Trump Poisoned the Base, the Base Has Poisoned the GOP

The GOP base thinks the January 6 insurrectionists were legitimate patriots, so that’s the new position of the party.

I’ll let Greg Sargent handle this one:

In recent days, we’ve learned that Donald Trump fully intended to get the 2020 election “overturned,” that he suggested law enforcement agencies could seize voting machines, and that, if elected in 2024, he might pardon those who violently attacked our seat of government, resulting in five dead and scores wounded.

So how is the GOP’s central committee responding to these developments?

With new efforts to punish the two Republicans who most prominently think this conduct should be disqualifying to lead their party and should call forth a serious national reckoning and institutional response in defense of U.S. democracy.

On Friday, the Republican National Committee voted to censure Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (Ill.) for their roles on the House select committee examining the Jan. 6 insurrection incited by Trump.

The censure resolution is explicit on why Cheney and Kinzinger are seen as such heretics. It declares that they want to “destroy” Trump rather than help Republicans win the majority and that their committee is engaged in the “persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

Sargent explains that this is a clear demonstration of Donald Trump’s stranglehold on the Republican Party, in that the GOP’s official position is now that the January 6 insurrectionists are “heroes and martyrs” who were merely engaged in “legitimate political discourse.” But I don’t think this is so much about Trump as it is about Republicans hear from the base. Individual Republicans might think assaulting the Capitol is not a legitimate exercise of the First Amendment, but they’re not finding much agreement on that from their constituents.

It might not be good politics to call people “deplorable,” but I’m not running for office. The Republican base is far more of a problem than the lawmakers who kowtow to them.

However, and I’ve said this many, many times in the past, political bases respond to good and bad leadership alike, and Trump is most definitely responsible for leading the average GOP voter into a land or moral decay and degeneracy. Things can and will turn around at some point. While I acknowledge that there’s not much individual congresspeople and senators can do on their own, there will come a time when someone other than Trump has pull and will have the opportunity to lead the right in a better direction.

That time can arrive later or sooner, but I think the prerequisite is that Trump is held accountable in a very legal sense for what he’s done. As long as he’s considered a viable candidate, perhaps even the favorite, for the 2024 presidential election, then nothing is going to improve and I can guarantee that things will get rapidly worse.

With Zucker Gone, Can CNN Suck Less?

Objectively speaking, everyone with any responsibility for CNN’s programming should resign.

I don’t know anybody who gives a shit about Jeff Zucker. If he’s responsible for the steaming hot pile of garbage called “CNN” then I guess I don’t like the guy. He’s been very bad at his job. His network is unwatchable. The talent he’s assembled is unlikeable and I want to punch most of them in the face.

The people at Fox News are very excited that President Zucker has lost his job. They’re trying to get CNN’s media correspondent Brian Stelter fired too because they claim he should have known and reported that his boss was boinking the network’s chief marketing officer. Affairs between top executives are now a no-no unless they divulge some details.

But Zucker could have been fired for a bunch of reasons beyond his hanky-panky, like the way the ratings for the network have plummeted over the last year or his handling of the whole Chris Cuomo fiasco. In any case, liberals are dunking on Zucker because he created Trump by giving him The Apprentice show at NBC and then, in 2016, turned CNN into Trump’s personal soundstage by airing his unhinged speeches in full.

I mean, that’s fair, I guess, but the American people didn’t have to buy what Trump was selling. I just can’t get worked up about Zucker. How could I match the mainstream reaction to his resignation?

In my home, the demise of Zucker doesn’t have a cataclysmic blast radius. It’s more like the sound of one soap bubble popping in the kitchen sink. We don’t care, and I doubt you should either. Only good things can happen now, right? Like, CNN will suck less? No?

Unlike Trump, Biden Follows Through on His Promises to Working Class Americans

As Robert Shapiro recently noted, “the Biden job boom is bigger than we thought.” Even since that piece was published, the good news continues to roll in.

But no one at the White House is ready to simply rest on their accomplishments.

As Teaganne Finn documented, “the farm sector has fared quite well under the new administration.” Not only are commodity prices up, the president’s “competitiveness agenda” has a long-term strategy of helping farmers compete with monopolies like the four companies that control 85% of the meat-packing business.

Building on an executive order from July 2021, the Biden administration announced earlier this month it intends to provide $1 billion in American Rescue Plan funds to help expand independent processing capacity, and provide funding that would give independent meat producers access to cold storage and other equipment to improve distribution of their products.

Both the coronavirus pandemic and Trump’s trade war with China created a shortage of semiconductor chips that are not only used in computers, but have become standard equipment in things like cars. That shortage became a major contributor to inflation.

Recently the American technology company Intel announced that it will invest $20 billion to build a semiconductor factory in Ohio. At the end of a video clip of company executives explaining their long term plans to make this the largest semiconductor manufacturing plant in the world, Senator Sherrod Brown replied by saying, “Nobody’s calling us the Rust Belt anymore.”

But that isn’t the end of the story. While all of the media has been focused on the failure of the Senate to pass the Build Back Better Act, the president is focused on passage of the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act, which includes $52 billion to incentivize more private sector investments in the semiconductor industry. The Senate has already passed that legislation and it is now being taken up in the House.

As soon as next week, the House is expected to consider a $250 billion proposal to strengthen U.S. technology, manufacturing and research as the Biden administration tries to address global shortages in areas such as computer chips that have contributed to the surge in inflation.

President Biden is fond of saying that addressing climate change means jobs. That was highlighted last week by this announcement:

General Motors said Tuesday that it would spend $7 billion to build a battery plant in Michigan and overhaul an existing factory outside Detroit to begin producing electric pickup trucks by 2024.

The investment will create 4,000 jobs and significantly increase G.M.’s capacity to build electric vehicles in the United States, the company said.

GM isn’t the only one. Companies like Toyota and Ford are ramping up domestic production of batteries and electric cars. Even Mack Truck is getting in on the action by rolling out electric garbage trucks.

All told, the impact of these efforts in just the first year of Biden’s presidency is impressive.

It is worth remembering that the former guy talked a big game when it came to manufacturing jobs. He got a ton of press for announcing that he had saved the jobs at a Carrier plant in Indiana that the company had planned to outsource to Mexico. Touting his success, Trump said that, “companies are not going to leave the United States anymore without consequences. It’s not going to happen, We’re not going to have it anymore.” That didn’t work out so well.

While about 800 jobs that were slated to leave the Indianapolis plant stayed put, 632 others were eliminated along with an additional 738 from a second Carrier plant in Indiana that closed, according to company filings with state and federal officials. Company-wide, Carrier eliminated an additional 1,300 positions last year.

It turns out that the guy who bragged about his skill at deal-making, wasn’t so good at follow-through.

Throughout his presidency, Trump has had little success with his highly personalized attempts to bend corporate decision-making to his will and reverse a generation-long decline in U.S. factory jobs…Trump’s partial victory in Indianapolis illustrates the limits of his hands-on approach, which favors attention-grabbing maneuvers rather than comprehensive policy development.

By the time Trump left office, the United States has fewer factory workers than when he was inaugurated.

Those are the facts about what Trump did while in office and what Biden has accomplished in just one year. The political question is whether that will make any difference to the working class voters who gravitated to the former guy’s so-called “populism.” To the extent that facts and policies matter, it should. But I’m not one of those people who thinks that’s what Trump’s appeal was all about.

A Lesson for Whoopi

She was suspended from The View for saying uninformed things about the Holocaust, but she’s just confused.

Whoopi Goldberg has been suspended for two weeks from The View for saying fairly uninformed things about the Holocaust. I’m not sure her ignorance merits punishment, but the brouhaha offers me an opportunity to explain why Goldberg is so confused. In her mind, German Nazis and Europe’s Jews were both white and therefore the basis of their conflict could not have been racial in nature.

It’s easy to see why she’s making this mistake because she spelled it out in an interview with Stephen Colbert.

“If the Klan is coming down the street, and I’m standing with a Jewish friend — well, I’m going to run. But if my friend decides not to run, they’ll get passed by most times because you can’t tell who is Jewish. You don’t — it’s not something people say, ‘Oh, that person is Jewish or this person is Jewish.’”

Goldberg actually self-identifies as Jewish, and obviously adopted a Jewish stage name, so that adds an extra wrinkle to this controversy. It’s clear that she sees racism through the prism of skin color, and that’s understandable in the American context, especially as a black woman. When she thinks about racial terrorism she summons the Klan. Of course, the Klan doesn’t like Jews and doesn’t like Catholics, but they’re best known for committing violence against blacks. Blacks are obviously easy to identify, but Jews have some phenotypical tendencies too, and certainly circumcision is an identifier that was quite useful to the Nazis. Southern Europeans, who trend Catholic, have darker skin than Northern Europeans. All white people don’t look the same.

So, even by Goldberg’s Klan example, her point isn’t great. But the real problem is that she’s not getting the underpinnings of white supremacy. It’s best to go to the source on this, so I’m going to quote from Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf.  Hitler had some crackpot ideas about race, genetics, eugenics and history, although they weren’t as rare at the time as we might wish to believe. Here we see the basic ideas that there are gradations of race and that humans should strive to breed themselves for improvement:

Every animal mates only with a member of the same species. … Any crossing of two beings not at exactly the same level produces a medium between the level of the two parents. This means: the offspring will probably stand higher than the racially lower parent, but not as high as the higher one. Consequently, it will later succumb in the struggle against the higher level. Such mating is contrary to the will of Nature for a higher breeding of all life. The precondition for this does not lie in associating superior and inferior, but in the total victory of the former. The stronger must dominate and not blend with the weaker. … And struggle is always a means for improving a species’ health and power of resistance and, therefore, a cause of its higher development.

Superior races should not breed with other races because it will weaken them and prevent advancement.

No more than Nature desires the mating of weaker with stronger individuals, even less does she desire the blending of a higher with a lower race…. The result of all racial crossing is therefore in brief always the following: a) Lowering the level of the higher race; b) Physical and intellectual regression and hence the beginning of a slowly but surely progressing sickness. To bring about such a development is, then, nothing else but to sin against the will of the eternal creator.

Of course, they had to have some criteria for determining which race is the best. Unsurprisingly, this is the Aryan race, an ill-defined category that in Nazi usage boiled down to a narrow grouping of “white” people.

The Untermensch concept included Jews, Roma and Sinti (Gypsies), and Slavic peoples such as Poles, Serbs and Russians. Slavs were regarded as Untermenschen, barely fit for exploitation as slaves. Hitler and Goebbels compared them to the “rabbit family” or to “stolid animals” that were “idle” and “disorganized” and spread like a “wave of filth”.

Insofar as these distinctions had any justification at all, it was based primarily on cultural and technological achievement.

Everything we admire on this earth today—science and art, technology and inventions— is only the creative product of a few peoples and originally perhaps of one race. … All great cultures of the past perished only because the originally creative race died out from blood poisoning.

Those who want to live, let them fight, and those who do not want to fight in this world of eternal struggle do not deserve to live.

All the human culture, all the results of art, science, and technology that we see before us today, are almost exclusively the product of the Aryan. … If we were to divide mankind into three groups, the founders of culture, the bearers of culture, the destroyers of culture, only the Aryan could be considered as the representative of the first group. From him originate the foundations and walls of all human creation.

At a time when Western European powers were colonizing every continent through the superior force of their weapons, inventions and economic power, it wasn’t overly controversial that their culture was more advanced, and racial explanations for this were widespread. In this context, the Nazi’s were merely taking things several steps further by introducing ideas like “purity of blood” and the goal of breeding for a more advanced race of humans.

… Hence it is no accident that the first cultures arose in places where the Aryan, in his encounters with lower peoples, subjected them and bent them to his will. … As soon as the subjected people began to raise themselves up and probably approached the conqueror in language, the sharp dividing wall between master and servant fell. The Aryan gave up the purity of his blood, and … lost his cultural capacity, until at last, not only mentally but also physically, he began to resemble the subjected aborigines more than his own ancestors.

Therefore, a central goal of the Holocaust was to prevent interbreeding between Aryans and Untermenschen. Such interbreeding would not only prevent the advancement of man but actually cause a regression: “Blood mixture and the resultant drop in racial level is the sole cause of the dying out of old cultures.”

This explains why the Nazis targeted not only Jews, Gypsies and Slavs, but also those with mental or physical disabilities and homosexuals. The ideology was determined by racial/genetic/hereditary considerations. It was essentially a breeding program where undesirable traits would be weeded out.

You can see the problem with Goldberg’s characterization of the Holocaust.

“The [Nazis] had issues with ethnicity, not with race,” Goldberg continued, “because most of the Nazis were white people and most [of] the people they were attacking were white people. So, to me, I’m thinking, how can you say it’s about race if you are fighting each other?”

This can get bogged down in semantic confusion. The Nazis considered themselves a part of a Master Race, but this was a race from which most whites were excluded. They didn’t have too much trouble identifying who didn’t belong to their group even if Goldberg might have found that task challenging.

I don’t think Goldberg should be too strongly faulted for not understanding the arbitrary and demented racial theories of the Nazis. I don’t believe she was trying to be offensive and I definitely think there are too many people today who are too eager to take offense. But I do think she should understand Nazi ideology so she get better understand American racism.

When we hear conservatives talk about the Judeo-Christian tradition or Anglo-Saxon heritage, these are variations on the white supremacy that Hitler employed in a German context. Fortunately, the American version wants to use immigration policy rather than death camps and foreign conquest to maintain the superiority of the white race, but we shouldn’t get complacent. Ideologies based on racial or cultural supremacy are inherently prone to extreme violence. The Nazi example shows that things can go sideways very quickly, and that there are more potential fault lines we can fight over than just skin color.

Why You Should Ignore the “Right Track/Wrong Track” Question as a Predictor of the 2022 Midterms

A media that is obsessed with horse race politics is trying desperately to come up with ways to predict what’s going to happen in the 2022 midterm elections. Since polling is still pretty unreliable when it comes to individual races, they have to look for something else. Typically that means taking into account the fact that, historically, the party that controls the White House does poorly in midterm elections. That, combined with Biden’s approval numbers, is part of the package that is predicting doom and gloom for Democrats.

But as we see with NBC’s First Read, there’s another poll number pundits are using to predict a “shellacking” for Democrats: the extent to which voters think the country is on the “wrong track.” According to most polls, 70-75% think we’re heading in the wrong direction. With numbers that high, the feeling is obviously bipartisan.

It is understandable why Republicans think the country is on the wrong track. Right wing media is constantly feeding them apocalyptic messages about things like stolen elections, hordes of immigrants invading our country, crime levels on the rise, public schools that teach propaganda to their children, and Democrats implementing a socialist agenda. And that doesn’t even take into account the radical conspiracy theories about how a cabal of pedophiles is in control of the world.

So what explains the fact that so many Democrats also think the country is headed in the wrong direction – especially when their party controls the White House and has (albeit small) majorities in both houses of congress?

A seemingly intractable pandemic is certainly a major contributor. But given four years of a Trump presidency, followed by a multitude of Republican attacks on our democracy, it is understandable that even those on the left are feeling pessimistic about the direction we’re heading. All of that is combined with the fact that mainstream media seems focused on highlighting the challenges we face as “Biden failures.”

It is obvious that Republicans and right wing media are depending on hyping their apocalyptic messages to get their voters to the polls in November. They’re doing everything they can to inflame the chaos, while avoiding any talk about their actual agenda.

The question is: how will this pessimism affect Democrats? To the extent that the “wrong track” analysis stems from the way Republicans are attacking our democracy, it is possible that more people will turn out to vote in the midterms. There’s just too much at stake. But if that feeling is a reaction to the media’s obsession with Biden failures, it could depress turnout.

In the end, Hayes Brown nailed it when talking about this particular data point.

I understand the theoretical utility of trying to take the country’s temperature. But declaring that “America is on the wrong track” based on such polling is absurd. As it stands, analysts and pundits are pretending that they’re using objective data to explain the political fortunes of our elected leaders and the policies they’re advocating. But nothing substantive is being measured — it’s all just vibes.

The Gray Wolf Deserves Emergency Protection

Since losing their endangered species status in 2020, the wolves have been “harvested” at an alarming rate.

In August 2017, when the white supremacist Unite the Right rally took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, I was on a family trip to Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks in Wyoming. We saw a lot of wildlife, including a pack of wolves in Yellowstone. It was a nice experience, but I don’t have some fetish about wolves. I don’t want them to go extinct, but I understand that ranchers don’t want them roaming around on their property. It’s just that I think there are solutions beyond hunting them down when they leave the protected environment of the park.

Most obviously, we can easily compensate ranchers for any loss of livestock. As for hunting wolves for sport, that obviously depends on their status as an endangered species. In October 2020, the Trump administration’s U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service removed “protection from all gray wolves in the lower 48 states except for a small population of Mexican gray wolves in Arizona and New Mexico.” It was a contentious decision opposed by conservation groups that argued delisting was premature. In 1967, the gray wolf population in the lower 48 states had dropped below 1,000, but they were protected in 1978 and the population grew to about 6,000 in 2020. It was a nice success story, but a tenuous one.

In the 1980’s, an extensive study located no wolves in Yellowstone Park, but they were re-introduced in the mid-1990’s. The park service says that 23 wolves have been killed since they were delisted, meaning that only 91 remain in Yellowstone. Fifteen of those wolves were “harvested” in Montana. These are wolves that left the confines of the park, but it should be noted that hunters are luring them with bait.

Yet, we are subjected to nonsense like this:

A representative of the Montana hunting industry said outfitters and guides supported the preservation of wolves inside Yellowstone. But once the animals crossed the boundary, sustainable hunting and trapping should be allowed, said Mac Minard, executive director of the Montana Outfitters and Guides Association.

Minard questioned whether the 20 wolves killed so far this year after leaving Yellowstone should even be considered “park wolves”.

“That just doesn’t make sense,” he said. “Why aren’t they ‘Montana wolves’ that happened to go into the park?”

Each one of the culled wolves has been identified by the park. You can download a spreadsheet on each kill here, so they are not “Montana wolves” that went into the park. The problem is exacerbated by changes in Montana law which eliminated quotas on how many wolves can be hunted near the park.

The park superintendent, Cam Sholly, has urged Montana’s Republican governor, Greg Gianforte, to shut down hunting and trapping in the area for the remainder of the season.

But Gianforte, who himself trapped and killed a Yellowstone wolf last year, violating state hunting regulations, has not been receptive to the request, according to a letter in response to Sholly obtained by the Associated Press.

“Once a wolf exits the park and enters lands in the State of Montana it may be harvested pursuant to regulations established by the [state wildlife] Commission under Montana law,” Gianforte wrote on Wednesday…

…Urged by Republican lawmakers, Montana wildlife officials last year loosened hunting and trapping rules for wolves statewide. They also eliminated longstanding wolf quota limits in areas bordering the park. The quotas, which Sholly asked Gianforte to reinstate, allowed only a few wolves to be killed along the border annually.

The original quotas were meant to protect packs that draw tourists to Yellowstone from around the world for the chance to see a wolf in the wild.

Under new rules, Montana hunters can use bait such as meat to lure wolves for killing and trappers can now use snares in addition to leghold traps.

The result has been as swift as it was predictable: an immediate 20 percent reduction in the Yellowstone wolf population. The slaughter may have been worse in Wisconsin.

As many as one-third of Wisconsin’s gray wolves probably died at the hands of humans in the months after the federal government announced it was ending legal protections, according to a study by University of Wisconsin scientists released in July.

I don’t think this is a sustainable trajectory. If the wolves aren’t already endangered according to whatever formula is used for determining such things, they surely will be before much longer. The Department of the Interior is reportedly doing a year-long study to determine if the gray wolf should be re-listed, but that is not good enough for 78 House members who have petitioned Secretary Deb Haaland asking for (temporary) emergency protection while the study is conducted. Haaland, who is the first Native American cabinet member, is getting a lot of pressure on the issue from the Native community. It seems to me that she ought to consider the emergency listing because the kill rate is alarmingly high.