Did Democrats Miss Their Chance to Save the Country?

If everything seems broken, that’s because the Establishment decided not to be serious about antitrust enforcement.

As I sit here with my power newly restored more than forty-eight hours after a wind storm, and still without internet except through my iPhone’s hotspot (which, I am notified, will soon be throttled for overuse), I can understand why so many Americans feel like the country is broken. It’s a theme today at the New York Times where columnists Bret Stephens and Thomas Edsall spell it out for us.

Stephens is being widely mocked for penning a column entitled The Case for Donald Trump…By Someone Who Wants Him to Lose, and I can understand why progressives are losing their patience with this kind of production from The Gray Lady. But the column is really a plea for opponents of Trump to “take our heads out of the sand.” If nothing else, it does a decent job of explaining that the Establishment is failing because it has a shitty record.

Edsall’s piece, A ‘National and Global Maelstrom’ Is Pulling Us Under, is much better and far more terrifying.

The coming election will be held at a time of insoluble cultural and racial conflict; a two-tier economy, one growing, the other stagnant; a time of inequality and economic immobility; a divided electorate based on educational attainment — taken together, a toxic combination pushing the country into two belligerent camps.

I wrote to a range of scholars, asking whether the nation has reached a point of no return.

The responses varied widely, but the level of shared pessimism was striking.

If I could sum up the common theme Edsall received in response to his inquiries, it’s a struck-dumb realization by our educated elites that at least half the electorate is beyond reason and prepared to deliberately destroy this country for spite. It’s a crisis of faith in the people, which hasn’t yet curdled into a loss of faith in the virtues of our democratic system. It’s not the virtues that are openly doubted at this point, but rather the prospects for survival.

It’s a theme my brother tackles in the cover story for the Jan/Feb/Mar 2024 issue of the Washington Monthly. I just checked and that story has not  gone live, although subscribers have already received their copy in the mail.

Phil explains how the monopolization of media has contributed to the brokenness we’re all experiencing, including the broken moral and mental capabilities of the American electorate.

Instead, it is a direct result of specific, boneheaded policy choices that politicians in both parties made over the past 40 years. By repealing or failing to enforce basic market rules that had long contained concentrated corporate power, policy makers enabled the emergence of a new kind of monopoly that engages in a broad range of deeply anticompetitive business practices. These include, most significantly, the cornering of advertising markets, which historically provided the primary means of financing journalism. This is the colossal policy failure that has effectively destroyed the economic foundations of a free press.

Since he came armed with solutions, I welcomed my brother’s piece as an antidote for my own deep and growing sense of helplessness. Because, to be honest with you, I generally am more in the Richard Haass camp. Haass told Edsall, “I am no longer confident there is the necessary desire and ability to make this country succeed. As a result, I cannot rule out continued paralysis and dysfunction at best and widespread political violence or even dissolution at worst.”

And if not Haass, then Jack Goldstone, a professor of public policy at George Mason University, who told Edsall, “if the G.O.P. wins in 2024 or even wins enough to paralyze government and sow further doubts about the legitimacy of our government and institutions, then we drift steadily toward Argentina-style populism, and neither American democracy nor American prosperity will ever be the same again.”

I most definitely identify with this:

Isabel Sawhill, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, wrote in an email that pessimism has become endemic in some quarters: “I find that many of my friends, relatives and colleagues are equally concerned about the future of the country. The worst part of this is that we feel quite helpless — unable to find ways to improve matters.”

The helplessness really draws from the inability of anyone with expertise and influence to convince the public about the true nature of Donald Trump’s character and motivations. And maybe Stephens is onto something when he writes, “My pet theory is that, if Republican voters think the central problem in America today is obnoxious progressives, then how better to spite them than by shoving Trump down their throats for another four years?”

But, truthfully, Stephens is probably more on point here:

As writers like Tablet’s Alana Newhouse have noted, brokenness has become the defining feature of much of American life: broken families, broken public schools, broken small towns and inner cities, broken universities, broken health care, broken media, broken churches, broken borders, broken government. At best, they have become shells of their former selves. And there’s a palpable sense that the autopilot that America’s institutions and their leaders are on — brain-dead and smug — can’t continue.

Which is really what my brother Phil is arguing, too. With respect to the crisis in journalism, he writes, “Simply put, it requires returning to the same basic anti-monopoly principles that Americans used during previous revolutions in communications technology to preserve our First Amendment rights.” As he’s been arguing for years now, anti-competitive practices are at the root of problems not just in media and journalism but in health care and in the regional inequality that is driving rural and small-town America into the hands of the fascist right.

In a piece just published in Politico Magazine on Nikki Haley’s campaign, Jonathan Martin makes an interesting observation about two recent events in Iowa:

The most memorable feature of Haley’s otherwise forgettable gathering was not what she said but the nature of her audience — and how it explains why Trump is poised to win overwhelmingly in Iowa on Monday but will face the same general election challenges in 2024 he did in 2020.

I struggled to find a single attendee in the suburban strip mall tavern who was not a college graduate. Similarly, the day before, I couldn’t find a Haley admirer who showed up to see her in Sioux City who was not also a college graduate.

Trump’s base of support is increasingly made up of non-college graduates, and this is transforming the Republican Party into a right-wing populist movement. There is nothing more dangerous to a representative form of government, and it’s proceeding this way in part because the Democratic Party has not fought strongly enough against monopolies.

My pessimism is really drawn from my suspicion that it’s too late. The Biden administration understands the problem and has the best antitrust policies we’ve seen in decades, but with Congress deadlocked, they simply lack the power to do more than tinker around the edges.

I am not a fan of Bret Stephens, but he’s doing a service in trying to explain Trump’s appeal to Democrats who can’t get beyond his personal failings. I am just hoping it’s not too late.

Lloyd Austin Should Resign

The Secretary of Defense is too important to the chain of command to be indisposed without informing his superiors.

In my personal opinion, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin should resign. I think I understand why he didn’t notify the Biden administration and the National Security Council that he was hospitalized and had transferred responsibilities to his deputy. But it doesn’t matter. His actions were reckless.

The basic timeline is that prostate cancer was detected during a routine screening Austin underwent in early December. This led to an elective prostatectomy on December 22, under general anesthesia. The surgery seemed to go well, but on January 1, he was admitted to Walter Reed hospital suffering from “nausea with severe abdominal, hip, and leg pain.” He had developed a urinary tract infection and was transferred to intensive care. On January 2nd,

Doctors then discovered that Austin had “abdominal fluid collections impairing the function of his small intestines.”

“This resulted in the back up of his intestinal contents which was treated by placing a tube through his nose to drain his stomach,” the officials added. “The abdominal fluid collections were drained by non-surgical drain placement.”

At some point on the 2nd, he notified Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks who was on vacation in Puerto Rico that she should take over his duties. But she was not told that he was in this hospital until the January 4th, which is the same day President Joe Biden and national security adviser Jake Sullivan were informed.

The Secretary of Defense should not go under general anesthesia without transferring his powers to his deputy and informing the White House and the National Security Council. The same could be said if they are admitted to an emergency room in medical distress, and certainly if they are put in an intensive care unit. Even if the nature of the illness was highly personal in nature, the Defense Secretary’s role in the chain of command is too critical to be put at this kind of risk.

This wasn’t a simple lapse that occurred only while Austin was in distress. His error began on December 22 when he was put under for his elective surgery and it extended to his failure to explain his situation to his deputy or superiors during 72 hours of hospitalization at the beginning of January. This would be irresponsible at any time, but it’s even more so with the current situation in Ukraine and the Middle East.

He screwed up in a very big way, and he should step down.

I wish him good health though, and a quick recovery.

George Washington and Star Trek Crew Dancing In a Ring Around the Sun

New rocket delivers remains of three presidents and original Star Trek creator and cast into solar orbit.

Kenneth Chang’s assignment from the New York Times was to write about the successful Monday morning launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, of a new rocket that is sending a payload to the moon. And he covered that topic admirably, describing the Vulcan Centaur rocket which is a joint venture between Lockheed Martin and Boeing, and a competitor for Elon Musk’s Space X launchers. The payload is a robot that will land on “Sinus Viscositatis — Latin for ‘Bay of Stickiness’ — an enigmatic region on the near side of the moon.”

The main payload for the first launch of Vulcan was Peregrine, a spacecraft built by Astrobotic Technology of Pittsburgh. Astrobotic, founded in 2007, is one of several private companies aiming to provide a delivery service to the surface of the moon. Its primary customer for this trip is NASA, which paid Astrobotic $108 million to carry five experiments. That is part of the scientific work the space agency is conducting to prepare for the return of the astronauts to the moon under the Artemis program.

But all of this is only of interest to space and rocket geeks. The real news came way down in the 22nd paragraph of Chang’s piece.

Vulcan also lifted a secondary payload for Celestis, a company that memorializes people by sending some of their ashes or DNA into space. Two toolbox-size containers attached to the Vulcan’s upper stage house small cylindrical capsules.

Among the people whose remains are on this final journey are Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek; his wife, Majel Barrett, who played Nurse Chapel on the original television show; and three other actors on the show: DeForest Kelley, who played the medical officer Leonard “Bones” McCoy; Nichelle Nichols, who played Uhura, the communications officer; and James Doohan, who played Montgomery Scott, the chief engineer.

One of the capsules contains samples of hair from three American presidents: George Washington, Dwight Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy.

A final brief engine firing sent the second stage and the Celestis memorial into orbit around the sun.

When thinking about the fact that Gene Roddenberry and his wife, Bones, Scotty and Lt. Uhuru are now in orbit around the Sun, along with hair from three presidents, I couldn’t help think about a line from the Grateful Dead’s Golden Road (to Unlimited Devotion):

Well, everybody’s dancin’ in a ring around the sun
Nobody’s finished, we ain’t even begun.
So take off your shoes, child, and take off your hat.
Try on your wings and find out where it’s at.

Talk about burying the lede!

Of course, they just traded one solar orbit for another one.

Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.960

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be starting a new painting. It is a Cape May, New Jersey scene. The photo that I’m using (My own from a recent visit.) is seen directly below.

I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 5×7 inch canvas panel.

I started my sketch using my usual grind, duplicating the grid I made over a copy of the photo itself. Over this I added some preliminary paint.

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.

Taking Trump Down To The Studs

The disgraced ex-president is going to lose two big trials in the next 60 days, both of which will come with massive financial penalties.

As my old Political Animal colleague Steve Benen points out for MSNBC, the disgraced ex-president absolutely lost his shit on Truth Social on Thursday, posting incessantly about E. Jean Carroll. Clearly he’s worried about the onset of the second defamation case scheduled to begin the same day as the Republican Iowa caucuses. The case is basically a formality since it has already been determined that he sexually assaulted Carroll and then defamed her.

Carroll sued Trump twice, once over his very public denials from the White House in 2019 that a rape ever occurred, and again for a taunting written statement he made in 2022 after leaving office.

The second lawsuit went first. Trump ghosted his rape trial in New York City federal court last year, leaving his inadvisable remarks on tape to do the talking for him. It was a blunder that resulted in the jury quickly determining that he did indeed sexually abuse Carroll at a Manhattan department store in the 1990s. The decision came with a $5 million verdict that punished Trump for forcing himself on her—and defaming her in the written statement.

But now that it’s already been legally determined that Trump had some kind of predatory sexual encounter with Carroll, the White House comments defamation case is proceeding on damages only. The jury will solely determine how much money Trump owes for misusing the presidential podium to essentially call his accuser a liar. The evidence will be the same, the issues will be narrow, and the trial could be over in a flash.

He’s going to get hammered with much more than a $5 million verdict, and continuing to run his mouth about Carroll isn’t going to help.

I believe he will find out that it didn’t help to run his mouth about the judge in his New York fraud case either. Judge Arthur Engoron will hold Trump’s fate in his hands when he decides the penalty some time in February. And I don’t expect any mercy.

New York Attorney General Letitia James is calling for a $370 million fine against former President Donald Trump and his companies and a lifetime ban on him and two of his former company executives from the real estate industry in the state.

Attorneys from James’ office requested the punishment in post-trial motions filed Friday in the Trump fraud case. They said that Trump owes $168 million of interest allegedly saved through fraud; $152 million from the sale of the Old Post Office building in Washington, D.C., the site of one of Trump’s hotels; $60 million through the transfer of the Ferry Point Golf Course contract; and $2.5 million from severance agreements for former Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Howard Weisselberg and ex-Trump Organization controller Jeff McConney.

James also called for lifetime bans for Trump, Weisselberg and McConney from participation in the real estate industry as well as from serving as officers or directors in New York corporations or entities. The attorney general also asked for five-year bans for Trump’s eldest sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, with the same conditions.

I won’t be shocked if AG James gets everything she seeks. Trump has done nothing in the case to inspire leniency.

He’ll appeal, of course, but he has little hope of prevailing on the substance. This is all part of taking Trump down to the studs. It’s all that matters.

Trump Is Neither a Person of Faith Nor a Religious Person

The disgraced ex-president is not a churchgoing man nor a man driven by the ethical teachings of any religion.

Maybe I am just getting old, but I don’t understand the difference between being “a person of faith” and a “religious person.” Sure, we could come up with definitions to distinguish between these two things, but they’re the same thing. Using HarrisX as their pollster, Deseret News surveyed the nation to find out how people feel about the presidential contenders’ belief systems. And the results are presented in a faith vs. religion way.

For example, more Republicans (64 percent) think Donald Trump is a man of faith than think he is a religious man (47 percent).  Republicans acknowledge that Mike Pence is a more religious (62 percent) than Trump, but they see Pence is less of a man of faith.

It helps a little that HarrisX asks a follow up question about why respondents think various politicians are people of faith/religious. And in that context, it becomes clear that Republicans and Independents agree that Trump “defends people of faith.”

There’s a bipartisan across the board recognition that Trump doesn’t have a strong moral compass and isn’t honest and trustworthy, and only half of Republicans who believe Trump is a person of faith/religious are willing to cite his ethical decision making as proof.

If we try very hard and introduce our own presuppositions, we can begin to tell a coherent story from these survey results. For example, I know Trump doesn’t attend church and isn’t religiously observant in any way. But he has helped push an evangelical Christian political mission to take over the federal courts and overturn Roe v. Wade. So, I can say that he’s not religious but he’s in some way a man of faith.

I would never say that though, because nothing about that makes him a man of faith. At best, he’s an agent or representative of other people who are driven by their faith. An attorney who represents Satanists in court doesn’t thereby become a Satanist. And the same is true of an atheist who does the bidding of religious believers in return for cash, votes, or other considerations.

All the available evidence suggests that Trump is too consumed with himself to have any time or space for God. But his religious supporters either don’t see this or they accept it because Trump is defending them and supporting policies they care about.

And that makes a certain amount of sense.

What stands out for me in this poll isn’t what I can twist and contort into coherence but new depressing evidence that Biden is doing horribly at the most important job he has as a candidate, which is to be better than the other guy on the “cares about people like me” question.

Admittedly, these numbers don’t show what they purport to show. Among Democrats who say Biden is a person of faith/religious, only 39 percent say “cares about people like me” is the reason why. The Democrats are less interested in the religious beliefs of their leaders, which is why they look for behavior.  Democrats think Biden proves his faith and religiosity through honest and ethical decisions informed by a strong moral compass. This is different from thinking he’s making decisions to pander to “people like me.”

But I don’t like seeing Independents giving more credit to Trump than Biden on the question. It suggests that one of Biden’s greatest political skills, which is identifying with normal American voters, isn’t working at the high level needed to win reelection.

But then I haven’t seen a poll on Biden that doesn’t look like an autopsy report. I can’t explain it, but the man just can’t get a positive response on any survey.

And now the Israel/Gaza issue has completely wrecked the cohesion of his political bloc. I don’t know that Humpty Dumpty can recover.

In any case, I don’t think this approach to polling about religion makes sense. Joe Biden is a churchgoing normal average Catholic guy and Donald Trump is a opportunistic nihilist. Biden shouldn’t be losing to this guy, but he is.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Volume 339

Howdy. It’s that time of week, and the first midweek of 2024. It has been an eventful day for me, but not in a bad way. Just means I was too busy to even think about something to post until this evening.

I want to introduce you all to a documentary segment about Latvian tape jockeys (yes you read that correctly) from the very late Soviet era. They were enjoying the relative freedoms of the Glasnost era and considerable portions of the segment involve them being interviewed and/or searching for music in the Netherlands. As you know (I hope), Latvia was one of the first to break away from the USSR, along with Lithuania and Estonia. So, their performances were definitely not pro-Moscow, as far as I can tell. And of course they had to deal with Soviet technological limitations, which is why they used the medium they used in the clubs at home.

Enjoy this little slice of history. Cheers.

Kim Jong-Un Has The Best Insults

The North Korean dictator is a monster but he’s got a gift with the putdowns.

North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un has the best insults. Who can forget the classic 2017 New York Times headline: Kim Jong-un Called Trump a ‘Dotard.’ What Does That Even Mean?Of course, a ‘dotard’ is an old person who is losing their marbles. Kim’s remark stung because it was accurate, but also because most people needed a dictionary to understand it.

Kim was at it again last week when his lunatic communist party had a five-day shindig. This was an opportunity to talk smack that Kim couldn’t resist.

At the party meeting, Kim called South Korea “a hemiplegic malformation and colonial subordinate state” whose society is “tainted by Yankee culture.” He said his military must use all available means including nuclear weapons to “suppress the whole territory of South Korea” in the event of a conflict.

He also used the usual disconcerting language about “annihilating” the United States, which I really think is tiresome and unnecessary. We all have enough to worry about in the world. But I applaud the “hemiplegic malformation” line. Hemiplegia is a medical condition characterized by a severe or complete loss of motor function on one side of the body, usually caused by brain damage. That’s about as good of a putdown as can be delivered to South Korea.

The “colonial subordinate state…tainted by Yankee culture” bit wasn’t as good, mainly because it’s as tired as the Cold War, but also because North Korea is every bit as much a client state, and there is nothing praiseworthy about North Korean culture under his odious regime.

That’s splitting hairs, though. The man is a dangerous maniac and his country is a nightmare, but he’s got a sharp wit.