Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.924

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be continuing with the painting of Bent Pyramid. The photo that I’m using is seen directly below.

I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 5x7inch canvas panel.

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

Since that time I have continued to work on the painting. I have now added the midground and distant figures.

The painting is now finished.

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

I’ll have a new painting to show you next week. See you then.

Friday Foto Flog 3.039

Hi photo lovers.

It’s been a while. I’m still very busy, and since my last post, have had to a series of family health crises as well as work-related stuff. So it goes. I’ve always loved sunset photos, and when I have some time, I try to take a few. This one was taken early in April. I love the lighting and the cloud formations in this particular photo. Hopefully I can find more time to enjoy taking photos of the landscape around my region again in the very near future.

I am still using my same equipment, and am no professional. If you are an avid photographer, regardless of your skills and professional experience, you are in good company here. Booman Tribune was blessed with very talented photographers in the past. At Progress Pond, we seem to have a few talented photographers now, a few of whom seem to be lurking I suppose.

I have been using an LG v40 ThinQ for over four years. My original phone is gone. The back of the phone came off. Apparently the battery began to burst. My replacement had a similar fate. I bought on my of the same phone for hardly anything, as I simply didn’t have the time to really research a good permanent replacement. We will see how long this one lasts. I need more time to research smart phones, especially at the high end. I prefer to get a device and keep it for four or five years. Most of my family seems to be gravitating toward iPhones, so I suspect I may eventually have to succumb and go to the Dark Side of The Force. Given the times we live in, my default is to delay any major purchases as long as possible. So, unless something really goes wrong with my current phone, I’ll stick to the status quo for as long as possible. Keep in mind that my last Samsung kept going for over four years (although the last year was a bit touch and go). Once I do have to make a new smart phone purchase, the camera feature is the one I consider most important. So any advice on such matters is always appreciated. Occasionally I get to use my old 35 mm, but one of my daughters seems to have commandeered it for now. So it goes.

This series of posts is in honor of a number of our ancestors. At one point, there were some seriously great photographers who graced Booman Tribune with their work. They are all now long gone. I am the one who carries the torch. I keep this going because I know that one day I too will be gone, and I really want the work that was started long ago to continue, rather than fade away with me. If I see that I am able to incite a few others to fill posts like these with photos, then I will be truly grateful. In the meantime, enjoy the photos, and I am sure between Booman and myself we can pass along quite a bit of knowledge about the photo flog series from its inception back during the Booman Tribune days.

Since this post usually runs only a day, I will likely keep it up for a while. Please share your work. I am convinced that us amateurs are extremely talented. You will get nothing but love and support here. I mean that. Also, when I say that you don’t have to be a photography pro, I mean that as well. I am an amateur. This is my hobby. This is my passion. I keep these posts going only because they are a passion. If they were not, I would have given up a long time ago. My preference is to never give up.

How Inevitable is Donald Trump?

The Republican base still wants Trump, but he’s on a bumpy road between now and primary season.

Jonathan Martin of Politico has some thoughts about the inevitability of Donald Trump winning the Republican presidential nomination in 2024. He reports on a growing fatalism within conservative ranks that nothing can stop the twice-impeached, once indicted ex-president. Yet, he wants to remind us that the picture a year out from an election often is distorted.

2024 could look a lot like 2020. That was when we in the political press corps dumped oceans of ink on the ideological differences among the candidates, questions about their specific policy proposals (will Elizabeth Warren release her own healthcare plan, inquiring minds didn’t want to know) only to cover a race that effectively turned on a single question: Who can win the general election? Democrats were effectively single-issue voters and their bet on President Joe Biden paid off in November.

I might add that the press corp also spilled a tremendous amount of ink in 2008 on the differences between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton’s health care plans, only to discover that it made not one whit of difference to the outcome of the contest between them.  As for 2020, we shouldn’t forget that Biden won the nomination primarily because he had strong support from the black community, and his perceived electability wasn’t the only factor they considered.

Still, Biden definitely looked like the safest bet to beat Trump to the broad Democratic electorate, so Martin’s point can stand. If you think back on my relentless coverage of those primaries, I predicted Biden’s eventual victory (in both the primaries and the general) from beginning to end. My analysis showed the same consistent confidence in Obama in 2008.

I don’t have that same confidence today. The one thing I know is that Trump’s legal woes are building and we’re going to spend most of the time between now and next spring watching all that get adjudicated. How Trump looks today is not how he will look on the back end of this process, and we certainly shouldn’t expect any policy distinctions between Trump and his rivals to play a meaningful role in influencing the Republican electorate on who they should nominate for president. We should start with the possibility that he’ll be in prison.

What we know is that Republican voters still like Trump and still want him to be president. Some may support a different candidate for practical reasons, believing Trump can’t be elected. We certainly saw plenty of that with Democrats whose first choice was Bernie Sanders but didn’t believe he could win and so backed Biden or someone else. The more erosion Trump gets among this type of voter, the worse his chances. For example, he could soon be held liable for committing rape. That’s not something that screams “electability!”

I think the uncertainty comes from the behavior of the Republican Party which seems to understand that the abortion issue is killing their chances of winning swing states and districts but is nonetheless racing forward with ever more restrictive laws. They are not behaving like winning future elections is a top priority.  They want to use the power they have while they have it, damn the consequences. Anyone depending on the Republican base having a survival instinct doesn’t have a lot to support their faith.

Would the base nominate Trump again even if he’s in prison? That I can ask that question without being laughed out of town tells you all you need to know. The problem isn’t Trump but something that he inspired and unleashed.

Looking at the situation, a GOP strategist told Martin, “We’re just going to have to go into the basement, ride out the tornado and come back up when it’s over to rebuild the neighborhood.”

I think the key to that analogy is the premise that first everything must be destroyed and only then can the GOP get back to practical politics. It’s another way of saying that the MAGA beast must be fed, and all efforts to tame them are futile.

It’s a compelling picture and quite possibly accurate, but I don’t have complete confidence in it. I think Trump’s upcoming problems are going to play out in ways that actually shake the status quo up and change it before the Republican National Convention in 2024. I think it will be almost impossible to make the case that Trump is a viable candidate, and electability will become more of a factor than it is today.

At the same time, were he to secure the nomination, I think people have to consider the possibility that he could win. A lot would have to go wrong with the world between now and then for it to happen, but there’s a lot that could go wrong.

In Tucker Carlson, the Kremlin Lost Their Best American Spokesperson

Carlson was a nefarious force, but never more dangerous than when talking about Russia and Ukraine.

The first thing that really alarmed me about Tucker Carlson’s primetime program on Fox News was his open expression of white supremacy. It really leveled up the nature of right-wing media racism because it replaced a lot of the coded language about crime and welfare and just started making the argument that America is being undermined from within by the influx of non-white immigration which is somehow eroding our cultural coherence and strength. That Fox News was countenancing this kind of messaging was disgusting and dangerous, but the fact that the mother corporation was being richly rewarded for it through sky-high ratings was a five-alarm fire. I began to feel a little desperate that something happen to stop this trajectory toward fascism.

Along the way, Carlson began attacking our institutions.  Politico reports that the Pentagon rejoiced when it learned Carlson had lost his job. The same is true of public health officials, election officials and advocates for the L.G.B.T.Q. community.

With his abrupt departure from Fox News on Monday, Tucker Carlson lost the megaphone that many have accused him of using to spread conspiracy theories about Covid-19 vaccines, gender identity and election integrity.

Civil rights activists and media experts expressed hope that a major force in the misinformation ecosystem had been muzzled.

The television host was “one of the nation’s most prolific mouthpieces for white supremacy, misinformation and misogyny,” said Bridget Todd, director of communications at the gender equity advocacy group Ultraviolet.

“We are not sad to see him go,” Sarah Kate Ellis, the president and chief executive of the L.G.B.T.Q. advocacy organization GLAAD, wrote on Twitter.

All of this was bad enough, but it was Carlson’s open support and admiration for Vladimir Putin and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that really sent my over the edge and made me think that his ouster from Fox News was one of the highest national priorities. I found it almost incomprehensible that Fox News had allowed itself to become one of Russia’s most valuable propaganda outlets and they were seemingly paying no price for it.

On March 3, as Russian military forces bombed Ukrainian cities as part of Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of his neighbor, the Kremlin sent out talking points to state-friendly media outlets with a request: Use more Tucker Carlson.

“It is essential to use as much as possible fragments of broadcasts of the popular Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who sharply criticizes the actions of the United States [and] NATO, their negative role in unleashing the conflict in Ukraine, [and] the defiantly provocative behavior from the leadership of the Western countries and NATO towards the Russian Federation and towards President Putin, personally,” advises the 12-page document written in Russian. It sums up Carlson’s position: “Russia is only protecting its interests and security.” The memo includes a quote from Carlson: “And how would the US behave if such a situation developed in neighboring Mexico or Canada?”

If America were leveling Mexican and Canadian cities on the pretext that they really belonged to the United States of America, then we might have a parallel situation to what’s going on in Ukraine, but that is not even close to the case here. The truth is that a good part of the American right sees Putin on the correct side of a fight between a pluralistic and ecumenical West and the old days of white colonialism and Christian cultural dominance. In this fight, a commitment to democracy and representative government has completely fallen by the wayside, and Carlson became the biggest megaphone (other than Donald Trump himself) for this slippage.

People are still sorting through the precise reason that Carlson was terminated, but it certainly was not because of his stance toward Russia. Maybe it was as simple as him getting cocky and making disparaging remarks about upper management. Maybe it was because of the Dominion Voting Services lawsuit or because Rupert Murdoch finally concluded that he is a dangerous religious fanatic. Perhaps it was about upcoming lawsuits related to Carlson’s toxic work environment. Most likely, it was a combination of these factors.

To me, however, the most important thing is that the Kremlin lost their most valued American spokesperson. What baffles me is how Carlson was allowed to fill that role for so long. Even now, most articles on his departure don’t even mention it.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Volume 308

Hi everyone! It’s been a minute. Lately, I feel lucky to be able to post something new every couple weeks. I hope that is about to change, but I really don’t want to try to write any checks I can’t cash. Let’s see how things go.

In honor of Tucker Carlson’s demise, I thought that at least the song title for this video was fitting:

As always, the bar is open and the jukebox is filled with an unlimited number of tunes. If you feel like leaving a comment, I am always grateful. If not, I get it. You do you. I’ll be back in a week or two.

Cheers.

Arizonans Would Rather Step in Dogshit Than Reelect Sinema

Her polling, favorability and fundraising are abysmal, and there’s no chance he wins another term in the Senate.

I am not surprised in the least to learn that Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona has raised only 0.3 percent of her reelection money from small donors, but I have to say I am little shocked to see that Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego has outraised her $3.7 to $2.1 million in the first quarter of the year. If there is one thing I assumed Sinema could succeed at, it’s raking in Big Money.

Now, the big news today is that Sinema is polling somewhere below chlamydia, although I have to note that the source is an internal Gallego poll, so her unpopularity may be somewhat exaggerated. The headline findings are sobering nonetheless. Let’s begin with her favorability numbers:

…27 percent of voters in the state view Sinema favorably and want her to run again, compared to 50 percent of Arizonans who view her unfavorably and 54 percent who say she shouldn’t run again.

This shows that she hasn’t compensated for alienating the Democratic voters who nominated her five years ago by picking up a commensurate amount of support from Republicans and independents. When you add in the fact that she hasn’t convinced the corporate titans she favors to put their chips on her line, this isn’t something she’s likely to fix. The three-way theoretical matchups look dismal, too.

In any likely three-way matchup among Sinema, Gallego and whatever Republican candidate wins their primary, Sinema appears to have virtually no chance of winning. If the GOP candidate is election denier Kari Lake, for example, the new PPP survey shows that Gallego would pull in 42 percent of the vote, Lake 35 percent, and Sinema just 14 percent. The numbers are similar if you plug Jim Lamon or Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb in as the Republican candidate.

Again, these are internal Gallego polling numbers, and I take them with a grain of salt. At least for now, however, she looks like her independent bid might be more likely to keep the seat in Democratic hands than splitting the left and handing it to the Republicans.

That’s a lot of failure. It makes me happy.

Can’t a Billionaire Just Give 300 Million Bucks to Harvard?

Rich people supporting education shouldn’t be a problem for either the right or the left.

Anu Needham is an accomplished author, editor and professor. If you go to her webpage at Oberlin College, however, she is invariably referred to as the “Donald R. Longman Professor of English, Cinema Studies, and Comparative Literature.” Donald Rufus Longman was my grandfather’s brother and a 1932 Oberlin graduate. Honestly, I don’t know anything about my uncle Don’s politics.

I know he wrote some books about marketing and cost analysis. I know he was an early venture capitalist in biotechnology, and very generous to his alma mater. I know in the photo on the right, taken in 1913 on my grandfather’s ninth birthday, he seems to be dressed as a girl. I suppose I can at least surmise that Oberlin’s reputation for left-wing politics didn’t put him off.

Now, Ross Douthat has an entire column in Saturday’s New York Times that amounts to a complaint that hedge fund billionaire Kenneth Griffin donated $300 million to his alma mater. This has supposedly annoyed everyone.

The problem is that Griffin is a big Republican donor and the recipient of his gift is Harvard University. Douthat suggests that progressives are annoyed that a big supporter of Ron DeSantis will have his name adorned on the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, while conservatives are angry that a conservative is funding “the Kremlin on the Charles, the fons et origo of so many liberal follies, the central shrine in the academic-progressive cathedral.”

Douthat is mainly upset that Griffin didn’t even specify some pet project but rather just threw the money into Harvard’s already huge endowment.

Could this money have been better spent? Yeah, sure. But Douthat’s overall argument is dependent on the idea that there’s some inherent conflict between conservative politics and supporting the preeminent institution of higher learning in the United States of America. That may well be true in the aggregate, but the idea that every Ivy League-educated plutocrat in the country is somehow obligated to turn their back on their own upbringing is downright bizarre.

I assume that Griffin gave to Harvard because he values the education he received there. Obviously there’s some vanity involved, and perhaps a desire to reach for a bit of immortality. I’m sure those considerations influenced my Uncle Don’s decision to give lavishly to Oberlin, too, but I never thought it was a political statement on his part.

And, by extension, it’s a reach to say it’s a political statement for Harvard to accept Miller’s gift.

As for the ideological critiques of Griffin’s gift, they both capture key dilemmas facing our political coalitions. For the left, to imply that Harvard is functionally right-wing because it takes money from Republicans is wildly overstating things, but the truer observation is that progressivism’s self-image as a champion of the underdog is in deep tension with progressivism’s entrenchment as the official ideology of the highly educated upper classes, and Griffin’s largess is a condensed symbol of that tension.

Can a movement for social justice be credible and capable if it’s intertwined with plutocracy and seems to originate and thrive in institutions that perpetuate socioeconomic privilege? Or is the contemporary left destined to always be a handmaiden for the woke-washed forms of capital, the Bernie Sanders vision of class warfare yielding to Pride flags and consciousness-raising H.R. sessions inside Fortune 500 companies?

The problem here is not of Harvard or Griffin’s making, but a simple consequence of muddled thinking. We have right-wingers convinced that Ivy League schools are aligned in any meaningful way with the socialist fringe of the Democratic Party. If conservatives no longer want to be part of the cultural elite, they can stop applying to the Ivies, but the Ivies will still churn out a cultural elite without them. That Kenneth Griffin doesn’t subscribe to that kind of self-injurious stupidity is not a mark against him.

And we have left-wingers who seem not to understand that perpetuating socioeconomic privilege is what happens when a rich child gets a top notch eduction at a highly networked prestigious university. The Ivies can do more to promote social mobility but they’re supposed to deliver privilege as an end result. That’s not a design flaw, but a reasonably expected return on investment.

A much bigger problem than how venture capitalists and hedge fund managers spend their money is that conservatism has defined itself in opposition to academic excellence. I prefer my plutocrats to value education, and money spent on Harvard is money not spent on conservative politics.

The American Republic Is Collapsing Like Weimar

When the right gives up on democracy, fascism in one form or another is what follows.

I spent a good part of my morning rereading parts of Martin Broszat’s 1987 book Hitler and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic, (a relevant excerpt can be found here). My main focus was to re-familiarize myself with the thinking of the industrial and agrarian leaders who decided to either back Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party or to at least accede or recommend, in the decisive moment of crisis in 1933, that Hitler be made chancellor. There are some other online resources you can use for this purpose, including simply the Wikipedia pages for the Freundeskreis der Wirtschaft (Circle of Friends of the Economy) and figures like Wilhelm Keppler and Hjalmar Schacht.

This is obviously an enormous topic of study, but I really want to focus on just three things. The first is that the broad right-wing of German politics was alarmed that the communists had done well in the 1932 election. This is really what united aristocratic landowners, wealthy capitalists, and the populist ruffians attracted to Hitler. These groups did not naturally trust or respect each other, but had to build an alliance to keep their common enemy at bay.

The parallel to the American right should be fairly obvious. The postwar Republican Party has always had a tension between respectable country club types and  the unhinged and paranoid style of right-wing populism. Fear of economic redistribution and atheism bound them together.

Which leads to a second point, one that Broszat makes here:

What increased the dependence of the old anti-republican and conservative-nationalist elites on Hitler was that nationalist and völkische ideologies had begun to corrode established traditional principles of government and legality well before 1933. The boundaries between [Franz von] Papen’s Young Conservatism and the varied elements of the “Conservative Revolution” that had rallied within the broad framework of Nazism had become fluid long ago.

The contemporary parallel is the blurring of the difference between the Republicanism of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and that of former president Donald Trump. These two men cannot stand each other, but neither can they carry any degree of power without the other’s assistance and consent. In practice, they are forced to settle on what unites them, and that is not the inviolability of our constitutional system.

What provided the glue for the “fateful” and never harmonious alliance between the conservative elites and the Nazi mass movement which made Hitler’s chancellorship possible, was the aggressive rejection of Weimar parliamentarianism and of the forces that had shaped the Republic. These latter forces-Social Democrats, left liberals and Center Party Catholics had been decried as “Reich enemies” as early as the Bismarckian Empire.

The “nationalist and völkische ideologies” referred to above are represented by MAGA Trumpism, and in order to make alliance with Trump, McConnellism has allowed a kind of “rejection of Weimar parliamentarianism” to take hold. Most obviously, this occurred on January 6, 2021, but it became clear as McConnell’s initial instinct to fight back was subsumed by his realization that his position lacked popularity.

There’s an exact parallel with what happened to the right-wing chancellors who immediately preceded Hitler.

However, the conservative-nationalist forces that aimed at a restoration of this kind were incapable of providing a popular backing for it. And yet without a plebiscitarian base, a stabilization of the situation which industry and commerce, crisis-stricken as they were, were also calling for more and more impatiently, proved ultimately impossible. In this respect the authoritarian presidential governments of Papen and Schleicher remained dependent on the support of the NSDAP [Nazi Party] and this, in turn, made them vulnerable to blackmail by the Hitler movement.

Lack of popularity was the reproach which Brüning had to face many times towards the end of his term of office; this weakness decisively weakened the prestige and the power base of his government. The absence of a popular basis condemned the Papen Cabinet even more strikingly to an ephemeral existence. It was no more than a transitional government on the way to a Nazi seizure of power. [President] Hindenburg refused to hand power to Hitler for a long time. But when he finally and at the last minute changed his mind he was also motivated by a desire to restore the popularity of his presidential regime. Schleicher proposed the risky establishment of a military dictatorship; Papen promised to deliver a popular base, and, faced with this choice, Hindenburg opted for the latter solution.

A small clarification on this last point is merited even though it’s not obviously relevant to our current predicament. Broszat’s argument is that President Hindenburg opted for the gloss of constitutionality represented by appointing Hitler rather than, as the current chancellor recommended, illegally postponing parliamentary elections. And this was because Hindenburg cared about his own legitimacy. In Papen’s proposal, which reluctantly put Hitler in charge, Hindenburg could shield himself behind “a popular base.”

And here’s the decisive point. A good while before the crisis of 1933 which brought Hitler to power, the German right had already made a decision to crush the left by unconstitutional means. But they wanted it to look legitimate. The process began with Papen’s chancellorship and ended with him greasing the skids for Hitler.

When Papen took office and the Social Democrat-led Prussian government was unseated, an irreversible decision had been made to rule through an authoritarian right-wing regime which was not supported by parliament and, in particular, did not take any notice of the political Left, i.e. the SPD and the trade unions.

The goal all along was basically for elites to protect their shit from the rabble. But they very unhappily realized that their goal could not be achieved in either a constitutional manner or without the support of Hitler’s mass movement.

In today’s terms, we saw all the voter suppression shit start under George W. Bush, but actually delegitimizing our elections and supporting a coup didn’t happen until Trump. The goal is to win at all costs, and that’s what unites the old guard with MAGA. As this blurring effect proceeds apace, we see less and less evidence that right-wing establishment organizations with an interest in norms and traditions (e.g. Senate Republicans) can or will hold the line to protect their own prerogatives or the system as whole. McConnell backing down on January 6 is the best signifier of this.

Now I see the Utah Republicans are upset that people are protesting an appearance by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis at their annual conference by using the swastika symbol. But the symbol serves as an appropriate warning about the way Republicans, very much including DeSantis, are drifting into a very recognizable form of fascism.

Consider that DeSantis is at once most famous for taking on Disney, a giant corporation, and yet is still the great hope of financial elites who feels estranged from Trump’s style of populism. They may resist the devil, but they will still succumb because it’s ultimately about making sure you don’t get any of their stuff.

The right is moving this way because they’re not popular on the merits of their policies. In fact, they can’t even agree on policies anymore because the MAGA base isn’t interested in Wall Street’s concerns. So, we don’t get proposals as much as we get things like DeSantis’s Anti-Woke Campaign.

It’s not seamless. Back in September, wealthy GOP donors flocked to DeSantis and now GOP donors are open to other Trump challengers as they worry DeSantis is the second coming of Jeb Bush.

All of this is my way of saying that sometime in the not too distant future we may be reading a book called [Fill in the Blank] and the Collapse of the American Republic. The “Blank” could be DeSantis. It could be Trump or someone else. But the direction here is looking kind of inevitable in much the same way that in retrospect Hitler’s rise seems inevitable. The problem arises when the political right gives up on representative government. What follows is some form of fascism, and how bad things get depends on details.

Want to Laugh At Mike Lindell Until Your Guts Split?

I wrote about Mike Lindell’s failed tweaker coup on January 17, 2021, but I have otherwise mostly ignored the Pillow Guy. I never commented on his “Prove Mike Wrong” campaign from August 2021 where he offered $5 million to anyone who could prove he was completely full of shit in claiming he had proof that China fixed the 2020 election for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

Specifically, he offered $5 million to anyone who could prove that the data he presented at a “cyber symposium” in South Dakota was not from the 2020 election. A Trump-supporting citizen from Nevada decided to take him up on that proposition. Robert Zeidman, 63, is a computer forensics expert, so he had the requisite expertise. But when he tried to claim his prize, Lindell refused to pay up.  The dispute went to arbitration. It didn’t go well for Lindell.

Zeidman had examined Lindell’s data and concluded that it not only did not prove voter fraud, it had no connection to the 2020 election. He was the only expert who submitted a claim, arbitration records show…

…In their 23-page decision, the arbitrators said Zeidman proved that Lindell’s material “unequivocally did not reflect November 2020 election data.” They directed Lindell’s firm to pay Zeidman within 30 days.

I find this all side-splittingly hilarious.

Zeidman’s attorney Brian Glasser said that the panel’s decision stood as a warning to others who made wild allegations about election fraud. “I think the arbitrators thought it important that these claims be vetted, because they’ve done great harm to our country,” he said.

I just wish a couple million Americans had made submissions because, as it stands, Lindell is only out $5 million. Of course, he says this is a horribly unfair and he will appeal, but there is no appeal from this arbitration decision.

A copy of contest rules submitted in the arbitration said disputes would be “resolved exclusively by final and binding arbitration” and noted that arbitration “is subject to very limited review by courts.”

Glasser said that the panel’s decision cannot be directly appealed but that Lindell could ask a federal court to quash it on the basis that it represented a “manifest injustice.” The statutory grounds for such a claim are narrow and it is “extremely rare” for such a claim to succeed, according to Glasser.

It’s impossible to see how it’s a manifest injustice for Lindell to honor the terms of his contest.

In an amusing aside, Lindell was furious when Fox News refused to run promotions for his August 2021 “cyber symposium” and angrily pulled all his pillow advertisements off the network. A year later, however, he was running up to 700 MyPillow ads on Fox News per month, making him according to the New York Times, the “largest single advertiser on Fox News’s right-wing opinion prime-time lineup.”

How poetic then, that Dominion Voting Systems just won a $787.5 million settlement against Fox News for defamation?

Next up is Lindell, and he’ll have to defend himself against a “$1.3 billion defamation suit from Dominion and a defamation lawsuit from one of Dominion’s former executives.” He probably can’t afford to settle, and his prospect of winning are not good. So, if actually want a MyPillow, I suggest you snatch one up soon because I think this motherfucker is going out of business.

Dominion’s Settlement With Fox News Is No Reason to Despair

A trial would have been more productive and satisfying, but this is a long process and we’re moving in the right direction.

Peter Maas’s latest article for The Intercept is simultaneously smug and despairing, but it’s quite accurate in its analysis of the $787.5 million settlement between Fox News and Dominion Voting Systems. The short version is that anyone who was hoping that a company like Dominion, controlled by a private equity firm, was going to be the vehicle to save American democracy was probably huffing paint: “One terrible limb of American capitalism was always unlikely to save us from another terrible limb.”

But hope and confidence are not the same things. Hoping for something unlikely isn’t a sign of stupidity unless your plan relies on it. Once the trial had selected a jury, it was reasonable to expect that opening statements might follow. Alas, it was not to be. So it goes.

Dominion won big and their discovery process provided a major public service along the way. But a trial would have been so much better. We needed to see Rupert Murdoch and his son Lachlan, along with Fox News talent like Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity, take the stand and admit that the Big Lie is a big lie. Even if the trial wasn’t televised, the transcripts would have been gold. In the end, we didn’t even get an on-air apology.

But try to look on the bright side. By settling, Fox News has to pony up almost a billion dollars, and it might have taken years for that to happen through a trial and subsequent appeals, if it happened at all. The number isn’t crippling but it’s substantial, and it’s giving their parent company a headache.

Fox Corp shareholders are demanding company records that may show whether directors and executives properly oversaw Fox News’ coverage of former President Donald Trump’s election-rigging claims, sources told Reuters, in what could be a prelude to lawsuits seeking to make directors liable for costs.

Accountability could come from shareholders demanding new management. This is more realistic because, as the Washington Post reports, the process is about to repeat itself.

The media company also faces a $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit filed by another voting technology company, Smartmatic, that alleges Fox broadcast lies that “decimated” its business.

In a nearly 300-page complaint filed in New York State Supreme Court in February 2021, Smartmatic alleges that Fox News knowingly made “over 100 false statements and implications” about the company, amplifying false information from former president Donald Trump and his allies that Smartmatic played a role in his election loss. In February, a New York appeals court ruled that the case was allowed to proceed.

If Dominion seemed ambitious seeking $1.6 billion, Smartmatic is even more so asking for $2.7 billion. Having seen Fox News shell out $787.5 million to make Dominion’s case go away, Smartmatic’s lawyers will definitely be driving a hard bargain. And I think Fox News will inclined to avoid repeating some mistakes, like letting severely damaging information come out in the discovery process. If you’re a Fox Corp. shareholder, the pain is not over.

There’s really four things we should want to see from these lawsuits. First is that people pay a price for deceiving the American people. Second is that as many of the deceived as possible realize what happened. Third is that Fox News does things at least a little more responsibly in the future. Fourth is that with respect to the 2024 presidential election, Fox News does not undermine acceptance of the legitimacy of the outcome.

The settlement started the process. A financial price has been paid and some deterrence has been established. We still need to see more accountability because, so far, only the wrong people at Fox News have lost their jobs. Perhaps the shareholders will have something to say about that, and they could also influence how Fox News responds the next time a Republican candidate outright lies about the integrity of an election.

There’s more accountability coming too, in the Special Counsel’s case on January 6, and the Fulton County, Georgia case on fake electors.

The settlement was disappointing but it was a big step in the right direction. I’m despairing about a lot of things, but this isn’t one of them.