How We Got to a Place Where Right Wingers Cheer Stealing Nuclear Documents

When Aileen Cannon issued her order delaying Trump’s stolen documents trial indefinitely, I posted this on Xitter.

The post was factual. Trump nominated Judge Cannon on May 21, 2020. Judge Cannon’s order ceded to the requests of Trump and his co-defendants for hearings on all sorts of requests that, before any other judge, would be deemed frivolous. She adopted deadlines Trump asked for last year. The order undoubtedly delayed accountability in this case, with the next deadlines set for a month after the original trial date. And Trump is alleged to have stolen nuclear documents. In the original 15 boxes returned in January 2022, there were three documents classified FRD, for a total of 57 pages and charged document 19, which was seized on August 8, 2022, is also classified FRD, formerly restricted, a classification used for nuclear stockpiles and targeting. All would have been covered by the Presidential Records Act and so belong to the US Government; Trump could declassify none of them on his own.

By 11 my time (plus-5 from ET), it had gone viral, with 200k views, 47 QTs, 4.4k likes, 1.6k RTs, and 300 responses.

The post is a good way to start thinking about the information economy that led us to a place where a Republican judge helps delay accountability for stealing nuclear documents and storing them in a closet normally storing campaign swag. This information economy creates an environment in which a former prosecutor like Aileen Cannon either believes, or claims to believe, outlandish claims of bias and ill-treatment solely because career national security officials — rebranded by Trump as the Deep State — did their job.

Take the responses. In addition to a bunch of lefty responses — including a bunch imagining there was some quick fix switch that Jack Smith can hit to remove Aileen Cannon — there were a range of MAGAt responses, including a bunch doubting that there were really nuclear documents.

One of those was a full Pepe meme invoking Obama’s birth certificate.

Several used the superbly inane retort MAGAts like to use with me: that my moniker should be “emptyhead” instead of “emptywheel.”

Several of the responses in the thread came from Alexander Sheppard, a Jan6er convicted of obstruction whom John Bates ordered released part way through a 19-month sentence pending the outcome of Joseph Fischer’s challenge to the application of 18 USC 1512(c)(2) over government objections that Sheppard still insists he’s a political prisoner.

This kind of viral response on Xitter is the point — right wingers have deliberately stoked such toxic viral responses for years. This is the kind of “engagement” Xitter’s billionaire owner has chosen to foster.

The point is not rational discussion, but instead the replacement of it with brainless mob-think, a mob-think designed to reinforce unquestioning partisan identity, a mob-think designed to drown out rational consideration of what it means that Judge Cannon has intervened in this way.

A mob-think that can be wielded to drown out the basic fact that Trump is accused of refusing to give back a nuclear document.

Of course, Elon Musk’s decision to grant people with a certain sized following, which includes me, checkmark status some months ago helps to ensure that anything I say will be visible to and therefore subject to this kind of mob treatment. Because of that involuntary checkmark, anything I say will be a magnet for this kind of mob response.

One reason the comment went viral is because of a few QTs from right wing influencers, not least Julie Kelly, who plays a key role in the right wing propaganda world. (The first post here is a QT, claiming that I am an example of the people invoked in her prior Tweet who (she falsely claims) hasn’t covered things I have covered; that is, Julie made my post go viral based on an outright lie, on top of the lie that I have never advocated that Smith ask Cannon to recuse because I doubt it would work.)

Julie has spent her time since January 6 running a PR campaign for the defendants, falsely claiming they were treated differently than other similarly situated defendants. I have repeatedly showed that Julie has refused to correct lies she has told about the number of January 6 defendants charged with assault and in some but by no means all cases, detained pre-trial. I’ve also had to explain really basic things to poor Julie, like how white people get charged with terrorism.

Julie has moved on from January 6 to Trump’s cases, providing the same kind of inflammatory, factually flawed claims she did for men who attacked cops. And she’s effective. Indeed, she spun the latest development that Aileen Cannon may use as political cover for shutting down the prosecution of a guy who stole nuclear documents. Julie has claimed that because FBI replaced certain documents with slip sheets, all the slip sheets were planted there by the FBI. That’s not remotely what the evidence shows (indeed, the evidence shows that a number of boxes had cover sheets without any documents, something even Tim Parlatore has backed). Nor does it convey the one place where altered box order will matter, which is for Trump — except that the altered document order shown thus far is almost certainly not implicated in any of the charged documents, because it involves Confidential, not Top Secret, documents.

Here is Julie’s coverage of the Robert Hur report, in which she spins Biden granting permission for the FBI to just come and grab boxes as somehow worse than Trump stalling, refusing to let the FBI actually look in boxes when they arrive, then withholding boxes and boxes.

Unlike the expansive raid of Mar-a-Lago, however, the bureau came unprepared. “The FBI dispatched two agents to retrieve the boxes in the garage the following day,” Hur wrote of the FBI’s visit to Delaware on December 21, 2022. “[The] agents conducted a limited search of the garage intended to determine whether it contained other classified documents. The two agents lacked sufficient resources to conduct a comprehensive search of the entire garage given the volume of material stored there.”

Authorities waited for Biden’s consent–he apparently did not want to turn over his notebooks–to search his home; agents were sent to Delaware on January 20, 2023. One item retrieved by the FBI, according to Hur, was Biden’s 2009 “handwritten memo [to President Obama detailing his opposition to the troop surge in Afghanistan] that contains information that remains classified up to the Secret level.”

But Biden and his associates will be spared prosecution. The same media echo chamber that raged for months about Trump’s threat to national security instead is condemning Hur for his “gratuitous” remarks about Biden’s faulty mental faculties.

In the meantime, Trump and his co-defendants are preparing for a tentative May 20 trial date in Florida, embroiled in costly and time-consuming legal battles with the DOJ.

Another example of the two-tiered standard of justice in Joe Biden’s America.

In spite of Julie’s close coverage of the Hur report, she has not told her rubes that the FBI similarly reordered documents in the most important box seized from Biden, nor gone back to admit that the problem she is now misrepresenting — that there were so many classified documents at Mar-a-Lago that FBI ran out of slip sheets — is evidence that the FBI was similarly unprepared for the Trump search.

Julie has similarly spun documents that show Mark Meadows was significantly responsible for getting the Biden White House involved in efforts to retrieve documents (because he tried to reach out to WHORM personally), and show key players at NARA hesitating before asking for further involvement of DOJ as the opposite, an aggressive effort to get Trump.

It doesn’t have to be true. It only has to feed the rubes.

And by feeding the rubes shamelessly false claims, Julie has become quite the celebrity, speaking at CPAC and regularly appearing on Steve Bannon’s show. Bannon knows a useful propagandist when he sees one!

Now, I’m not begrudging Julie the fame she has carefully cultivated with her shamelessness. She has earned it! The right wing propaganda network — the deliberate fostering of lies masterminded by people like accused fraudster Bannon — always rewards people who will tell the rubes what they want to hear.

What I’m trying to explain is how her role gives Aileen Cannon cover to do truly astonishing things, like entertain the notion that  putting a non-partisan in charge of the investigation of Trump for classified documents while putting a Trump appointee who had already deprived a Trump target of due process in charge of the Biden investigation is instead proof of selective prosecution against Trump.

In addition to that premise — that investigating Trump in the same way as investigating Biden is proof of selective prosecution against Trump — Aileen Cannon’s order yesterday and earlier orders signalled she is entertaining the following claims:

  • That Walt Nauta, who doesn’t claim to have sorted through any documents, must have the ability to sort through classified documents
  • That because the document investigation, which included crimes in DC, started in DC, and used DC SCIFs for the investigation, it’s proof that Jack Smith was deliberately attempting to bypass SDFL
  • That because Mark Meadows and Pat Philbin got the White House involved in document response, it’s proof that Biden improperly intervened
  • That even though multiple Trump-friendly witnesses testified that Trump didn’t even know Tom Fitton’s Clinton socks theory until 2022, he should be able to argue to jurors he applied it in 2021
  • That because NARA informed DOJ about classified documents, the same way they did with Joe Biden, it’s proof that NARA are part of the prosecution team as opposed to the victim
  • That because Trump’s surveillance system uses difficult software and one of the defense lawyers only uses an iPad, prosecutors have failed to meet discovery obligations
  • That Trump has immunity to steal nuclear documents that he couldn’t even declassify on his own

These are all, individually and collectively, crazy. It’s unclear whether Cannon truly believes them or simply doesn’t care. She has chosen to treat Trump’s claims according to the reality his propaganda bubble has created rather than the actual facts before her.

A lot of the responses to my Tweet were lefties imagining that Jack Smith has some kind of button he can press to get Aileen Cannon replaced; he doesn’t.

But even if he did, it wouldn’t solve the problem. Because the problem before us is that Trump’s mob and his judges have been trained to believe that applying any law to him amounts to a two-tiered system of justice by a very comprehensive propaganda machine.

Trump’s propaganda machine has drowned out facts and replaced it with grievance.

And until something starts cutting through that grievance, mere trials aren’t going to fix this.

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139 replies
  1. Bay State Librul says:

    ‘Your lips to God’s ears”
    I hope what you say does not come to pass, but I think the die is cast.
    Marcy speaks the truth, and her ending words are indeed both worrisome and pressing.
    If not trials and a verdict, what’s left?

    • PeteT0323 says:

      Voting…and physical shoe leather activism to get out the vote for Biden.

      I wish there was a better candidate than Joe for many reasons, but we’ve got basically three (that needs to be fixed – later) and a few wanna bet, but Joe is the best of the bunch – or least worse if that needs to be a person’s thing.

  2. Mister_Sterling says:

    It’s clear to me that Trump has broken the Federal justice system. Right now, the rule of law doesn’t apply. That’s bad, right? And there doesn’t appear to be any motivation from the voters to rescue Biden and give this nation another 4-year reprieve before it goes full authoritarian. We are teetering on the edge of an abyss.

    • WhisperRD says:

      It’s important to recognize that Trump himself is just a placeholder for far more dangerous people. Trump is a dumb narcissist who cannot actually accomplish anything.
      But he is a line of defense for the ultra-rich who are systematically dismantling the rule of law in America.

      • earlofhuntingdon says:

        A tad reductionist. Trump is not a placeholder on every issue, though his expertise is in destroying things. His govt’s Covid response illustrates that his mismanagement, gross ignorance, and pathological need to avoid accountability and embarrassment can kill millions.

        But he doesn’t have to destroy things himself. Last time, he was haphazard about hiring people. This time, his courtiers will be brutally surgical about it. Imagine a govt of Kash Patels, Jeff Clarks, and Stephen Millers – devoid of anyone who would say no, the law-custom-politics or his personal safety won’t allow it.

        • Peterr says:

          And all paraded through as “acting” officials, denying the Senate their role in confirming major executive branch officials. Let them each serve their 90 days (or whatever the limit for a particular position might be), then swap them with another “acting” official.

          Don’t give the Senate a chance to say “no.”

    • Rayne says:

      Thanks for yet another less-than-constructive comment. Are you personally doing anything to fight fascism besides dumping your feelings here?

      • trnc2023 says:

        Why is taking a few minutes to post a comment here assumed to be in exclusion of any other action?

        • Rayne says:

          I’m sorry, but did I miss where in the Terms of Service this site guaranteed immediate publication of all comments?

          Did I miss where the TOS said for the $XX users pay for this service they would receive immediate publication?

          Is it possible that comments might trigger moderation and require clearance by human volunteers, or that work may be done on the site in the background, or that an attack on the site might slow services, or that users’ network service is variable in speed? Did it say anything in the TOS that the site must communicate such challenges?

          -__-

      • trnc2023 says:

        There’s no reply button for your TOS comment, so this is in regard to that.

        I’m not sure how TOS or timing of comment publication got dragged into this. My point was that, while I understand trying to set a minimum standard for the relevance of a comment, I don’t think we should assume that a commenter is not contributing to the fight against fascism just because he posted a comment that didn’t meet that standard. He’s obviously spending some time reading the posts (as are we all).

        • Rayne says:

          Your comment wasn’t clear on that point at all. It read as if you personally were having a problem with posting a comment based on the “taking minutes.”

          As for the content of comments here: you’ve published a whopping (59) comments here under three usernames in the last two years. You do not know the history of commenters who’ve been here longer, and definitely not the commenter for whom you believe you’re standing up. You apparently don’t realize this site gets a lot of concern trolls across the political spectrum, and there’s zero obligation on our part to give them a platform — and you think you can demand we give one? Pffft.

          Don’t like it? Find the exit, no one here will stop you.

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      To say that parts of the American rule of law is broken will come as no surprise to the poor or POC. To say that all of it is broken is Putinesque propaganda.

      If what you say were true, there would be no Judge Chutkan, no DC Circuit opinion rejecting Trump’s immunity claims, no hundreds of Jan. Sixers convicted of crimes.

      Get a grip. Start motivating voters as best you can yourself. Speak, write, volunteer, contribute. Work for your local board of elections. Do something to put into practice the last half of Franklin’s quip about the American Republic, “if you can keep it.”

      • xyxyxyxy says:

        Since you bought up Putin, do we for some reason think he would sit idly by as the US and its allies are sending munitions to help his enemy fight “his” military? If Biden gets 99.9% of the vote, they will find a way to “beat” him in the election.

        • xyxyxyxy says:

          And about Judge Chutkan and DC Circuit, the J6ers are the pawns in this chess match, forfeited to save the biggest pieces; why are none of the “parliamentarians” being indicted for their roles in J6? Like in the CO ballot case, Judge Chutkan, the DC Circuit and the people will lose on every case involving the big pieces.

    • Grain of Sand says:

      I see massive motivation to elect Joe Biden and it isn’t about rescuing him.

    • jmac10878 says:

      Seems to me that it’s the marriage between the Federalist society and the Republican Party that broke the judicial system. Trump (who no doubt played a significant part) just happened to be at the helm when they started asserting themselves.

      • ButteredToast says:

        As far as installing rightwing judges, you’re correct. But Trump (with significant help from RW media) has played the major role in destroying the faith of Republican voters (and many previously apolitical people) in not only the entire judicial system but also  previously sacred cows like the FBI and basically any branch of law enforcement other than local cops. Moreover, he did it in a remarkably short time. Rightwing media and Republican politicians of past decades had already destroyed faith in government, non-blatantly rightwing news media, as well as universities, but it was a more drawn-out process. I’m skeptical any other Republican politician could’ve radicalized and duped so many, so thoroughly.

        (Ironically, given that the acceleration of the Covid vaccine might be the only positive development of his presidency, Trump also played a not insignificant role in destroying faith in vaccination generally, through promoting and attracting so many lying grifters and wackos.)

  3. dark winter says:

    ‘Judge Cannon on 21, 2020’- month?

    yes. I followed this in real time Marcy and it’s painfully frustrating … it’s like hitting a brick wall, over and over. Just this am, WJournal had on Rep. Rutherford and he called djt president (constantly), compared BLM as riots to J6 as peaceful (on a side we didn’t see “they let them in, they took pictures and left and now are jailed”.

    So, this shit is so thick and deeply embedded; WHAT CAN WE DO? It’s gotten so bad it’s like watching that cop on George Floyd over and over. I felt what those Dem tweeters did: can’t JS get Cannon off the case? We don’t know law. We don’t know legal strategy..what are possible directions to calm these emotional shrills for trump to listen when we have parts of the elected government (congress) spewing the same shit?

    • emptywheel says:

      Ask yourself why your response is “can’t JS get Cannon off the case”?

      Does it fix the underlying problem? Does it involve YOU doing the most that you can (or, frankly, anything at all)?

      One of the problems w/Dem response is that it hopes for a quick fix. We’re well beyond quick fixes.

      • dark winter says:

        I agree w/you Marcy.

        I should of put that statement about JS in quotes from this report. That’s what I used to share I read that a lot and it’s frustrating. That’s why I retweet you so much and direct many to this site.

        I was admitting I felt that way BUT because I come here? and follow many journalists such as yourself? I feel it…often: but it’s just frustration. That’s all I meant by that.
        I do know, solidly, that a quick fix is not the answer, that’s why I gave the example of Rutherford being on WJ and spew his shit.
        I was just ’empathic’ to many in our country that feel so frustrated and afraid. I’m not stuck, you educate, you give examples and you provide thought provoking conversations.
        I don’t protest anymore due to age and disability BUT I do what I can…RT your reports and other too, etc.

        I appreciate your comments Marcy. Thank you.

      • Frank Anon says:

        I think for me at least, its time to forget about the trials and just focus on electoral politics. The only rational conclusion is a Trump loss of a magnitude that allows changes to be made through legislation – to the courts, to the matters exposed by the Trump era, and to the rule of law. That is certainly not to be accomplished through the magic of a Trump jail sentence, but by reelecting Joe Biden, Bob Casey, John Tester et. al and getting rid of the constant anguish of the current matters. Door knocking at the very least

        • bgThenNow says:

          Door knocking, however frustrating, is the most effective method of turning out the vote. Much more effective than hundreds of mailed pieces or other advertising. I don’t know about how social media changes this, but I encourage people to knock doors.

        • Rayne says:

          One of the other really effective tools: voter guides handed out door-by-door before the deadline for voter registration, or through the month before election day if the state has same-day registration.

          Help them vote blue up and down the ticket, even for dogcatcher. When dropping off the guide, ask if everyone in the household is registered, help them if they aren’t. In some cases getting citizens valid ID is the barrier to breach to get them to vote. The voter guide is a good tool to open the conversation.

          It made a measurable difference in precincts we did this in. If only we could have afforded to do the entire county, we might not have lost a state senate seat by a few votes.

        • David F. Snyder says:

          Agreeing with bgThenNow: knock doors, talk to folks. It takes some practice to get good at having those difficult conversations, but it can shift the needle. For example, my state representative here in Texas is a Dem in a mostly red/conservative district who gets elected precisely because she door-knocks, talks to these aggrieved folks, listens to them, and gives responses that they understand, earning their votes. Door knocking works much more effectively than letters, phone calls, or ads.

      • paulka123 says:

        I’m sorry but I disagree-with the aspect of asking ME to do more. This just comes down to VOTE HARDER!

        This is just more shifting of the responsibility-from politicians to the justice system to the voters to the politicians.

        Maybe if Schumer didn’t give up on the impeachment with the thought they had better things to do and the justice system would handle it.

        Maybe if the DoJ acted with the urgency a nascent rebellion calls for it wouldn’t take 4 years for Trump to see the inside of a courtroom.

        So, it is back to the voters.

        Voters who for the past 5 decades regularly put Democrats in office, but they never protected Roe. Democrats in the White House who allowed McConnell to steal a SC seat-what stopped Obama from saying here is my pick you have to July 1 to Advise and Consent, if you choose not to, he is seated?!

        No, I do not accept responsibility. I live in a blue district in a blue state, my vote doesn’t matter. Any money I donate is like a fart in a hurricane. I can talk till I am blue in the face to get people to the polls, but if the people we elect don’t do what they are needed to do or the DoJ drags it’s feet it is for naught.

        If Trump loses in November this will all be a moot point. If he wins there will be plenty of finger pointing all around.

        • Rayne says:

          You could spend less time whining at us and make contact with your representatives. Did you contact Schumer as Senate Majority Leader with your complaint? Did you complain to your own senators and representative and ask them to find a way to change the status quo?

          If you have time to puke out 248 words bitching at Marcy who has single-handedly taken a stick to all coverage of Trump, you are engaged in friendly fire and fragging the wrong person.

          Get out of here and find something constructive to do — like help citizens who don’t have ID get some, because even in a blue state that’s a problem. Find a phone bank you can help out in a purple-to-red state. For fuck’s sake contact your electeds again and again.

          But stop concern trolling here; it’s just a sign of your goddamned privilege and it’s sucking up resources.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          The responsibility is not shifting onto citizens and voters. It’s always been theirs.

        • emptywheel says:

          Honey: DO NOT waltz into this place and repeat false conspiracy theories about what DOJ did and did not do. One REASON those conspiracy theories are so toxic is they give people like you excuse to be lazy.

          You’re complaining about finger pointing but you’re excusing your own inaction by repeating false finger pointing in a place that has repeatedly laid out the evidence those conspiracy theories are false.

        • ExRacerX says:

          “This just comes down to VOTE HARDER!”

          Practical question: How does one “vote harder” without committing voter fraud?

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      Americans have been conditioned to count on, to win, when someone else hits a home run. That’s not how it works. Conditioning, good fielding, singles, stolen bases, the occasional great play are the shoulders on which stand the rare home run.

  4. Ruthie2the says:

    Something Terry Kanefield wrote on her blog months ago comes to mind, as it has repeatedly since she wrote it; to paraphrase, the US will remain a democracy only if a majority of people vote for it. It sounds obvious, but it was her way of pointing out that the justice system can’t save us from Trump and the Republicans. And equally obvious is the fact that the mainstream press will not save us either. It’s left to those of us who see the danger to do what we can, with the hope that enough of our fellow citizens will see beyond the right wing noise machine and vote accordingly.

  5. Badger Robert says:

    Good morning from Colorado. The propagandists may be able to spin an acceptable fantasy about the nuclear documents. But maybe the tawdry tale of cheap sex, and the former President’s 2006 incestuous fantasies will penetrate the public psyche.
    And by the way, it seems as if someone on Joe Scarborough’s team follows Ms. Wheeler and our comments.
    And these described by Ms. Wheeler are functioning at the Molotov/von Ribbentrop level. We know how that turned out.

  6. Trevanion says:

    EW’s fine piece is an all-too-rare capture of the very nasty elephant in the room that so few who should know better dare to acknowledge, to the detriment of all of us.

    It brings to mind a quote from Iris Origo’s memoirs, published in 1970 (Origo is also author of “A Chill in the Air — Italian War Diary 1939-1940”). For consideration in 2024, one word (‘radio’) has been changed.

    “Not enough has been said, I think, in accounts of our times (since one is always apt to disregard what has come to be taken for granted) about the psychological changes brought about in uninformed civilians by the mere existence of the [XradioX] social media. Never before in history had so many ears been battered by so many voices. Gradually, as I sat before our radio in the library at La Foce, trying to reconcile their messages and sift the small kernel of truth, these voices became for me the true echo of our times.”

    …“Far more than the whistle and crash of falling shells later on, or the dull roar of bomber formations overhead, this cacophony represents my personal nightmare of the years before and during the war.”

  7. Alan_OrbitalMechanic says:

    I am old enough to remember that this same crowd (more or less) were fond of chanting “Lock Her Up!” at one point. And for what again? Something to do with confidential documents in e-mail.

    Now here we are, but I don’t think it is that hard to understand. We have been calling it a cult for a while now and the X response is nothing new. It always looks like “Four legs good! Two legs bad!” that attempts (and often succeeds) to drown everything else out.

    I take one positive thing out of this. The intensity and vacuity of the reaction suggests how scared they are.

    • Peterr says:

      I’m not sure that’s a positive. Scared people can lash out in destructive and dangerous ways. See “January 6” as but one example.

    • Bill Crowder says:

      I disagree with your thought that this group is scared. They are no more scared now than when they were chanting lock her up. It is something else they feel.

      • Troutwaxer says:

        My wife points out constantly that right wing propaganda is a constant appeal to fear, much of it racial or sexual fear, and it goes something along the lines of ‘if you vote for (whatever Democrat) you’ll end up with convicted Black pedophiles teaching your (grand) children anti-White prejudice in the classroom, so vote MAGA, buy more guns and think of the children!’ Sometimes the message is a little different, but it’s all designed to use the other (Blacks, Gays, Immigrants, etc.) to cause fear.

        One of the responses to fear is aggression. This is not rocket science!

        • Rayne says:

          Right-wing propaganda also relies on the conscious and unconscious assumption by the right-wing base that Christian cis-het whiteness is the default and anything which rocks that assumption is an existential threat.

          If that assumed default didn’t exist already, there’d be nothing to threaten. Which means part of the propaganda isn’t just about fear but about bolstering the continued assumption the default condition is Christian cis-het whiteness. That’s why Fox News on-screen personnel have been so white; that’s why far-right Black women like Candace Owens, who bolster the Christian cis-het white default, are the rare exception.

      • GeeSizzle says:

        I would say it’s more like they are amped up in anticipation of a release of pent-up revenge fantasies and violence, at least for the male half of the group. And right now, they are feeling it even more so, as all of the trials are pretty much focked, at best one comes to a verdict pre-election, and after yesterday’s mess in court, has a much less chance of success, and could backfire if the creature ends up jailed for contempt. That will only further the rage.

        I am sure they sense the momentum building, and it is fueling the blood lust. Imagine how they will act out as vigilantes if Trump’s deportation scheme comes into play. Imagine that, and then make sure it amps you up to do the things you can do to get out the vote and prevent this outcome.

      • paulka123 says:

        It is the same fear Archie Bunker represented in the early 1970s. A fear, of the white American middle class that their economic and social supremacy is at risk. Look at the faces of people at a Trump rally, the vast majority of them would look perfectly comfortable in his chair, bleating racial epithets and malaprops at everyone they fear is taking their place. Back then it was seeing the civil rights movements, anti-war movements and the rise of feminism and gay rights that stoked the fear, now it is the Big Lie and the economic uncertainty of a middle class stripped of it’s wealth by Republican (for the most part) policies.

        Song remains the same.

    • Super Nintendo Chalmers says:

      The difference being that literally everyone HRC shared these classified-after-the-fact emails had the proper security clearance.

  8. wetzel-rhymes-with says:

    Now we are thirty years into the War on Terror, and it’s terrorism that gives the key to understand how people can speak words and seem not to care at all whether they are true or fiction. In terrorism, violent, atrocity and death are carried out, not to achieve some factitious goal, as if destroying the World Trade Center affected our country’s capacity or power in any way, but the violence is only and expression.

    The expressive dimension is that what happened is so horrible that we cannot accommodate it, that is real, a real event constructed to be a message. Terrorism makes carnography of violence, like the adult film industry makes a pornography of sex, so real violence or real sex aren’t those things in their intention but the viewers response to them is the intention.

    Twitter these days is just for scapegoating. With your shocking red hair and general indifference to make-up, you were perfect for Tuesday. Maybe there is a general adaptation syndrome and scapegoating of protestors has become our general way to resolve the injustices that affect us or we are guilty of and the way Twitter facilitates this is not consciously constructed, per se, by Musk or Bannon types, but they seem to be following a kind of apocalyptic script. Might move to Lisbon.

  9. Canine Whisperer says:

    The Senate roll call vote for Aileen Cannon was held 12 November 2020:

    56 Yea’s
    21 Nay’s
    23 Not voting

    All Nay’s were Dem votes. Both Democratic Senators from Delaware and Nevada voted Yea along with Manchin, Feinstein and 7 other Dems’. Sinema did not vote.

  10. hcgorman says:

    I am a Michigan voter and although Michigan is pretty blue today- it was pink/purple (if not red) not too long ago. And yes, there are things we can do to keep Michigan and other swing states (and maybe even some red states!) blue. I have worked almost every election since I was a teenager but not as a paid worker- as a volunteer poll watcher. After I became a lawyer I have worked as a legal observer- almost always for the democratic party (I tried the neutral thing once and it was not as satisfying for me).
    I have been going to Detroit to monitor absentee ballot counting since the heavy handed bullshit that occurred in 2020. And I will be in Detroit for the August primary and November general election. A couple of weeks ago I talked two of my Michigan neighbors into joining my husband and I in Detroit and I hope by the time of the elections to convince more people to step up.
    Election workers have been under attack- that is also part of the game plan of the republicans- and this is something most of us can actually do something about. It is not difficult. Not even all that time consuming. You will be trained and there is a lot of support.

    So yeah, we can sit around and bitch but maybe getting off our asses could actually help things.

    • emptywheel says:

      Thanks for that! That’s what I started doing when I really could not longer work directly with the party. It is pretty high reward and important work in Detroit or even predominantly neighborhoods of color in GR.

    • Rayne says:

      I’m a Michigan voter and the problem with Michigan was that it is and has been blue but partisan gerrymandering produced elections resulting in purple-to-red elected officials. We have a blue trifecta now not because the state’s population changed but because a nonpartisan ballot initiative changed the state’s constitution so that partisan gerrymandering was minimized in redistricting.

      The ballot initiative is an example of what motivated individuals can do to make real constructive change happen — thanks to Katie Fahey and the volunteers behind Voters Not Politicians.

      • hcgorman says:

        Of course what I worry about is blowback from Biden’s Gaza position. It is not a position that I like either but it will not stop me from voting for him. I worry about those that cannot bring themselves to vote for him because of his horrendous policy (at least one of my adult kids is in that camp).

        • Shadowalker says:

          Gaza will be resolved before election day. What will your kid do then? Biden is not flashy, but he gets results, both domestically and internationally.

        • Rayne says:

          I think hcgorman’s progeny suffers as many young people do now from insufficiency of analysis combined with an inundation of coverage from Gaza. Yes, the genocide is bad, evil, wretched; hospitals and schools should never be targets, children should never be acceptable collateral damage. Netanyahu needs to face the ICC, and it’s very easy to scream that Biden needs to stop what is being done by Israelis under the direction of their own elected leader.

          Meanwhile, Trump’s son-in-law is making plans to buy oceanfront property along the Gaza strip, and not just for resort development offering both a place to invest Saudi cash and launder yet more Russian money, but access to the gas and oil rights offshore which rightfully belong to Gaza.

          Don’t vote for the head of the Democratic ticket and we’ve seen what happens — 80K Michiganders didn’t vote for a presidential candidate in 2016 and Trump won the state by 10K over Clinton. Don’t vote for Biden and watch how fast Gaza is completely cleared of humans ahead of pipeline and resort construction.

        • Peterr says:

          Rayne, Bibi may take care of cleaning all the humans out of Gaza well before the November elections in the US.

        • Rayne says:

          Except doing so would ensure that Bibi no longer has the excuse of terrorism/war to use to prevent his being prosecuted for corruption.

        • Shadowalker says:

          2016 is way different than it is today. This is not rocket science. It’s much more complex than that, with the added problem in that variables not only change from one election to the next, but more variables get introduced (2020 was covid, 2012 was superstorm Sandy). Presidents running for reelection must be able to ride a bike and chew gum at the same time. Carter didn’t in 1980 (he didn’t campaign in the final months), GHW Bush lost to Clinton because he never could connect with his base the same way Reagan did, and Trump lost because he was not only bad at the job, but he never understood what campaigning was/is actually about. Michigan GOP is in shambles, and they aren’t the only state, and then add DOBBs into the mix. We’re still six months out, but if things keep trending the way they are now, this election will be decided well before election day. Remember, Trump only won in 2016 because he was lucky and he had a lot of help both foreign and domestic.

        • Super Nintendo Chalmers says:

          This is probably obvious to EW readers but these Democrats threatening to withhold their vote for POTUS are self-defeating naive idiots. Why? Should they help elect Drumpf, they will have effectively made the situation WORSE for the people of Gaza since the Peach Pervert has no intention of helping them.

        • chocolateislove says:

          Piggybacking on Rayne’s and Super Nintendo Chalmers’ comments. Perhaps we need to keep mentioning Project 2025. As bad as Trump’s foreign policies will be, his domestic policies aren’t going to be any better. I really think we need to take him at his word about his plans for deportation and detention camps. The Heritage Foundation will help Trump put sycophants in place so he can do Revenge. And he will give them free rein on everything else.

    • Opiwannn says:

      Volunteering to be a poll worker or watcher so you can double as support for the election judge in your precinct is definitely a help. I’m in central PA, and all of the training you need to be effective as a worker is online and easily accessed through both the state and county board of elections sites. It took me less than 4 hours to review it all and take the knowledge tests to ensure my eligibility. Over 80% of the election workers at my location were retired and over 60, but have been volunteering for election work (including the newly elected judge, who previously was a regular worker) for 20 years or more. Many of them will have to stop helping soon, as there were several who said that even the half-day shift was too much for them to handle either physically, mentally, or both. This was understandable given that we reported at 6AM to open at 7AM, and were there doing the ballot counts (just to ensure we had the same number of scanned ballots as we did signatures in books and that we weren’t missing any of the paper ballots we were issued) and securing the machines and info for transport to the counting center until after 9PM. We can support our democracy by making sure elections actually run smoothly, regardless of our party affiliation, and by being involved directly to make sure rules are followed, the process flows and is easy to understand (by setting up the room and signage effectively), and that there are people to take over as the “seasoned veterans” in each precinct once those who have put their work in take their leave and hand over the process to the next wave.

  11. Max404Droid says:

    Now, I’m not begrudging Julie the fame she has carefully cultivated with her shamelessness. She has earned it!

    There is a phenomenon that we call “Web 2.0”.

    Web 2.0 describes the current state of the internet, which has more user-generated content and usability for end-users compared to its earlier incarnation, Web 1.0. It does not refer to any specific technical upgrades to the internet; it refers to a shift in how the internet is used.

    There is a phenomenon which we call “influencer”:

    The ability to affect public opinion on specific topics, measured in impressions, reach and engagement. The use of this ability to influence people for commercial purposes, where the influencers promote brands’ products and services in exchange for compensation.

    Then there is “pay-per-click” advertising.

    Taken together, these phenomena create an economy in which anybody, literally anybody, with the right attitude an a few functioning fingers and an internet connection, can earn money by getting other people to click on adverts which appear on a location filled with stuff this anybody decides to post. The economics of it are kind of like turning metal into gold in the world of medieval alchemy. Difference being, of course, that for a medieval alchemist to have any hope of succeeding, he needed to be “pure of heart” else the alchemy would fail.

    Here we have the perfect way for any trailer park victim, as Trump called Stormy in her recounting yesterday, to earn money simply by posting any old shit and getting other people to click on the adverts. Earning a living by doing something useful, or making something good, is for chumps.

    Pandemic deniers, rabble rousers, online Elmer Gantrys, all of them share this. Get people to watch and click; make money.

    The preparation for this goes way back, to the birth of advertising itself. But thanks to Web 2.0 the and pay-per-click, the benefits accrue not just to the product producers, but to the atomized network participants. The cultural cost is so profound, as it is *the perfect* mechanism for rewarding cynicism.

    I think that the way out is to help people to understand the economics of this system. So they can understand how the costs, which accrue to the most outrageous cynics, are borne by all who purchase anything in the system, as in the end it must be paid for in the price of the goods. One hopes that as people learn how it really works, they will activate their personal bullshit detectors. I see no other way out. Calling out “grifters” like Trump is the first step.

    • Krisy Gosney says:

      I agree with your reply. Once upon a time a lot of people were blown away by the ‘new’ concept that television programming existed solely to make you watch the commercials. That tv was feeding you the commercials not the shows. Now with the internet, it’s a similar thing. I like this Web 1.0 and 2.0. I felt it instinctively but didn’t know there was a vocabulary for it. I think teaching children internet literacy and parents pointing this out to their kids will help bring Web 3.0 and 4.0 when most ‘learn’ internet content is there just to feed you ads. And the emotions you’re feeling is about you and ads not so much about the content. (Noting that of course there is ad free web here and there.)

        • elcajon64 says:

          Seconded on Molly White. Her appearances on Matt Binder’s “Scam Economy” podcast are a good entry point to her work.

        • Krisy Gosney says:

          Which makes my point all the more important— teaching kids internet literacy. Showing them how to spot a scam. Whether it’sthe old fashion content and ads or crypto or whatever comes next and next. The scam of the is not the point. The point is teaching kids, and adults, how to spot the scams.

    • Bruce Olsen says:

      In general the Web x.x labels are self serving nonsense created by tech marketeers and journalists. Do not read too much into them.

      Web 3 is intended to signify the decentralization of the web. It’s all about flogging crypto and blockchain. I believe as a “movement” it has failed miserably, as is appropriate.

      • earlofhuntingdon says:

        Well said. Calling the current version of the www “decentralized” seems perverse.

      • ColdFusion says:

        Web1.0 was very decentralized, tons of people hosted personal sites at school, on their isp, from home, etc.

        What these web3.0 people want is still central, it’s just them instead of other places.

    • John Lehman says:

      “ Pandemic deniers, rabble rousers, online Elmer Gantrys, all of them share this. Get people to watch and click; make money.”

      “Ya Got Trouble…right here in River City…with a capital T that rhymes with P that stands for Pool…..”

      Apologies to The Music Man … but the P. T. Barnum tradition has gone to far…to say the least.

  12. Sussex Trafalgar says:

    A timely and excellent piece!

    And you are correct, i.e., “Trump’s propaganda machine has drowned out facts and replaced it with grievance.”

    And that’s the typical path a society takes when a narcissistic leader like Trump wants to become the society’s strong man leader and dictator.

    Vladimir Putin learned early in his KGB career that narcissists like Trump are perfect targets for grooming and eventually controlling.

    And if the target has financial problems like Trump did starting in the 1990s, that makes grooming and controlling easier.

    Trump is an integral part of Putin’s goal to reshape the USA into a less internationally powerful nation state that will allow Putin to establish a military base within its borders.

    That’s what Putin covets and that’s what Trump will give him.

    Trump is Putin’s useful idiot.

  13. John Forde says:

    Only about 60% of the adult population develops to achieve true hypothetic-inductive reasoning. About 40% never pass Piaget’s “concrete operator” stage. RWM has been aggregating this segment for decades.
    Could some external event split this compacted group? A conviction of TFG will be fascinating to watch. How big a fissure will it create? How will RWM conceal and congeal?

    …..and how might AI give the RWM machine additional traction thru microtargeting of individual emotion hot buttons?

    • Allagashed says:

      It won’t create any fissure up here. The conservative aggregate is already boilerplate; any conviction will simply harden the already made-up minds. We held a Dem candidate forum at the rec center a couple of weeks ago and most of the cars in the parking lot were keyed. What starts to happen if Trump is convicted? It won’t just be keys.

      • earlofhuntingdon says:

        Holding Trump to account is the price to keep that republic Franklin talked about. If that leads to violence on the right, we’ll manage and prosecute it. January 6th was a test for the legal system, as well as for Trumpian violence. Imagine the much greater violence, if Trump avoids accountability and wins.

      • Super Nintendo Chalmers says:

        Are you a resident of Maine, specifically ME-2? I’m assuming your handle of Allagashed might have something to do with it.

        My wife and live in York County in ME-1, where Dotard and MAGA are less popular. Getting keyed at a Democratic event in the local rec. center sounds so on brand for MAGAs. You were all lucky they didn’t Super Glue your door locks or maybe that tactic borrowed from the Forced Birth movement in the 80’s and 90’s is too passe’.

    • Rayne says:

      I think the work by Aleksandr Kogan and Cambridge Analytica accelerated the aggregation process, along with the work of other useful idiots like advertisers and media outlets collecting sentiment in what amount to A/B tests and selling the data.

      AI is not likely to be a necessary tool when it’s already been proven that readily available cheap tools give RWM ample traction, ex. YouTube’s algorithms and targeting.

      • Ewan Woodsend says:

        I agree with Rayne, pros know already how to do micro-targeting efficiently. The new tools allow setting up whatever campaign you want to set up much faster, by automating a lot of steps.

        But people’s reactions, and other bots reactions is still needed to sort efficient campaigns for inefficient ones. With captcha google was (is) using people to tell what was the picture of an animal (it did not know). Comment sections will probably be used to parse efficient slogans from inefficient one.

  14. Ding_08MAY2024_1104h says:

    Have you considered simply not going on Twitter/X? This is a thing that you, as an adult with agency, are capable of doing.

    Memes and opinions you disagree with seem to cause you mental anguish, so just log off and do something else with your time, lady. It’s not that complicated.

    [Welcome to emptywheel. Please choose and use a unique username with a minimum of 8 letters. We have adopted this minimum standard to support community security. Because your username is far too short it will be temporarily changed to match the date/time of your first known comment until you have a new compliant username. /~Rayne]

    • emptywheel says:

      Thanks for your words of concern, first time commenter.

      As a first time commenter, you undoubtedly have no background to distinguish my anguish from something else.

      I stay on Xitter for two reasons. One, to track and raise friction on the things that TradMed journos do there.

      And two, to make comments like this that will get people to think of these matters differently. I find it important to call out right wing lies in the sphere where they are so powerful. Obviously, this particular comment hit a sore spot.

      • Ding_08MAY2024_1104h says:

        I hadn’t realized not having previously commented on your screeds was an offense worthy of reprimand.

        I’ll do the work and try harder next time.

        • emptywheel says:

          Oh honey. What was worthy of reprimand is you waltzed in here and faceplanted in our comments, falsely misrepresenting the entire thread. Perhaps YOU’RE the one who had his fee fees hurt?

          Don’t worry about trying harder next time. You’ve well earned a ban.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          Snarcastic straw man argument, demonstrating complete ignorance of the first rule of holes.

        • Super Nintendo Chalmers says:

          A card carrying member of the cult of self-victimization. It wasn’t the fact that you are a new commenter, but a naive one.

      • Rayne says:

        LOL I couldn’t figure out how Ding’s comment cleared while I was screening for previous comments they may have made.

        You’re more generous than I am; I was skeptical about clearing a first time comment like this.

        EDIT: LMAO they’re not even in the US. Hello, foreign influence.

        • emptywheel says:

          I confess I wanted to take his bait.

          As I was writing this I was asking myself — was riling up the propagandists on Elmo’s dime worth it? Yes. But what a pain in my fucking ass.

        • Peterr says:

          The line between feeding the trolls and smacking them down is a fine line indeed.

          Marcy, I think you chose well in this instance.

        • Rayne says:

          Whew. Right now it’s smacking, all the way down. No line to consider whatsoever. I’m going to have a rotator cuff injury soon.

    • earlofhuntingdon says:

      My, were you lucky, even for a first-time commentator. Your needlessly personal, patronizing, and sexist comments received a mere slap on the wrist. I wouldn’t count on that again, even if you’re not a troll.

    • Bill Crowder says:

      Analyzing the pulse of Twitter posters is valuable to getting a sense of what is out there. Thank you for doing this.

      Like Twitter, reading the comments in WaPo and NYTimes serves the same function as looking at polling results. At least a fuzzy image appears.

  15. Magbeth4 says:

    The absence of local newspapers which, formerly, people could hold in their hands, tactile evidence of what their familiar politicians were up to, has contributed to the ignorance which appears in what I call the “anti-social media.” Folks have been programmed to react, rather than think.

    I look, in vain, for information, with any depth, about city government in my local “rag” which isn’t local any more: another Gannett-owned obscenity. Instead, there is a plethora of articles about roaches in restaurant kitchens, new restaurants, closing restaurants, football gossip and scores, with no editorials by an editor, only opinions by readers, few of which are deeply informed about the subjects. Only 3 reporters do serious articles on a city of over 1,000,000.

    Meanwhile, city governance is covered in 3 minute bites on the TV stations. Our Mayor is a former TV presenter, bright, intelligent, but, unfortunately, part of a political machine which is broken in the State of Florida. She has to balance on a thin knife in MAGA-land. Ignorance abounds, not always from I.Q. deficiencies, but because people are not supplied with the kind of information and facts with which they can make intelligent political choices. It all ends up in a heap of emotion, not reason.

    This results in cynicism and apathy about the futility of voting. I am resisting as much as I can, but I am deeply disappointed that political choices are so skimpy and information about candidates so thin: not finding out about corruption until it’s too late to do anything about it.

    There has been a heap of comparison of our current predicament with what happened in Germany in the 1920-30 period. Media helped then, to generate the fear and anxiety, and to promote lies. Twitter and all the rest of our modern internet inventions are even more effective. Anyone posting the truth on the internet is very brave these days. Marcy is one of the bravest. All any of us who care for democracy can do is just keep telling the truth: even in the face of awkward silences at parties and dinner tables. Make the liars and the ill-informed squirm!

    • emptywheel says:

      Don’t know if you’re familiar with Bolts magazine. But they are incredibly valuable for tracking state level elections.

      https://boltsmag.org/

      For example, they reported on some local elections that ousted some MAGAts in MI yesterday.

      • Magbeth4 says:

        Thank you for this link. However, just ordinary community news which is the kind of thing which helps people form a sense of community, is what I miss from a local newspaper. It is reading about how some elementary school child did something exceptional, or a story about an especially talented local person,
        coupled with local political events which form a sense of the whole.
        We have lost all of that. The old newspaper clippings are crumbling, and everyone in my city is not clicking on the same web pages. So, no community; just a disjointed cluster, here and there, of movers and shakers known only to each other. At election time, nobody knows who the candidates really are. We are becoming de-personalized. We are becoming mere bots and cyber-cyphers.

    • Matt Foley says:

      re lack of info in local papers, it’s even worse than that. I get 2 papers delivered and about once a week the paper never arrives. Delivery is so bad that I have both customer service phone numbers memorized.

      re lack of info about local government, my township council’s meeting agendas provide minimal cryptic info. Only insiders can possibly know what the agenda items are about.

      • Magbeth4 says:

        The announcements of City Council meetings, or School Board Meetings are generally not noted as to time in my city. And, for instance, recent decisions regarding closing public schools due to lower enrollment caused by Charter schools, have caused protests. However, the venues where people can object are located at schools which are in neighborhoods which are not affected! The School Board can get away with this because my City is very large in land area and it is hard for parents to drive long distances to attend such meetings. The venue for City Council meetings is in downtown which for elderly folks such as I to attend, are problematic, especially in view of shootings, muggings, etc. So, I would be there in both cases, but am not able: times of meetings not posted and venues too far afield. This is another example of how so-called elected officials practise “democracy.” One finally feels like giving up!

  16. Charles R. Conway says:

    Well, it is incumbent on anyone reading this to register one more D, each. And get that person to vote in November

  17. Frank Probst says:

    Suggested edit: “Trump nominated Judge Cannon on 21, 2020.”

    First line right after the first tweet looks like it’s missing part of the date.

  18. ToldainDarkwater says:

    The whole John Yoo Torture Memo thing convinced me that rule of law is subordinate to politics. That is to say, we cannot look to the justice system to correct political issues. It works the other way around. We have to generate the political will to hold to rule of law.

    Apparently, we’ve been taking that for granted. Or, we could frame it as the internet introduced a whole new range of vulnerabilities to our political process, which we haven’t developed antibodies for yet. There are signs that this is shifting, though there will be damage done before then.

    Lastly, never forget that the opposition is puffing themselves up to look larger and scarier. Always. Looking invincible and frustrating us *is the game plan*. I was very glad to see Rayne making this point recently.

  19. Votingrights says:

    I want to contribute to the conversation on things we can do. Of course, contributing $$ is major and doing it now is most impactful as budgets are getting drawn up. I also encourage people to focus on state and local elections. Run for Something and the States Project are two good organizations. RFS also has volunteer opportunities vetting candidates for endorsement. I find most of the people I have interviewed to be inspiring.

    Field Team 6 is working to register Democratic voters and has it set up so you can do it from home.

    And of course volunteering on campaigns.

    There are so many opportunities. I urge everyone to pick one or two and do it. As others have said, no one else is coming to save us.

  20. The Old Redneck says:

    I heard a lecture from Roy Black, the famed criminal defense lawyer from South Florida. He talked about how Romania prosecuted Ceausescu post-revolution. During the trial, the prosecution (such as it was) was continually congratulating itself on providing him with his due process rights and following the rule of law. But the reality is that it was a show trial. Ceausescu was convicted, then immediately taken outside and shot – all in the same day.

    Black was not an apologist for Ceausescu. His point was that many countries have the machinery and the formal structure for the rule of law and democracy. There are constitutions as robust as ours all over the world. However, if you don’t have a population committed to upholding them, those things aren’t nearly enough.

  21. Mike_08MAY2024_1246h says:

    Maybe this is a stupid question, but at what point can her behavior and rulings be considered election interference?

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    • Peterr says:

      In terms of the legal system, the answer is “never.” Her rulings can be appealed and overturned, as happened twice already, but absent other illegal acts like taking a bribe, simply delaying things and making rulings are not actionable as “election interference.” Federal judges have more or less complete control of their calendars and their judgments, answering only to those courts above them.

        • Peterr says:

          Question for you, with respect to calendar control: if someone wanted to appeal a judge’s calendar rulings, could that be done as an interlocutory appeal, or (like most appeals) would it have to wait until after the trial is concluded as somehow having created a problem so severe that it would require a retrial?

  22. Chris papageorgiou says:

    Before Twitter became x by the lunatic, I was following you here and there.
    I posted two or three short comments here and possibly one on Twitter under your post supporting your position.
    Accidentally and to my great surprise I found out that you blocked me on Twitter. I reached out to you via email asking to please look into this “error”.
    Your response: ” Probably when I mass blocked MAGA’ts “.
    I’m still blocked, so I could not see all these “nice People” attacking you lately.
    Water under the bridge, I enjoy your great work here.
    Thank you !!!

  23. ExRacerX says:

    It’s impossible for me to take someone calling Dr. Wheeler an “idiot” seriously. That said, this sort of attempt to devalue expert opinions via ad hominem is a classic Russo/Repugnican dezinformatsiya tactic.

  24. Tburgler says:

    I understand the need for ordinary citizens to step up. I donate and contact my legislators regularly. But where is democratic leadership in setting the terms of discourse?

    The RW grievance machine works in part because GOP politicians close the circle by taking these issue up. That makes them de facto legitimate in the eyes of the NYT/WAPO, so they send a reporter to a diner in Missouri to get confirmation that this is a really important issue.

    In a normal world with a functioning press, it would be a terrible idea for politicians to be going after judges, but that’s not the world we live in. If Dick Durbin came right out and said Cannon/Alito/etc are partisan hacks who need to be removed from the bench to preserve the rule of law, Cannon would have less of the cover she gets as outlined in this piece.

    Instead we hear they are “concerned” or “frustrated,” which reads as weak, sour grapes that the judicial system isn’t doing what they want. They could be calling hearings on the corruption of the rule of law. Instead we get handwringing.

    Read this from 5 days ago. Tell me this is equal to the moment in history we are living.

    https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/4639872-democrats-alarmed-over-conservative-judges-in-trump-court-cases/

      • Magbeth4 says:

        And, have you noticed how the Hill and the WaPo use words such as “slam” and “alarm” in headlines? Sensationalism designed to increase anxiety. The same word, “slam” always describes the movement of hurricanes. As someone who has experienced many hurricanes, I can attest to hurricanes, not “slamming” but creeping, beginning with oppressive humidity, followed by steady rain, then wind picking up. The “slamming” is when the tree hits the car or the house.

        • Just Some Guy says:

          It’s pretty much every news outlet that uses sensationalist headlines now. I was discussing this phenomenon with friends the other day, one of whom is coincidentally a Pulitzer winner, mostly in regards to how I read a headline this past week about how Mick Jagger made fun of Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry from the New Orleans Jazz Fest stage last Thursday. The headline stated Jagger had started a “feud” when really it was merely a quip.

  25. OldTulsaDude says:

    I agree with all the problems noted; however, are they not all subsets of one overarching problem: the consolidation of too much capital in too few hands?

    • Bob Roundhead says:

      In my opinion, yes. Absolutely. It seems to run to the same conclusion be it monarchy, fascism, feudalism. Now those dudes have a new toy, the internet. I believe the term for what they are creating is called “hypernormalization “. Everyone knows that the system is not working, but at the same time we are all frozen like deer in the headlights. I believe that in this space, change is only possible through the accumulation of individual acts. Like that of this blogs author, or those who knock on doors, work at the polls, write letters to the editor, confront their political leaders in public, attend rallies, sit ins and demonstrations. Every little bit helps. It just needs to be in person.

  26. Molly Pitcher says:

    OT, but it answers a lot of questions and there is no where else to put this. According to the NYT: “R.F.K. Jr. Says Doctors Found a Dead Worm in His Brain”

    Apparently he was having major cognitive issues in 2012, and Drs found that a parasite had eaten part of his brain and died in there. Additionally “About the same time he learned of the parasite, he said, he was also diagnosed with mercury poisoning, most likely from ingesting too much fish containing the dangerous heavy metal, which can cause serious neurological issues.”

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/08/us/rfk-jr-brain-health-memory-loss.html

    • RipNoLonger says:

      I had assumed that his allegations of mercury poisoning were part of his anti-vax campaigns that involved thiomersal (remember Andrew Wakefield and mercury leading to autism?) But perhaps his known opiate addictive drugs also had thiomersal as an adjuvant.

      • ExRacerX says:

        One of my friends got over-enthusiastic on the sushi/sashimi intake & got mercury poisoning, so it’s possible RFK Jr. may have gotten the worm and the mercury via the same vector.

        • RipNoLonger says:

          Ewww. (Not related to EW.) I do like some of that raw fish but I worry that the harvesting and quality control ain’t what they used to be.

    • P-villain says:

      Shall I compare thy brain to a bottle of mescal?
      Thou’s art more wrinkly and intemperate

  27. NYsportsfanSufferer says:

    It’s a cult

    Sometimes I feel pretty hopeless that my vote really doesn’t matter being from NY. I actually, for the first time, got to vote in a meaningful way earlier this year being in NY’s 3rd district to take out Santos and not going to lie, it felt good when Suozzi won.

  28. Savage Librarian says:

    Funny Business

    Hush, diddle Donald, don’t say a word
    MAGA’s going to get your trials deferred

    And if those trials deferred aren’t winning
    MAGA’s going to shush your underpinning

    If your underpinning’s a mess
    MAGA’s going to wish you best success

    If that best success is a joke
    MAGA’s going to get you a diet coke

    If that diet coke goes flat
    MAGA’s going to get you some tit-for-tat

    If that tit-for-tat runs dry
    MAGA’s going to find your next fall guy

    If that next fall guy’s a bunny
    MAGA’s going to wink at their hush money

    And if that hush money breaks down
    You’ll still be the creepiest MAGAt in town

    Hush, diddle Donald, don’t you cry
    MAGA huffs you and your Big Lie

    • RipNoLonger says:

      Don’t know how to ever add value to you, SL

      And if you just aren’t worth the prize
      We’ll take care of your final demise

      It may not be pleasant and might be gory
      But you’ll go out in a burst of glory

      But hush little Donnie, sleep well tonight
      Thinking of ketchup, Ivanka, and Stormy

    • Booksellerb4 says:

      Allow me to express my sincere and absolute admiration for your lil ditty. When the grandkiddos come along, this is the version I will sing to them. . . Hush Little Baby, so TY!!! Also applaud your delicate usage of “diddle”.

  29. Zinsky123 says:

    Don’t get discouraged, Emptywheelers! There are still more of us than there are of them! Get out and vote in November and also write letters – every day write one letter to a senator, a representative, a judge, a governor – anyone who can make a difference in American public policy. Tell them how you feel and how you want Trump held accountable. I am working for the Democratic Party in my state as well, running my precinct, door-knocking, making calls and editing documents for conventions. In other words, use Trump’s own words and FIGHT LIKE HELL, OR WE WON’T HAVE A COUNTRY ANY MORE!

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