Saturday, August 01, 2020

What Is Trump Really Up To? It Sure Isn't Helping The GOP Suckers Who Enabled Him All This Time

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On Wednesday, Brookings published a report by Jon Valant, School reopening plans linked to politics rather than public health, which is bound to be more than concerning for millions of parents and teachers. "One of the most enduring-- and maddening-- aspects of Betsy DeVos’s legacy as secretary of education will be the way she has politically charged complicated issues in education. By reducing nuanced issues to a simple directive or judgment, she has attached her reputation-- and President Trump’s reputation in turn-- to those positions, making the issues as polarizing as the two of them... [W]e need to be clear-eyed that national politics-- and the strings attached to federal resources-- can affect the decisions of local and state leaders. Politicization has become an immediate concern for the COVID-19 relief package, which now threatens to withhold funds from school districts in severely affected areas that need to build remote learning capacity. As Sarah Reber and Nora Gordon have argued, Congress needs to move quickly and generously, without playing games with school reopening politics. Now is a time for local and state policymakers to focus on the best interests of their communities, apart from how that relates to matters of ideology and national politics. Of course, better leadership from the federal government would take us a long way in that direction. How can the Republicans be rushing headlong into this minefield right before an election when the vast majority of Americans are skeptical-- at the minimum-- about reopening schools willy nilly, the way Israel did, much to its chagrin as the pandemic exploded across the country causing a worse shutdown than the first one-- as well as a case total of 70,970, the 33rd worst total in the world for a tiny country with the 96th biggest population? Because of the totally botched school reopening, Israel now has more cases than European countries with much bigger populations, from Holland, Belgium and Portugal to Poland, Greece and Czechia.

Is it possible that Trump just doesn't care that he's dragging the entire Republican Party down the toilet with him? The #NeverTrump conservative Republicans at The Bulwark have a theory about that. Although they assert that not losing is Trump's top priority, none of his other priorities include helping any Republicans below him on the ballot. In an intro to the theory, they quoted Bob Dole-- an institutional conservative Republican who very much did care about the well-being on the GOP, even as he was losing his 1996 election bid-- who more recently said of Señor Trumpanzee: "This man, in addition to his general bad character and unfitness for office, has no interest in the Republican party as an institution and will burn it to the ground if he thinks it will profit him one iota. Ceding control of the party to a person whose incentives have previously, and may in the future, wildly diverge from the party's incentives is an invitation to disaster."



That leads one to wonder about what Trump is doing for the party as election season approaches-- aside from tweeting out his lame and utterly insincere one-size-fits-all Twitter endorsements. This is how The Bulwark columnist sees Trump's hierarchy of priorities right now
(1) Win the election.
(2) Avoid blame for losing the election.
(3) Bind his voters more tightly to his own person.
(4) Establish a framework for his next venture.
You will note that "Protecting Congressional Republicans" is not on that list.

It is becoming clear-- even to Trump-- that barring extreme outside events, his primary goal is off the table. While it remains possible that some event intercede-- a meteor strike, a shooting war, a health crisis-- there is nothing that Trump himself can really do to change the outcome of the election.

And so as you move down Trump's incentive structure, he has pivoted to items (2), (3), and (4).

In furtherance of those goals, we should expect Trump to be more erratic and outlandish, more openly racist, and to flirt even more openly with outright delegitimization of the election.

Why? Because these actions will shift blame away from himself, activate and validate the bitter-enders who are part of the Trump cult, and provide him with a launch pad for his post-presidential scheme, where he can promise to give people the real story of what happened with the election. (For just $9.95 a month.)

All of this will be-- just objectively speaking-- good for Trump. It will make him money, enhance his hold on the Republican party, and pave the way for him to be the decider on the party's 2024 nominee.

It is unlikely to be good for the Republican Party.

In all the hand-wringing about how the awful, no-good Never Trumper types want to "burn it all down" you rarely see any Republicans complaining about how it's Trump who's doing the actual burning.

Which only proves my point. The party made a deal with a man they did not fully understand. And now they're trying to pass the bill to someone else.
They deserve Trump and I have no tears for them. They inflicted Trumpism on the rest of us with, in most cases, eyes wide open. No tears when I see careerist hacks like Susan Collins, Steve Daines, Joni Ernst, Dan Sullivan, Martha McSally, Cory Gardner, Michael McCaul, Roger Williams, Donald J. Bacon, Fred Upton. John Katko, Ken Calvert and dozens and dozens more out on their asses after the first of the year. My eyes will be dry.





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Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Je Suis No Tears For The Creatures Of The Night

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-by Melody Siegler

One of my long time best friends, Bob Filbey, sent me a cartoon he had just done.  
My "career" has just made new headway. Every editorial cartoon I've ever done has been submitted for free to our 3 local publications (in Humbolt County). None were ever published locally. Because of the Comic Show at the Sewell Gallery  on display this month in Eureka and the execution of several cartoonists in France, the North Coast Journal requested I do a comic about the event, so apparently I will finally be published locally in that rag this week! I presume there is no pay-- a typical ploy by for profits and non-profits alike, because everyone knows artists work for free because they can best afford it...



The [White] House Trap Game was published in Comic Review and Comic Relief nationally, for which I was paid a hefty $2 back in 1986 (and you may wonder why I don't do more cartoons...).
Filbey continues:
I saw an interview of a real, full time professional editorial cartoonist on PBS last week who lamented that there are only about 30 of his kind left in the US, and that the number of cartoonists killed in Paris was more than the number of pros employed in New York, California, and Texas COMBINED! With such little diversity (and pay), it's no wonder cartoons in this country have become so bland.

Political cartooning, a noble endeavor a century ago, has been (mostly) reduced to inflammatory images meant to sing to the choir or lame platitudes intended to provoke nobody. I got in a hairy dispute with a local cartoonist who didn't care if political cartoonists disappeared from earth (even though he's partially paid as one). He thinks the only bar political cartoons must pass is being funny.

Humor is golden, but political cartoons can do far more than that: they can educate, they can juxtapose, they can make people think of relations and perspectives they've never considered before; that's just not what they do anymore.
I had to ask Filbey about this cartoon from Patrick Oliphant, published in the NYTimes and elsewhere on March 25, 2009 (Universal Press Syndicate distributes Oliphant’s cartoons).  The cartoon garnered various comments, as you can read here.



Filbey’s response: “I think Pat (Oliphant) is probably pick of the litter of the remaining 30 professional cartoonists. As to the cartoon you sent, I'm not fond of Zionists and tend to agree with Pat, but it's really not the fault of the Jews...“

Here’s Oliphant’s cartoon of  January 08, 2015 (published by GoComics). I didn’t ask Filbey about this one, but I think he would approve.



I also asked Filbey about Mike Luckowich, and this cartoon in particular:



Filbey said:
Not familiar with him, but checked out about 50 of his images on Google. He is funnier than most, sometimes uses effective juxtaposition, but often takes the singing to the choir route without much analysis.
And, no, I didn’t ask him about the Rob Crumb cartoon:



But that’s a whole ‘nother story, here and here. But, in response to a comment to another friend, he responded “Yes, Melody, aging cartoonist Robert Crumb has become fossilized in his own warp.”


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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

The Cult Of Celebrity-- This Is No Apologia For Qadaffi

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My friend Cynthia is a very fit great-grandmother. Yesterday she told me she has more sympathy for John Kasich's dead Bengal tigers than for Qadaffi, whose corpse was then on display for tourists in a meat freezer at a suburban Misrata shopping mall. I'm afraid Cynthia-- and myself-- are in a minority. "Let them eat cake," notwithstanding, Marie Antoinette, is largely viewed as a sympathetic victim these days, at least in America. And even Tsar Nicholas II has been partially rehabilitated in the public consciousness-- even more successfully than the Bush Regime (with more than a little help from Los Tres Nosy Amigos, McCain, Graham and Lieberman). Me and Cynthia... no tears for the creatures of the night.

Every day thousands of impoverished parents around the world lose a child so someone from Jamie Johnson's film can buy another new handbag or Porsche. If I think about the indignity of Qadaffi's lynching, it'll be far down that list of millions of people who have suffered at the hands of powermad tyrants and avarice-driven billionaires like him.
The grisly spectacle of Muammar Gaddafi's death and posthumous career as Misrata's most popular body art exhibit may not have been very edifying, and news that the deposed dictator of Libya has been quietly buried at a secret desert location has to be welcome. Let's hope the disposal of his decaying remains does bring an end to the surreal story that started with ambiguous video images-- was he dead or alive?-- and culminated with shots... of celebratory people eager to view the bodies of Gaddafi and his son Mutassim in a cold storage unit, surrounding the corpse to photograph it on their phones.

But nothing in the photographs of Gaddafi wounded, dead, dragged through the streets, and finally on display, rotting in public, has been anything like as disgusting as the thoroughly hypocritical and self-deceiving international reaction to these pictures. Libyans did what they probably had to do. Their western supporters have moaned and groaned at the realities of war with no apparent understanding that through Nato we are participants in this conflict and so share its inevitable moral complexities.

First our media rushed the confusing visual evidence of Gaddafi's capture on to websites and into print. Then, as the reality that he was dead became clear, it worried about the ethics of so openly displaying photographs and video of a corpse.

Meanwhile global agencies expressed concern over the mystery of Gaddafi's killing. Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) came under pressure to hold a proper inquiry, and evidence of more executions in the last days of fighting was sternly announced. By the time Gaddafi's body was said to be finally heading for desert burial, the manner and imagery of his death threatened to absorb the larger story of Libya's liberation.

The Arab spring became The Autumn of the Patriarch, as his dead body haunted the new era. No wonder a Libyan was quoted as saying he has given more trouble dead than alive. Yet the main trouble dead Gaddafi has given is to expose the fundamental shallowness and sentimentality of the western democracies' support for Arab revolution and in particular our military intervention in Libya.

To get upset by photographs of the dead Gaddafi is to pretend we did not know we went to war at all. It is to fantasise that our own role is so just and proper and decent that it is not bloody at all.

Why is the modern western world so obsessed with the idea of a "just war," which goes back to the medieval theology of Thomas Aquinas? In the 21st century we keep trying to re-enact some fantasy of a war that is utterly righteous, and from which we emerge with no guilt on our hands-- not even the killing of a brutal dictator. Gaddafi should have gone on trial at The Hague, we wail. He should have been decorously imprisoned and politely handed over to international war crimes judges. It's complete nonsense. We totally forget the fact that Nato planes blasted his Tripoli control centres with every chance of killing him. If a French or British raid just happened to have blown him to bits, would we be wringing our hands?

The stench of doublethink is more noxious than any vapour emerging from the meat store in Misrata. When I look at this photograph what do I see? War. War and nothing else. How many times do we need to be told that war is hell? The phrase has lost all meaning for us. Think about what hell is. Hell, in paintings by Bosch, is chaos. It is meaningless, monstrous, and lacks any place of safety or redemption. This picture of Gaddafi dead is a day in the life of hell, also known as war: a corpse photographed for souvenirs, displayed to satisfy the oppressed, in a moment of violent gratification. When Nato intervened in Libya what we see in this picture was probably the best-- not the worst-- outcome on offer. And we should be grimly glad of it. What fantasy makes us long for some impossibly dignified and humane end to a bloody conflict?

...[F]or once, with the death of Gaddafi, we have seen the face of war, washed in blood, bathed in cruelty. The horrible and haunting pictures of his last moments and his public exhibition simply show us, for once, what the wars of our time and all times look like. If we don't like what we see we must stop this foolish pretense that war, however "just", can ever be anything but a brutal mess.

A couple years ago Roland and I rented a jeep and drove through the wilds of Mali. It seemed like the two most popular names we found were Barack Obama, the just-elected president of the United States and Muammar Qadaffi, the de facto ruler of Libya who was showering sub-Saharan Africa with some of his country's oil wealth. I took the photo on the right in Timbuktu. It's Roland, at one of the main sites of the fabled town (which is now being engulfed by the Sahara), pointing to a street sign: rue Guide Mouamar El Kaddafi. I'm not sure how well Obama has fared in Mali public opinion-wise, but in Qadaffi's case... it's a decidedly mixed bag.
Muammar Gaddafi once declared Timbuktu his favourite Malian town, but as the Libyan leader is besieged by Nato forces at home, his property and projects in the ancient city are crumbling.

In 2006, the Libyan leader made himself an Imam of Timbuktu during Mouloud, the celebration of the Prophet Mohammed's birthday which draws thousands of pilgrims to a famed mosque in the northwestern desert city.

He then paid for hundreds of Africans, including heads of state, to come to Timbuktu on Libyan aircraft and pray with him in a stadium of the town he publically declared his favourite.

This Gaddafi-esque ostentation is a thing of the past as the embattled leader is bombarded daily by Nato forces in Tripoli, mandated to enforce a no-fly zone and protect civilians in a four-month popular uprising against his regime.

Gaddafi’s residence stretches over several hectares in the north of the desert town, once a renowned intellectual and religious centre during the 15th and 16th centuries, helping to spread Islam throughout Africa.

A small rubbish dump has built up outside the main entrance of his estate.

"We will remove the rubbish tomorrow. Since Gaddafi’s problems, three Libyans who kept watch over his property have left," explains a guard who quickly scuttles off when he learns he is speaking to a journalist.

Through a screen, the dusty interior is visible as hundreds of date palms, flown in specially from Libya, and eucalyptus trees wilt in the heat. A large motor-pump in the middle of the poorly-maintained lawn obviously long out of commission.

Before disappearing the menacing guard orders AFP to see "the Libyan boss" for any information about Gaddafi’s regime in Timbuktu. He is staying in a Libyan-owned hotel which has cost millions of euros and is still not complete.

An envoy sent by Gaddafi to oversee the construction disappeared as soon as he heard his leader was in trouble, several sources said.

"The Libyan people will win. I am part of the team which watches over Libyan interests in Timbuktu," says the mustachioed "boss" at the half-built hotel.

A major retailer in the city, speaking on condition of anonymity, is not a fan of the Libyan leader.

"Gaddafi is a megalomaniac. When his corrupt entourage come here you always have to give them false invoices."

Another one of Gaddafi’s projects, a water canal completed in 2007 and meant to divert water from the Niger river to Timbuktu, is dry and silted up.

"Now that Gaddafi’s has problems, the canal risks having problems too," says a concerned Mohamed Iddi, member of the Timbuktu Association of Young Muslims.

He says he feels the absence of the Libyan leader in his wallet.

"Here in Timbuktu, there are dozens of schools and Koranic masters who earn a monthly subsidy from Libya. In the new situation we don't know where this money will come from.

"Do not think it is because Gaddafi supports us financially that he is supported in his stand-off against the West. It is because he is a Muslim like us, and he is a victim of an unfair attack," says Iddi.

Timbuktu, like other towns in Mali including the capital Bamako, has held marches in support of Gaddafi.

Nor is Mali the only African country with fond-- if mixed-- memories of Qadaffi. Many see him as a benefactor who was martyred by the West.
Moammar Gadhafi's regime poured tens of billions of dollars into some of Africa's poorest countries. Even when he came to visit, the eccentric Libyan leader won admiration for handing out money to beggars on the streets.

"Other heads of state just drive past here in their limousines. Gadhafi stopped, pushed away his bodyguards and shook our hands," said Cherno Diallo, standing Monday beside hundreds of caged birds he sells near a Libyan-funded hotel. "Gadhafi's death has touched every Malian, every single one of us. We're all upset."

While Western powers heralded Gadhafi's demise, many Africans were gathering at mosques built with Gadhafi's money to mourn the man they consider an anti-imperialist martyr and benefactor.

Critics, though, note this image is at odds with Gadhafi's history of backing some of Africa's most brutal rebel leaders and dictators. Gadhafi sent 600 troops to support Uganda's much-hated Idi Amin in the final throes of his dictatorship.

And Gadhafi-funded rebels supported by former Liberian leader Charles Taylor forcibly recruited children and chopped off limbs of their victims during Sierra Leone's civil war.

"Is Gadhafi's life more important than many thousands of people that have been killed during the war in these two countries?" asked one shopkeeper in the tiny West African country of Gambia, who spoke on condition of anonymity fearing recrimination.

Some analysts estimate that the Gadhafi regime invested more than $150 billion in foreign countries, most of it into impoverished African nations.

"Gadhafi was a true revolutionary who focused on improving the lives of the underdeveloped countries," said Sheik Muthal Bin-Muslim, from the Gadhafi mosque in Sierra Leone's capital that was built with Libyan funds. Muslim worshippers were planning an all-night vigil in honor of the slain Libyan leader.

...Gadhafi's influence even extended to Africa's largest economy: The Libyan leader supported the African National Congress when it was fighting racist white rule, and remained close to Nelson Mandela after the anti-apartheid icon became South Africa's first black president.

Current President Jacob Zuma also was one of the most outspoken critics of the NATO airstrikes in Libya, and he told reporters he thought Gadhafi should have been captured and tried, not executed.

The ANC Youth League described Gadhafi as an "anti-imperialist martyr" and a "brave soldier and fighter against the recolonization of the African continent."

For many of Gadhafi's supporters, the military operation to oust him was another example of the Western interference and neocolonialism that he railed against.

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