influential neoconservative in the Bush Era, Max Boot bears a lot of responsibility for the rise of Trumpism.

That is why I find the opening to his piece so objectionable:

The far left and far right have long been warning about neocons taking over the Republican Party. Turns out they are right. Only the “neocons” in question aren’t the neoconservatives — a small group of intellectuals, in whose ranks I have often been included, who have espoused a values-based foreign policy and a centrist domestic policy. Many of us have left the GOP in disgust over the rise of Trumpism. The neocons who are now in the ascendancy are the neo-Confederates who have been encouraged to come into the open by President Trump’s unabashed appeals to racist and xenophobic prejudices.

It’s impossible not to see in this an effort by Boot to vindicate himself and triumph over his critics who saw neoconservative influence as massively problematic. The far left and the far right warned about people like Max Boot because they are military adventurers and economic imperialists who, as William F. Buckley put it, “simply overrate the reach of U.S. power and influence.”

For Boot, the more significant problem is the influence of Neo-confederates in the Republican Party, but they were considered nothing worse than a necessary evil for the neoconservatives when they were helping Bush defeat Al Gore and John Kerry.  Those of us who said this was a deal with the devil were dismissed or ignored, and it’s really not that clear that the Neo-confederates are the more dangerous faction. So far, at least, the neoconservatives have left more blood and treasure in foreign lands, and the current state of the Middle East is a direct result of their reckless ideology.

In truth, President Trump is not fully free of neoconservative influence. This can be seen most clearly by his choice of John Bolton to serve as his national security advisor and by Trump’s persistent alarmism and bellicosity towards Iran.  Trump’s decision to move the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, to give a free hand to Israeli settlers, and to align himself totally with an Israeli-Saudi alliance against Shi’a influence in the Middle East are all consistent with neoconservative practice and ideology.

Trump is actually giving us the worst of both the paleo- and neoconservative worlds.

Near the end of his column, Mr. Boot remarks, “It is hard to remember that Republicans were once the Party of Lincoln. But in the 1960s they sold out their birthright to court Southern voters smarting over desegregation.” Ironically, that is the precise period of time when a bunch of Democrats became disgusted by the countercultural excesses of the New Left and began flirting with the Republicans.

Perhaps some of the first neoconservatives were seeing clearly that the New Left was inspiring the kind of backlash that would soon result in the Reagan Revolution, and they were motivated primarily to protect the things about the Democratic Party that they valued by working to avert its electoral destruction.  But the ones that departed to join the Reagan Revolution really have no business now complaining that the GOP used to be the Party of Lincoln.  It’s really quite odd that they would use overt racism as a rationale for wandering on back to the party of the left.

Maybe they’re also a bit more reconciled to the values of the counterculture these days, too, with gay marriage accepted, marijuana increasingly legal, and a black empowerment movement more associated with Barack Obama than Elijah Muhammad.

Still, there is no obvious home for Max Boot or Bill Kristol, David Frum, Jennifer Rubin, John Podhoretz or other neoconservative critics of the Trump administration. They’re now flirting with the Democratic Party, but at a time when the Democratic Party is more McGovernite than ever.

If they want to join the fight against the modern Republican Party, they’re quite welcome to do so, but their foreign policy ideas are as objectionable and possibly lethal as the ideas espoused by Trump’s America Firsters. And I don’t think anyone should forget that the neoconservatives were for civil rights until they become inconvenient for their foreign policy preferences. They can cry about racism today, but they aren’t reliable allies on that issue or any other.

This is what BREXIT IS BREXIT means

The Brexit deal has been agreed by the European Council in the time it would take to eat a good breakfast brunch in a Brussels brasserie. No point in wasting a whole day on this sort of thing. It’s happening for the optics only, to send one clear message to all concerned: THIS IS BREXIT, this is the deal, we are not going to revisit it. Take it or leave it.

The House of Commons can huff and puss all it wants, vote for it, against it, amend it to its hearts content: But this is the deal. Mutti Merkel has said so. She wouldn’t have wasted her time coming to Brussels if anyone was going to reopen the debate.

Boris Johnson is absolutely right: This Brexit deal is a historic mistake, and he should know. He has been the prime mistake maker: leading the UK up the garden path of delusional dreams. Nothing encapsulates that delusion more than the gap between what this deal delivers for the UK and what the Brexiteers said they would be able to negotiate in “the easiest deal in history”.
The Gibraltar dispute was useful, from an EU perspective, in demonstrating that it is not just the UK that is unhappy with aspects of the Brexit deal. There has been an attitude in the UK that the EU will cave if the UK shouts loud enough, and demands certain changes.

Not only is this unlikely, from an EU perspective, because it is by no means certain that there are any changes, acceptable to the EU, which would bring a majority in the House of Commons on board, but re-opening the negotiations could open a Pandora’s Box of demands from other members among the EU27.

Sánchez has gotten his hour in the sun (or rather his people got to pull an all-nighter) and was made look strong in relation to Gibraltar ahead of the Andalusian elections. Merkel could perform her favourite “adult in the room” routine, and the UK is reminded that any renegotiation, even if it were to occur, would not be a one way street.

The centrality of the Irish border to the negotiating process and the shape of the final deal is also a reminder of how much stronger your negotiating position is if you have the backing of a powerful and united trading block. Varadker has performed the difficult task, for him, of saying as little as possible, without quite being able to wipe the smug smile of satisfaction from his face.

Good luck with trying to negotiate your own trade deals in the future if you turn down this deal is the message. Michel Barnier advised MPs to vote for the deal on the table, suggesting that a “no” vote could damage negotiations on the future relationship. “Now it is time for everybody to take their responsibilities, everybody,” he said. The deal was “a necessary step to build the trust between the UK and the EU” to build “an unprecedented and ambitious future partnership.” The EU is now even using the UK’s florid and meaningless piffle against it.

From day one, this negotiation has been almost a one way process: Brussels set down the timetable for the negotiations, stipulating they had to be complete this autumn. A.50 is actually very sparse to the point of being silent on the substance of the agreement itself, saying only that it should set out “the arrangements for [a members] withdrawal, taking account of the framework for its future relationship with the Union”.

It was Brussels which insisted that the agreement should deal with 4 basic issues:

  1. An Exit Payment to settle outstanding liabilities
  2. Provide for the continuing rights of EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens in the EU
  3. Avoid a hard customs Irish Border, and (later)
  4. provide for a Transition Period

It was Brussels which decided that the future relationship could be dealt with only when the above for issues had been settled, and that it should only be covered by a a vague aspirational and non-legally binding short document. It did so to prevent the UK from using the disruption caused by a hard Brexit as bargaining leverage in the new negotiations. In particular, the Peace Process in Northern Ireland was not going to be allowed to become a bargaining lever or collateral damage.

The negotiations on a future relationship will take place from a starting point of the UK being a third party outside the Union, seeking to preserve and retain a close trading relationship with the largest trading block in the world. Ask Canada how it feels. Ask Yanis Varoufakis for that matter. He too had the backing of a popular national referendum for his negotiating position. Little good it did him…

When the history of these negotiations is written, I would not be surprised to find that the vast bulk of the 585 page Brexit deal was written by EU officials, with the UK side getting to argue over a word here and there. And it was not necessarily because the UK negotiators being totally incompetent: they simply had no clear political guidance on what their negotiating priorities should be, and what trade-offs they could offer in return for their priorities.

The EU negotiators had the luxury of clear political guidance and a clear legal framework to work from. Juncker and Barnier took great care to keep all 27 remaining member governments on board. For many, Brexit was not a life and death issue and they were happy to let the Commission, Germany, France, the Benelux countries and Ireland take the lead. Nevertheless their achievement in maintaining a united front among the EU27 with only token dissent is remarkable.

Contrast that with the UK, where Conservative law makers and the DUP seemed to delight in undermining Theresa May’s negotiating position at every opportunity, humiliating her into embarrassing U-turns and rubbishing proposals before they had even been presented as opening negotiating offers in Brussels. Brussels negotiators merely had to sit and wait while their adversaries did the hard work of shredding their own proposals. Napoleon: “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake”.

A 26 page non legally binding “Political Declaration” dealing with the proposed future relationship between the EU and UK has also been hastily cobbled together to provide Theresa May with as much political cover as possible. It uses the word “consider” 19 times and kicks all the more difficult issues into the long grass of future negotiations. If the House of Commons has difficulties with the 585 page legally binding Brexit deal, the EU will be more than happy to accommodate those concerns by putting more emollient phrases into this text.

The EU strategy appears to be to draw a line under the legally binding text and redirect UK anger onto the political declaration. If the House of Commons passes various amendments to the Brexit deal the EU will seek to accommodate them, as best as possible, in the political declaration. But from now on, passing the Brexit deal through the UK constitutional process is essentially an internal UK matter. The EU can only negotiate with governments, and it has fulfilled its obligation, under A.50 to do so.

The DUP, meanwhile, is going almost beserk, angry that their natural allies in the business and agricultural communities in N. Ireland have abandoned them. There has long been a convention in N. Ireland politics for business and trade never to get involved in N. Ireland politics. Not only is it extremely divisive and damaging to business, but it used to be a matter of life and death. Seamus Heaney summed it up in the phrase: “Whatever you say, say nothing”. So for them to speak out publicly, in tandom with just about every other Northern political party is “a wonder to behold”.

It remains to be seen whether time and circumstance do their thing and House of Commons attitudes to this deal change when they consider the alternatives. Seasoned observers expect many more twists and turns in this tale before the matter is settled. Jacob Rees-Moggs’ dramatic and outraged challenge to Theresa May’s leadership – when it turned out he couldn’t even muster 48 MP’s to sign letters to that effect (from among his own 80 strong European Research Group caucus) may be a straw in the wind. Certainly Theresa May’s resilience in the face of adversity is drawing some respect even from her adversaries.

If there isn’t a majority in the House of Commons for this deal, or for no deal, and no other deal is in prospect, where do you go?

Baseball Shouldn’t Support Fascists

I did not know that there was such a thing as The Office of the Commissioner of Major League Baseball PAC. It’s a horrible idea. Politicizing baseball is foolish, and it’s especially dumb to donate to individual candidates. It looks like some baseball lobbyists were asked/invited to attend an event for Cindy Hyde-Smith and got shaken down for the maximum allowable $5,000 contribution.

They’re returning the money because Hyde-Smith has been exposed as a neo-confederate proto-fascist and that’s a bad look for an organization that prides itself on integration and has retired Jackie Robinson’s number ’42’ league wide.

But, let’s be honest here. Hyde-Smith isn’t out of the mainstream for her party on racial issues. In fact, she’s a moderate compared the president. If baseball’s money can’t be associated with Hyde-Smith then it can’t be associated with most Republican office seekers.

Truthfully, though, the national pastime shouldn’t be alienating fans of any political stripe, and it should just refrain from giving out checks to politicians irrespective of what party they represent.

Individual owners are free to do what they want, but the Office of the Commissioner should show more common sense.

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SPP Vol.693 & Old Time Froggy Botttom Cafe

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be continuing with the painting of the old double-turreted Victorian. The photo that I am using is seen directly below. I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 8×10 inch canvas.

When last see the painting appeared as it does in the photo seen directly below.


I’ve now painted the lit siding in a preliminary yellow.  To the right side the building’s shadow helps to place the structure in context.  To the far rear the distant shrubs are seen in a preliminary blue/green.  All of these changes further the depth of the scene.  I am pleased so far.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.

I’ll have more progress to show you next week. See you then.

Earlier paintings in this series can be seen here.

 

Swift-Boat Birtherman Corsi’s Time in the Barrel

Jerome Corsi is largely responsible for the two most egregious Republican attacks of the last fifteen years: the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth’s assault on John Kerry’s distinguished military record and the birther conspiracy theory launched against Barack Obama. As a result, there are few people less sympathetic than Mr. Corsi. It seems like a kind of justice that he’s now in negotiations with Robert Mueller, reportedly to plead guilty to unspecified crimes in return for leniency.

Corsi’s name emerged rather recently in the context of the Russian investigation. It wasn’t until September 2018 that we learned that he’d been subpoenaed and agreed to turn over his computer and phone. Since then, NBC News has reported that the Special Counsel’s office has “obtained communications suggesting that Corsi was aware in advance that emails from former Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta had been stolen and handed to WikiLeaks.”

Nothing Corsi says can be taken at face value, but by his telling, Mueller’s interrogators found his explanations “preposterous.” Corsi has also said that he fears he will spend the rest of his life in prison. He’s only 72 years old and in seemingly good health, so he must be thinking that he’ll get more than a perjury charge.

It’s clear that Corsi was in communication with Roger Stone in the critical August 2016 time period, both before and after Stone announced on Twitter: “It will soon [be John] Podesta’s time in the barrel.” Stone has testified that he was relying on information provided to him by Corsi, although both of them have tried to muddy the waters about how they came to that conclusion. At the time, no one knew that Podesta’s email account had been hacked, and WikiLeaks didn’t release the contents of his emails until early October.

What we know for certain is actually pretty limited at this point. Corsi initially said that negotiations with Mueller had broken down and he expected to be indicted, but now the word is that the negotiations over a plea are back on track.

Obviously, he could agree to plea guilty and expect some degree of leniency, but if the charges are serious enough he’ll need to actively cooperate to avoid substantial jail time.

It’s hard to say what kind of criminal liability he’s facing beyond lying to federal law enforcement officers. It’s possible that crimes totally unrelated to the Russia investigation have been uncovered. It’s also possible that he’s right at the beating heart of the Russia conspiracy-collusion case. Since Mueller already has Corsi’s electronic communications from 2016, he might not need him as a witness, but I’m sure it’d be nice to have him as a prosecution witness rather than an uncooperative defendant.

One thing that has been clarified is that the president was thinking about Corsi when he sent out these tweets:

Three days before those tweets, NBC News reported that Corsi had told them in a telephone interview that he had found his interrogation “confusing and frightening,” believed the Special Counsel’s office was “determined to find a connection with WikiLeaks and me” and was “afraid they’re going to lock me up and put me in solitary confinement.”

The fact that Podesta had been hacked wasn’t the only thing Corsi knew before the rest of us. In April, he correctly predicted that Trump would attempt to launch a counterattack against Hillary Clinton and the “deep state.” Of course, he said that Clinton (and Obama) would both be charged with treason, so his track record isn’t any better there than it was in explaining the real story of 9/11.

Still, President Trump has been trying to get the FBI to prosecute Hillary Clinton, and now he’s going to have South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham chairing the Senate Judiciary Committee, where he can accuse Clinton of crimes.

I hope some of the people responsible for this astonishing disinformation wind up in jail. Corsi would be a good start.

And a Happy Mark Twain/William Burroughs Thanksgiving To All!!!

THE WAR PRAYER – Mark Twain

A Thanksgiving prayer from William S. Burroughs

Like those lovely churchgoers in Twain’s piece…no matter how many times you hear that second prayer and no matter how many ways it has been presented to you from well before Jesus Christ to well after Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr…as soon as the second sermon is done and the messenger departs the church, you return to the barbarism.

In the present case, you vote for it!!!

God bless and keep us all.

We gonna need it.

Repent!!!

(The real meaning of “Wake the fuck up.”)

Amen.

Dutch Gov’t Hard Facts and Lies/Propaganda about Syria

Due to FOIA requests by media Nieuwsuur/Trouw, the Dutch government published documents on their website for a number of hours which contained top secret names of jihadists groups supported with supplies in military action and human rights abuse.

Foreign Ministry accidentally releases names of supported Syrian groups | Dutch News | [EN]

More below the fold … a rant!

Dutch FM Blok unintentionally reveals state secrets about Syrian combat groups | NOS Nieuwsuur / Trouw |

The Dutch aid to Syrian insurgents was explicitly meant for military combat, as can be seen from documents that were requested by Nieuwsuur and Trouw. This contrasts sharply with statements made by Minister Stef Blok of Foreign Affairs in the House of Representatives, where he stated that the aid was ‘civil in nature’. And the government reveals information that has previously been labeled as state secret.

Now it appears that almost all goods supplied by the Netherlands were used by the Syrian insurgents for the military battle. Not only were pick-up trucks used in attack missions, the Netherlands also supplied ‘tactical vests’ for weapons such as the M-16 and AK-47. Furthermore, innocent items such as food parcels, generators and furniture had military value: especially to boost the morale of the fighters. Laptops were used for selecting military targets.

State secret information

In the released documents, moreover, state-secret information appears to be unintentionally present. For example, names of the groups involved are mentioned, information that Blok has been silent about to date. This is now called ‘Levant Front‘ (Jabhat al-Shamiya), a group that was already mentioned by Nieuwsuur and Trouw, but Foreign Affairs refused to confirm.

A new battle group is also mentioned in the documents: Hama Rebels Gathering. This movement was already in the picture at Nieuwsuur and Trouw, but was not mentioned in previous publications due to lack of evidence.  

From my earlier diary in September …

A developing story …

US citizens and its western allies have been LIED to and clouded by military propaganda from their governments. How many deaths did these criminal acts cause in Syria by extending the civil unrest. How many civilians have fled their homes and millions crossed into Europe causing an “immigration” issue which led directly to a conservative movement of white supremacy and a strong shift to right-wing politics across Europe.

Dutch Gov’t Admits Support for Salafist Jihadists in Syria

New research suggests that the Netherlands supported a ‘Terrorist movement’ in Syria | Nieuwsuur – Sept. 11, 2018 |
Seventeen Years After 9/11, US Counts Al Qaeda Among Allies in Syria, Yemen | MintPress |

Yet the Dutch government managed to LIE about the true nature of support, military goods and the names of the jihadist groups fighting the proxy war to overthrow Assad.

From a pro-Syria website, the alternative news and undoubtedly biased views on the events taking place …

The secret documents about the sponsoring of Jihadist groups in Syria, by the Dutch government  

CONCLUSION

The Dutch government must have had the knowledge since the making of the conflict in 2011, which they called the “Arab Spring”, meaning the destruction of the Middle-east and eventually bring it under control of NATO/US and Israel.

As from 2012 it was clear that the groups (so-called 22) they supported were not “secular – democratic” opposition, but mainly Jihadist groups, who were formed with the help of the US, KSA, Qatar, Turkey and EU countries like the Netherlands.

That is why it’s top-secret the so-called “22” groups who, according, to the Dutch government part of their NLA (Non-Lethal-Assistance) programme. The NLA programme was “lethal”, if you send trucks and army-equipment, you indirectly sponsor war in a sovereign country, which is forbidden under International Law, no reasons can be found to prove the opposite, because, the secular state of Syria, meaning the Syrian Arab Republic, was according my knowledge and most importantly the Syrian people and law, a secular state, were there was no war or repression. Differences were communicated, in a democratic way, at the Assembly and Parliament.

Qatar and Saudi Arabia Financing Salafist Extremists in Mali and Sahel
After 35 Years, Iran Liquidates MKO Terrorist near Amsterdam
Iran: Terror Strikes IRGC Forces In Parade
Iran Avenges Terror Attack Hitting Targets in SW Syria

Dutch involvement in support of the US/UK alliance in Iraq has been reported to be in defiance of International Law.

Dutch Investigation: Iraq Mission Ruled Illegal – January 2010
Dutch Cabinet Falls Over Uruzgan Mission – February 2010

KSA financial support teaching Wahhabism in Syria [and the West] for decades …

Further reading …

Makkah Siege of 1979 – Turning Point in Saudi Arabia  
Classic Agitator: Preacher Safwat Hegazy Inciting Violence In Cairo
Perhaps You Have Noticed … A turning Point In Syria
Push by Saudi Clerics for an Islamic State in Al-Sham (Syria)
Rhetoric – Pat Lang on Israel and the Iranian Conference ¶ A Rebuttal – Updated by Oui @BooMan on Jan. 17, 2006

My warning in 2015, before the election of president Trump who has sealed US fate with Israel and the Saudi monarchy …

Remodeling Middle-East: Neocons, Republicans and Israel

The Khashoggi case: Arab media omit uncomfortable facts | DW |
Trump’s Saudi Coverup | Tikun Olam |

No, Mr. President: MBS Is Not What You Think He Is | Bloomberg |

The Triangle of Evil: Yared Kushner – Crown Prince Salman – Bibi Netanyahu

When Kushner met Mohammed; How Saudi prince charmed Jewish power-broker | JPost |
Saudi textbooks overflowing with anti-Semitism | Ynet News |
Netanyahu said to urge Washington to stick by Saudi crown prince | Times of Israel |

One can throw the Abu Dhabi emir into the mix of evil on Yemen and the UAE alliance with American rightwing extremists like Erik Prince and Steve Bannon!! Enough sad.

Election Night Projections Need to Improve

My wife, who is almost never sick, has been laid low by influenza for the last three days, and this has thrown a real monkey wrench into our Thanksgiving plans and preparations. I need to step up to the plate here, so this post will be brief.

There is nothing out of the ordinary here. The main reason Hillary Clinton’s popular vote victory kept growing and growing weeks after the election was over was because California takes a long time to count their ballots and the late ballots trend much more Democratic than the ones that are cast early.

What I’d like to see in the future is more recognition of this fact when the media cover election results.  First impressions mean a lot, and they can actually have real-world implications for the eventual outcome of close elections, as we saw when the 2000 Florida recount was shut down. Had Al Gore been closer on the Election Night, he would not have conceded only to have to take back his concession shortly thereafter. And if he had been holding a narrow lead as the chad-fiasco unfolded, it would have been a different drama in every respect, with the Supreme Court more interested in prolonging the process than in bringing it to a premature close.

We have now seen this post-Election Day surge for Democrats in California repeat itself enough times to be able to anticipate it, and it’s something that happens in other states, too, to greater or lesser degrees depending on their partisan lean and how they conduct their absentee, provisional and/or mail-in voting.

The Networks should really have a built-in and ready assessment of how many votes candidates stand to pick-up after 100 percent of the precincts have reported.  It wasn’t impossible to predict that the Democrats would ultimately win all or most of the close elections in which they were trailing when we went to sleep on November 6th, especially in California.  Failing to do so impacted the narrative and could have conceivably changed the outcome in a race or two.

Have a Happy Thanksgiving. I have to get to work.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Vol. 91

Happy Hump Day and happy Thanksgiving Eve!  I’m continuing to be the DJ and bartender for this weekly series while Don Durito is on walkabout.  For today’s theme, I’m picking songs from Billboard’s Thanksgiving Songs: Music About Food, Giving Thanks, and the Holiday.

The first song on the list just happens to tie into my love of awards shows, in this case,  the 2018 Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards.  As I reported in ‘RBG’ wins Best Political Documentary, ‘Won’t You Be My Neighbor?’ Best Documentary at my personal blog, Quincy Jones received Most Compelling Living Subject of a Documentary and the documentary “Quincy” won Best Music Documentary.  With no further ado, here is Groovy Gravy.

Next, James Brown with Mashed Potatoes, U.S.A.

For the last song in the diary proper, I’m sharing Thanksgiving Theme by Vince Guaraldi from the Peanuts specials.*

I had to have some music for Snoopy to dance to.
Once again, I’m concluding the diary proper by quoting Don Durito.

For those of you wondering how I and Neon Vincent are circumventing Sucuri to embed videos, here is an example of the embed code we use, so that you can replicate as wanted:

Just remember that each unique 11-digit video code in YouTube needs to be pasted in two separate locations within the embed code in order for your video to show up properly. So easy that I can do it!

With those instructions, feel free to post your favorite music videos in the comments.

*I’ll post more from the playlist in the comments.