Toasted white bread

Anti-racism: Saviors, allies, and partners.

Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise: making toast is hard. Too little heat, and it’s just bread. Too much, and it’s charcoal. Finding that balance, that middle ground, is an art. Or, actually, you could just use a timer, like the one in my toaster, but that’s beside the point.

Point is, there’s some spot between black and white that’s right, but finding it is hard. Maybe there’s a broader lesson in this or maybe this is a terrible analogy that’s going nowhere fast. We’ll see.

What got me started was this hilarious “White Savior” video by Seth Meyers. It’s one of those “funny because it’s true” parodies that’s spot on. Watch it. Now! I’ll just wait here, staring at you impatiently. Then go watch BlacKkKlansman for contrast. Still waiting.

Ok, humor aside, there is indeed a trope of feel-good-if-you’re-white movies about black racism that serve to alleviate the anxieties and guilt of white people who oppose racism in principle but don’t know how to do anything about it in the real world. The undeserving Oscar winner, Green Book, is a prime example of this.

While the white people in these movies are desperately well-meaning, they still treat Black people as inferiors, like children who need adult supervision to tie their own shoelaces. In doing so, they turn Black people into junior partners in their own liberation, passive recipients of outside aid. They buy into the very narrative that they ostensibly oppose.

This is offensive. While aid might be appreciated, infantilization is not, and nobody wants to have their own problems whitesplained or mansplained or straightsplained to them by a clueless outsider who wants to play at being their champion. For that matter, why would any oppressed minority want members of the oppressive majority to waltz into their activist group and take over?

It is understandably hard to trust these people—these racial carpetbaggers—despite their likely-good intentions because they don’t seem to have any skin in the game or even relevant personal experience. Given this, it would seem that their priorities would necessarily differ from those of the people they are trying to help, making them unfit to lead. Perhaps this is why BLM insists on black leadership.

The flip side is the notion of an ally, which was a perfectly good word until it came to mean a junior partner of a different sort. In this view, the role of an ally is not to lead but to follow. They have to be supportive, but not ask too many questions, and absolutely never make any suggestions. Donate your time and money, but be seen, not heard.

This, too, is offensive. So, do we really have to choose between one sort of subservient role or another? Do equal rights movements have to either be colonized by outsiders or relegate them to servitude? Before I try to answer my own rhetorical question, let me frame this in terms of the two types of equal rights movements.

There’s a powerful scene in BlacKkKlansman which intercuts between (white) Klansmen chanting “White power!” and Black student union members chanting “Black power!”. Despite the juxtaposition of the two, there is a deep contrast. The power that the KKK wants is for maintaining superiority, while the Black students want equality, not Black supremacy.

White supremacy is a partisan movement; it favors one group over others. Black civil rights is an equalitarian movement; it seeks to undo this favoritism, not to install a new favorite. In the same way, feminism is not a misandrous mirror to misogyny, it is simply the fight against it.

Nonetheless, false equivalence is rampant. White supremacists treat all civil rights activists as partisans. Perhaps this isn’t even so much a lie as it is blindness; they totally get how someone might want to fight for the group they identify with, but can’t wrap their bigoted little minds around the notion of wanting everyone to be treated fairly and therefore equally.

White supremacy is white identity politics, and its adherents project their partisanship onto their opposition. Through this lens, they understand how Black people can demand more rights for Black people but not why any white person might want to join them. They even came up with a nasty slur to describe whites who do not favor whites above all others: “race traitors“.

We can also see this in racists responding to Black Lives Matter with “all lives matter”. If we misinterpret BLM as only Black lives matter, then the response makes sense. If we correctly understand it as Black lives matter, too, then the response falls flat. After all, wanting Black lives to matter doesn’t mean wanting white lives not to. Human rights are not a zero-sum game. So if the BLM movement were to tap me for my PR skills, I’d suggest rebranding as BLMT to avoid being (intentionally) misunderstood as OBLM.

If we see black civil rights, such as BLM, as a partisan movement, then it makes sense for it to relegate white participants to second-class status. These white people are, in this view, just self-hating weirdos who are perversely working against their own interests. But if it’s an equalitarian movement, then it is not at odds with other equalitarian movements. Wanting Black people to be equal in no way conflicts with wanting Hispanics or women to be equal, much less wanting white men to be equal (but no more than that).

Call it intersectionality if you like, but all equal rights movements are part of one great movement for the equal rights of all. It is a single war with many fronts, and we are full partners who all have skin in the game, no matter the color of our skin. We each identify with many groups at once. While some are more privileged in particular contexts than others, what unites us is the moral imperative to design society as if we had no clue about our own identity.

When you think about it, even the most straight, cis, able, rich, white Anglo-Saxon Protestant man can have skin in the game because they have people they care about who are not so privileged. Besides friends and neighbors, there is always family, including mothers, sisters, and daughters. Life has its ups and downs, too. Over time, even those on the top rung in the hierarchy will slip from it by becoming sick or poor or elderly.

Moreover, being on the receiving end of one form of bigotry provides experience that is relevant to those on the receiving end of others. So if you’ve ever been discriminated against on any basis, or been subject to any sort of unfair treatment, it’s not hard to feel for for those who deal with this on a daily basis. You don’t need to identify with a particular group to identify with its plight and oppose its mistreatment. You need empathy: a working conscience and the ability to see all sides.

There is also a pragmatic aspect to this that BlacKkKlansman tackles head-on. The Black policeman, who poses as a white racist over the phone, still relies on a white cop to attend Klan meetings in his name. His fellow officer takes advantage of his white privilege to serve equality.

That’s a movie, but in real life, it is still counterproductive to alienate those who are willing to help. Embracing intersectionality allows taking full advantage of what individuals bring to the movement, whether it’s in their own skills, their connections, or their resources, regardless of how they identify or are identified.

It also brings an advantage stemming from their differences. When a white person calls for the equality of Black people or a man calls for the equality of women, it cannot be so easily dismissed as self-serving. This undermines the hostile narrative of it being a zero-sum, partisan struggle for supremacy.

Such outsiders can also serve as diversifiers, offering insights made possible by having more distance from the problem, and combating the tendency towards groupthink with cautions about how things will be seen from the outside.

There is no magic here. Being part of a group does not grant omniscience or infallibility about that group’s needs or how best to achieve them. While personal experience is an invaluable starting point, it does not replace education and an open mind. There is no substitute for the willingness to shut up and listen with humility. A good leader is one who knows when to follow; a public servant, not a dictator.

Given this, we should choose people for roles on the basis of their individual merit, not just their identity affiliation. Anything else is, by definition, bigotry. Does this mean that Black people need a white champion to rescue them or women need a chivalrous man to protect them? Not at all. But it also doesn’t mean that we should feed the partisan narrative by denying that they’re part of a broader fight for equality by denying all who support them the opportunity to be full partners, not mere cosplay allies.

Racism is wrong. Racism against anyone is wrong. Racism in the pursuit of anti-racism is still wrong. All bigotry is wrong; there are no exceptions or excuses. The best reason not to lower yourself to the same level as the mainstream racists is that it is immoral. This is sufficient reason in itself.

Some will argue that bigotry against the dominant group won’t harm them, but that’s not just false, it’s missing the point. This behavior is not only unjust, but self-defeating. It harms the oppressed more than the oppressor because it undermines our moral high ground and reduces us to yet another partisan movement that can be safely ignored by anyone not directly impacted.

Our shared goal is to build a world where people have the opportunity to reach their potential, regardless of their background. We are not going to beat bigotry with more of the same. Our movement for the goal of equality must be built upon the principles of equality, from the ground up. Otherwise, it is rooted in a contradiction that undermines it. Our fight for equality starts at home, in our own movement, which is why allies and saviors must both make way for partners.

The game theory of fatal allergies

I was disgusted by the Bernie-or-Busters in 2016 and assign them a big share of the blame for Trump, but I’m also NeverBernie in 2020. Does this make me a hypocrite?

I’m glad you asked, but the answer is no. First of all, there’s no parallel once you look at the details. Clinton was an actual Democrat who earned the Democratic nomination by an overwhelming majority of the votes. Sanders is a non-Democrat who is attacking the party from its radical left flank with yet another scorched-earth campaign.

He does not represent the best interests of the party that I am a member of, he does not care about equal rights outside of economics, and he is tainted by the same foreign ties that the Traitor-in-Chief has. Ultimately, he is not a viable candidate, whereas Clinton was supremely qualified and would have become president if the Bernie-or-Busters had instead supported her.

Second, it comes down to game theory. The Bernie-or-Busters are back, and they want to hold the entire country hostage. Again. Either we give them their preferred candidate or they give us Trump. Again. Fuck that!

Rather than negotiate with terrorists, we call their bluff. Let them stay home or not. Let them vote for Trump, as an eighth did last time. Let them threaten whatever they like, but we will not give in to them by ever voting for their candidate.

Go ahead, make my day.

The deep principle here is that every strength is a weakness, every weakness a strength. To gain the strength to stop someone from chopping down a tree, you accept the weakness of being chained to it. Yes, it would be better if you could walk away from the tree if they come at you with a chainsaw, but by removing that option, you call their bluff.

The same applies to chaining yourself to a commitment to vote only for a real Democrat; it calls the bluff of those who would try to force you to support them by refusing to vote for a real Democrat. It is the natural counter to their political power play.

Last time, Sanders lost the nomination by millions. I fully expect that he will lose again, so I consider this to be a safe bet. In other words, by committing to NeverBernie now, I am making it less likely that I will be in the position to have this commitment tested.

So, no, I don’t think I’ll ever have to choose between Sanders and Trump. But, yes, if push comes to shove, I will shove: I will not vote for Sanders under any condition. I will only vote for a Democrat. I don’t think they will ever be able to call me on it, but if they do, they will find that I do not bluff.

P.S.

By committing to never voting for Bernie, we compel his supporters to respond by doubling down on unity. They have to insist that we’re all Democrats and should agree to vote for whoever gets the nomination. Of course, this means that, when Bernie loses, they’ll be the ones who’ve insisted all along that they should vote for the nominee even though it’s not Bernie.

Does this mean they’ll actually vote for the Democrat who can oust Trump? Maybe. Some of them will remain Bernie-or-Busters and go bust again, no matter what they say now. But others will deal with the cognitive dissonance by avoiding hypocrisy. At the very least, they’re going to find it harder to justify bailing on the party.

So add this as one more game-theoretic benefit to calling their bluff.

Leftovers in a doggy bag

Nobody should have to go to Facebook, so I’ve done you the favor of reprinting an article from Skye Williams, with due credit. I wrote none of this, but I stand behind it. Here goes…


WARNING: This article contains facts! You may not know it and you may not like it, but it’s still a fact. You can use a thing called Google and quickly find credible sources for all of the facts in this piece. If you are the kind of person who gets triggered and turns nasty every time someone posts something you don’t like or agree with, you probably shouldn’t be following my page. If you call this “fake news” or a “smear piece” or post comments calling me a Russian Bot just because you don’t agree with the facts herein, prepare to be humiliated, deleted and/or blocked.

The Male-Dominated Anti-Democratic Party Agenda Behind AOC

By Skye Williams (Originally Posted August 2018, Updated February 2019)

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez ran as a 28 year old bartender with zero experience in public service. Her sole political experience was being an “organizer” for the Bernie Sanders campaign. Two divisive groups, Justice Democrats (JD) and Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), are responsible for her recruitment and her campaign and both continue to drive all her positions and ideology. It is simply irresponsible to form an opinion on AOC without looking at the people and organizations behind her and understanding their agenda.

Let’s start with Justice Democrats (JD), who recruited AOC. Justice Democrats are one of the most vile anti-Democrat PACs around. The JD’s have done Putin’s bidding from day one. Their sole purpose (like TYT, DSA and Our Revolution) appears to be attacking Democrats and promoting insurgents to hijack our party from within.

Justice Democrats was co-founded by Putin puppet Cenk Uygur, who also founded the divisive media platform The Young Turks aka TYT. Uygur’s main financial backers were conservative right-wingers, including former Republican governor and congressman Buddy Roemer, who invested millions in TYT. I’m not going to get too far into TYT here but if you are sharing videos and media content from TYT, Rebel HQ and their social pages, you are supporting a right-wing-backed group whose agenda is to divide Democrats with propaganda.

Other Justice Democrats founders include Kyle Kulinski (a left libertarian who proudly voted for Jill Stein and makes racist and misogynist comments on Twitter) and Saikat Chakrabarti, who “developed technology” (aka spreading anti-HRC propaganda) as an advisor for the Bernie Sanders campaign. David Koller served as Justice Democrats’ treasurer and co-founded The Young Turks with Uygur. These guys were the foundation of the Justice Democrats.

Uygur, Kulinski and Koller all resigned from Justice Democrats in December 2017 over “language deemed sexist or degrading to women” after a number of disgusting and misogynistic posts and articles were made public. As of February 2018, the executive board of Justice Democrats consisted of Chairman Saikat Chakrabarti and Co-Chairperson Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Justice Democrats recruited and promoted 12 candidates for 2018 races against incumbent Democrats. JD provided media, field reps and fundraising help. 11 of those candidates lost. Ocasio-Cortez won by a fluke, after a dismal voter turnout of less than 12% of registered Democrats in her district. After she won, JD co-founder Chakrabarti went to Washington as AOC’s Chief of Staff.

Since winning her small district race, Ocasio has gone on a national press tour slamming Democrats. After briefly trying to distance herself from Justice Democrats, Ocasio appeared in a new recruiting video for Justice Democrats on Jan 16, 2019, as they prepare their new campaigns against so-called “establishment” and “corporate” Democrats, many of whom have pushed for progressive policies.

Since taking office, AOC’s Justice Democrats rhetoric has only increased and she has voted against the party on several key issues including the new Democratic Party rules package. The new rules include defending Obamacare in court, creating a committee on climate change, promoting diversity and fighting Trump’s massive budget deficit. Only three Democrats voted against it, including AOC, Ro Khanna (another Justice Democrat and self-described “Berniecrat” who reps Silicon Valley) and Tulsi Gabbard (a cult-raised homophobic DINO supported by the alt-left).

On Jan 23, EVERY Democrat in the House voted for a bill to reopen the Government. Except one. AOC was the only “nay” vote.

Official Justice Democrats now serving in our Congress include Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), Ayanna Pressley (MA), Rashida Tlaib (MI), Ilhan Omar (MN), Ro Khanna (CA), Pramila Jayapal (WA) and Raúl Grijalva (AZ). Justice Democrats are also affiliated with Brand New Congress (a group that organized protests against the DNC at our 2016 convention) and National Nurses United, the superPAC who followed the Bernie Sanders campaign in their own tour buses.

Now let’s take a look at DSA. There are many Democrats (myself included) who advocate for some programs that could be defined as European-style Democratic Socialism. Unfortunately that is NOT what the DSA organization is doing. They are far more extreme.

Instead of attacking the real enemy (right wing fascists occupying our government) the DSA focuses their efforts on attacking and condemning Democrats and the Democratic Party. DSA is a divisive anti-capitalism alt-left group aggressively attempting to unseat real Democrats and infiltrate our party with fauxgressive insurgents. AOC’s propaganda-filled campaign videos, ads and TV spots were all produced and paid for by the DSA. Current DSA members serving in Congress include AOC and Rashida Tlaib. They are also affiliated with Congresswomen Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley.

The DSA was formed in 1982, when the Socialist Party and the DSOC merged the New American Movement (NAM) with former members of socialist and communist parties of the Old Left.

In 2000, DSA backed Ralph Nader. In 2016, DSA endorsed Bernie Sanders. After the 2016 primary, DSA would not and did not endorse Hillary Clinton. DSA leaders include Cornel West and many other prominent anti-Democrats who helped put Trump in office in 2016.

DSA is now the largest socialist organization in the United States. The median age of its membership is 32. Since 1982, DSA were members of Socialist International (SI), a worldwide association of political parties which seek to establish democratic socialism. To give you an idea of how extreme DSA has become, the DSA voted to leave the SI in 2017 over what the DSA perceived as “neoliberal” economic policies.

In the words of a DSA member and editor of the socialist magazine Jacobin, the object “in the long run is to end capitalism.” The DSA website states that “Capitalism pits us against each other” and that “Bernie Sanders launched a political revolution and we continue to build it.” Their website also makes looney claims like “the globalization of capital” is responsible for “racism, sexism and homophobia.” Wow. Clearly the agenda of the DSA group is much more extremist (and socialist) than what is known as “Democratic Socialism.”

We must also keep in mind that the very word “socialism” is toxic in American politics. Despite semantics or whether or not it is misunderstood, a Gallup poll shows that all Americans (D, R or I) rank socialism dead last in Presidential candidate characteristics. The poll showed all Americans were more likely to vote for a gay or even a Muslim candidate (!) before voting for a socialist. That is data that Democrats should definitely pay attention to.

AOC now has the audacity to claim that Democrats have done nothing on climate change (a lie) and is now taking credit for a “Green New Deal” first launched by Democrats in 2009.

Perhaps AOC and her fans need a little history lesson. The term “Green New Deal” was coined in 2007 by author Thomas Friedman, a self-described centrist and “free-market guy.” Barack Obama added a Green New Deal to his platform. In 2009, the United Nations drafted a report calling for a Global Green New Deal to focus government stimulus on renewable energy projects. The Democrats’ landmark cap-and-trade bill known as the American Clean Energy and Security Act, passed in the House but was killed by Senate Republicans in 2010. Likewise, Obama’s game-changing infrastructure bill Known as the American Jobs Act, was also killed by Republicans in 2011.

Another version of the Green New Deal was the centerpiece of Jill Stein’s 2016 campaign. It is not known whether she spoke to Putin about it over dinner.

While AOC was still in high school, Nancy Pelosi and Ed Markey launched the United States House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming in 2007. It was killed in 2011 after the Rethugs gained control of the House. Pelosi announced in 2018 that if Dems retook the House, she would revive the committee, which she did as soon as Dems retook the House in January 2019. It’s now called United States House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis.

Despite these facts, AOC led a shameful protest for Justice Democrats and the Sunrise Movement outside Nancy Pelosi’s office just days after the midterm election. They chanted “Step up or step down!” as Ocasio shouted about “busting down the doors” while the news cameras rolled.


They were supposedly protesting for environmental issues. If that were really the case, they would be protesting against the Republican fascists.

In fact, Pelosi announced her intention to restart the special committee on climate change weeks BEFORE the protest. Of course, Pelosi’s announcement was ignored by most of the media.

But this protest wasn’t about the environment, it was about optics and propaganda. They chose to protest against Democrats at Pelosi’s office because they knew the media would take the bait, hook, line and sinker. The big media story became about a “divided” party, not the environment. THIS was and is the goal of DSA, TYT and Justice Democrats.

Either way, AOC is a Justice Democrats / DSA mouthpiece who shouldn’t be getting credit for anything. She has no right slamming Democrats over environmental issues and “her” problem-plagued version of a Green New Deal was written in two days by Saikat Chakrabarti.

AOC and her male anti-Democrat mentors at DSA and Justice Democrats have a clear agenda to attack and divide Democrats. At best, AOC is an inexperienced green-tea-party mouthpiece for the alt-left. Or even worse, she is a knowing and willing insurgent on an ideological mission to divide or destroy the party. Either way, she is dangerous and she is aiding and abetting our real enemy (Right Wing Fascists) by attacking the very party she claims to represent in Congress.

Tastes like chicken

One of these days, I’ll finally get around to writing up a long, comprehensive rant about what populism is, and incidentally, why it’s terrible. But today is not that day.

Today is the day that a populist resistance led by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez succeeded in discouraging Amazon from opening HQ2 in NYC. It’s not Brexit, but it’s a similarly idiotic removal of their own nose to spite their face. Instead of bargaining with Bezos over the magnitude of the incentives, they beat “corporate greed” by preventing thousands of high-paying high-tech jobs from coming to a part of the city that could use them.

Despite these populists claiming to speak for the people, as usual, Amazon’s new office had overwhelming support among New Yorkers. Now the local politicians who chased Bezos out are going to have to face an angry, unforgiving electorate. Perhaps we’ll see some new faces there.

But what’s interesting to me is that Bezos is not only the target of AOC and the rest of the populist left, but of Trump and the rest of the populist right. Of course, Trump despises Bezos because he’s everything Trump isn’t: the self-made richest man in the world, someone who runs businesses that provides a valuable contribution to society, and is respected if not necessarily beloved.

Trump, on the other hand, has lied repeatedly to inflate his wealth—he most likely has less than $3B—and this was inherited, not earned. He got nearly half a billion dollars from daddy (close to $2B when adjusted for inflation), and he did it while criminally evading inheritance tax. If he had taken this fortune and invested it very conservatively, he’d have more money today than he’s gained from a lifetime of grifting. Moreover, he’s despised in America and worldwide. Trump is a loser and Bezos is a winner.

What’s in the news at the time of this writing is the National Enquirer’s attempt to blackmail Bezos with sex texts and dick pics. This is relevant because the Enquirer is not just a purveyor of sleaze, but an arm of the same right-wing propaganda mill that gave us Fox and Breitbart. It actively assisted Trump through a catch-and-kill scheme to cover up one of Trump’s many affairs. The leak came from the Trump-loving brother of Bezos’ mistress and the threat was politically motivated; it was Pecker’s way of apologizing to Trump for flipping on him.

Bezos called their bluff and now they’re in serious trouble, as they’ve violated their non-prosecution agreement with Mueller, much as Manafort violated his plea deal. Frankly, he probably should have called AOC’s bluff, as well, demanding that they offer their own terms for how they would get Amazon HQ2 into NYC. When they refused, it would have been a PR win, but that’s all.

Now, to be clear, Bezos is not a saint. There is room for reasonable people to hold nuanced views and practice selective opposition. But nuance and selectivity are not what populists are known for, and it’s not what we’re seeing here. Instead, both extremes are launching self-destructive attacks for political and personal gain.

So, what does it mean when populists on the left and right alike are opposed to a single person? Well, there’s that old truism about how everything—or at least all meat—tastes like chicken. It’s the same with populism; whether left or right, despite ostensibly being on opposite sides, they have more in common with each other than with the sane middle. Only chicken is delicious and nutritious while populism is idiotic and toxic.

Unscrambling eggs, and the worst part of the cow

A truism fully supported by the laws of thermodynamics is that you can’t just unscramble an egg as easily as you can scramble it. Well, you also can’t just un-tell a lie.

TIL that one version of this is Brandolini’s Law: “The amount of energy necessary to refute bullshit is an order of magnitude bigger than to produce it”. For obvious reasons, it’s also called the Bullshit Asymmetry Principle.

On the surface, it seems related to an older maxim: “A lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth can get its boots on”. However, while both deal with the difficulty that truth has when dealing with falsehood, one is about speed of propagation, the other is about total effort to refute.

A closer match can be found in the Gish gallop, a Creationist propaganda technique which amounts to a DoS attack on the truth. The trick is to put out as many arguments as possible, no matter how weak or even absurd, knowing that it’ll take much longer to refute than to throw out there in the first place. If anything, bad arguments work better because it takes longer to make some sense out of them before showing the errors.

On a related but distinct basis, Richard Dawkins argues that there’s no point in someone like him debating Creationists because he’s just giving them credibility by pretending there’s something to debate. They have more to gain and he has more to lose because there is no genuine controversy, only denialism.

Taken to its natural end, you get the propaganda technique found in Russia, as explained thoroughly in a book called “Nothing is True and Everything is Possible”, which attacks the very notion of truth. For example, when there is something to cover up, the state-controlled media doesn’t just put out a single story to lead people astray. Instead, it puts out multiple, intentionally-conflicting lies until everyone is too confused to even bother searching for the truth of the matter. It’s the Gish gallop escalated to a DDoS attack of national proportions, and it works.

If it sounds familiar, that may well be due to Putin’s favorite American pawn using a variant of it, in which a single sentence may contradict itself, and then immediately contradict that contradiction, leading to confusion. There’s so little self-consistency, much less connection with reality, that you wouldn’t even know where to begin; there is no detectable logic to refute.

There’s a taxonomy of deception:

  • Lies. These are statements intended to pass for truth, but falling short in one way or another. The key is that the claim must be willfully false while being designed so that the listener is likely to believe it. Lying is a staple of deception, but only amateurs stop there.
  • Bullshit. This goes deeper than lying, as it often involves using the truth (but not the whole truth, and with something but the truth) to distort reality. The key is that it’s not limited to getting a specific fact wrong but instead works by building up a narrative that’s deceptive. It doesn’t deviate from reality on a single point; it creates an alternative to reality.
  • Gaslighting. The next level is to directly attack the target’s confidence in their ability to tell truth from lie, much as HIV attacks the immune system. It piles on the lies and BS, often engaging in the most bald-faced versions of each, until they doubt their own grasp of reality. It seeks to induce a sort of learned helplessness, so that they no longer even bother to make the effort to defend themselves.

Forewarned is, according to the cliché, forearmed. Nonetheless, even when you know it’s coming, these methods can be highly effective. Hopefully, every bit of defense and awareness helps. When it doesn’t, all you have left is the humility to admit that you were misled, so that you can begin to recover. Good luck with that.

The power to grab some turtle soup

Only one of these turtles is a traitor.

When I attended a public high school, I was indoctrinated in the civil religion of representative democracy.

Under this ideology, voting is seen as a non-partisan good, the very basis of the legitimacy of our government. No matter how much we might disagree on matters of policy or who should be in charge, we all agree that the path to victory is to appeal to the voters. The government is the will of the people, so the people must be allowed to speak.

It turns out that Mitch McConnell, like the rest of the Republican leaders, is a disbeliever in this civil religion; a voting rights atheist. He’s not merely against the Democratic party, but against democracy itself. We know this because he said so, in pretty much those words.

In response to HR 1, the anti-corruption bill that the Democrats are symbolically proposing, McConnell has not only dismissed it as “not going to go anywhere”, he has tipped his hand about how he really sees voting. You see, this bill includes making election day a federal holiday, thus ensuring that citizens will be able to vote without interference from their jobs or the need to take their kids to school. This can be expected to increase participation rates, especially among those who don’t own cars and have little flexibility in their hours; the urban poor who lean Democratic.

McConnell gives up the game when he insists that helping people vote is a Democratic “power grab“. He’s admitting that his party is not the one that the people would choose if they were allowed to choose. Worse, he doesn’t want them to be allowed to choose, because he puts his party’s success above democracy itself. He doesn’t want the legitimate winner to be in charge, he wants his own party to be in charge no matter what the voters want.

This is consistent with decades of Republican-led voter suppression, which includes gerrymandering, felony disenfranchisement, closing polling sites, limiting polling hours, blocking early and mail-in voting, purging the rolls, and outright fraud. And then there’s their quid-pro-quo agreement with hostile foreign powers to use hacking and social media to sway the vote.

The Republicans are not the patriots, they are traitors. They are not the loyal opposition, they are a criminal coup. We should not treat them as anything better than what they are. We should not meet them in the middle, or assume the best. They are scum.

That can’t be healthy

Unicorn burger
How would you like your unicorn burger cooked?

In a previous rant, I went on and on about the meaning of liberal. In specific, I made it clear that it refers to a moderate left position that is distinct from the radicalism of the left-wing populists who call themselves “progressives”. Apparently, someone didn’t get the memo.

To wit, here’s a Politico article entitled “Democrats’ plan to neuter Medicare for All irks liberals“. If you read it, you find that no liberals were irked in the making of this policy. The article even contradicts its own headline when it says that the “more incremental approach is nonetheless frustrating for some progressives”. Progressives, meaning populists: low-information extremists who are left-wing but not at all liberal, and are only Democrats for lack of any alternative.

So what’s the real issue here? Once again, it’s about words having meaning, so that when you twist that meaning, you generate confusion and propaganda. Take single-payer healthcare, which means that the government provides the insurance and pays for it through taxation. It’s sold as being the only alternative to what we have now, but it’s only one of the many ways to achieve what is actually important to us: universal coverage.

The big problem with the status quo is that, before ObamaCare, about a sixth of the population had no health insurance coverage. The true number was higher than that, as many were under-insured or had huge gaps due to such things as the pre-existing condition loophole. With ObamaCare, it’s dropped to under a tenth, and would be lower still if not for Republicans desperately trying to hold it back.

What we want and need is for everyone to be covered, so that illness does not mean financial ruin, or suffering or even dying due to lack of treatment. It’s common decency and something that first-world nations must provide their population, if only as a practical necessity for economic reasons.

Voltaire famously quipped that “the perfect is the enemy of the good”. Even if we can’t flip a switch and get 100% coverage, it’s entirely worth fighting for an increase from 91% to, say, 95%. That’s literally millions of people whose lives will be bettered. But that means compromise, and populists do not compromise. That would go against their performative ideological purism. They stand by their demands, come hell or high water, and fuck the little guy who gets screwed in the process.

Even if we take for granted that a single-payer system would be the best possible solution—and we shouldn’t—this isn’t an argument for focusing exclusively on the ideal when it’s not politically feasible instead of working to improve what we’ve got. Better to compromise to help millions than to stand our ground and let them suffer for our idealism.

The real Democrats—the liberals—know this. To quote, “[Pelosi is] not going to have people walk the plank for the sake of it because we’ve gotta satisfy some of our vocal friends on the far left.” Brown goes on record with, “It’s easy to say ‘Medicare for All’ and make a good speech, but see no action. I want to see action.” Hard to argue with that, unless you’re a petulant extremist who’d rather lose than settle for less. Perhaps they believe they can afford to lose, but there are people who cannot and will instead go to the grave prematurely.

It doesn’t help that, as I alluded to above, it’s not at all clear that single-payer is the best answer, or even a good one. For one thing, it would be a huge shift with painful consequences. There are hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people employed by private health insurance companies, and still more who indirectly owe their livelihood to them. If we provided government insurance to everyone, we’d be shutting down these companies and putting their workers out of their jobs overnight.

Sure, maybe these jobs should go away in the long run, and maybe the government could find a place for some of these workers. But if we rush to radical change in medical insurance, we violate the medical maxim of “first, cause no harm”. We reduce a complex issue to a sound bite or rallying call, like the bluff of “54° 40′ or Fight“. (Polk compromised on 49° instead of fighting, but the lie got him elected.)

Not everyone even wants to switch to Medicare. To quote Merkley, “If you tell people the only choice they have is Medicare, that could produce a lot of folks being concerned about, ‘Wait a minute, I like my health care and you’re telling me I have to leave it.’” Even in a world with Medicare for All, some people will want more convenience or more coverage, including services that are luxuries, such as elective cosmetic procedures. There will always be some need for doctors who are paid out of pocket.

This is a good place to note that that single-payer is also distinct from single-provider, where all the doctors would work for the government and all the hospitals would be run by the government. This is the way the VA hospitals work, and they’re a complete mess. Libertarians claim that the government is necessarily bad at running businesses, which is nonsense. But the opposite is also nonsense: the government is quite capable of running businesses poorly, continuing on even when private owners would have folded from lack of funds. Medicare for all could become a nightmare for all, if it means removing all alternatives first.

So what do we do? We don’t have to lock the door and throw away the key by going fully public all at once. There are many choices, but the most obvious one is to restore some version of ObamaCare’s original public option, which lets Medicare coexist with private insurance on the open market. This was and is a great idea because the competition from the government effectively sets an upper limit to how greedy private insurers can get.

If they don’t provide enough value—if their coverage is weak or their prices are high—then Americans will switch to the opt-in Medicare. But if Medicare buckles under the weight an entire nation and starts serving us as badly as VA hospitals do, then private insurers pick up the slack. Essentially, each side keeps the other honest, so the people win. It’s neither market fundamentalism nor forced nationalization, but rather the very liberal notion of taming a market to our desired ends through regulation and participation.

Now, my suspicion is that, if we go this way, private insurers will find themselves unable to compete. They lack the economy of scale and the ability to control costs by regulation. Over time, they’ll shrink, if not entirely go away. There’ll be just enough left to provide boutique coverage that Medicare does not (and probably should not), and this will keep up some of the competitive pressure to keep Medicare honest. But even if I’m wrong and private insurance remains competitive or somehow wins out, then this hybrid plan protects us from the extremes of going all-in.

None of this is new. The article talks about incremental approaches, under the label of Medicare for More, and admits that these are much more likely to actually happen. It also references over a half dozen variants under serious consideration. Some expand the scope of Medicare by making more people eligible. Others offer it as the public option, allowing anyone to pay for Medicare, even if they’re not eligible for the government to provide it. Note how, for the employed, paying for it with tax-deductible payroll exclusions isn’t really much different from paying for it with taxes.

Whatever realistic plan we go with, they are all designed to be improvements over today’s ObamaCare. And it almost goes without saying that pretty much anything is better than repealing ObamaCare and returning to the bad old days, which is apparently all the Republicans have to offer. This is serious business and the proper domain of boring, competent policy wonks who crunch the numbers, do the math, and go with what adds up. This is not a place for empty rhetoric. (See above regarding Polk.)

If we wind up with de facto single-payer, so be it, but it’s better than doing it by fiat because the risks of putting all of our eggs in one basket are too great. So long as we have a system that works for everyone, the details of how we get there are something we should figure out as we go along, based on the data, not overcommit to in advance just to satisfy ideological needs and create simplistic slogans. In the end, the good is better than the perfect, for the same reason that horses are better than unicorns.

Still, I don’t recommend horse meat for your burgers; beef is fine. Which bring us to the real question: Do you want fries with that?

Special of the day: MLK

Martin Luther King is well-known as a martyr in the fight for racial equality, but is somewhat less known for having taken an economic turn towards the end of his abbreviated life. He became increasingly “committed to building bridges between the civil rights and labor movements”

This wasn’t just a matter of branching out to yet another area of inequality worth fighting against, but of recognizing that the two battles are fronts in the same war, that inequality against anyone is inequality against all. He understood that American racism is not driven by inexplicable hatred, but is instead rooted in the historical and ongoing desire of the 1% to take economic advantage of the rest of us.

Slavery amounts to an extreme version of labor abuse. Much as factory owners brought in scabs to replace inconvenient union labor, plantation owners replaced the inconvenience of paid labor with people whose skin color made it impossible for them to blend in with the populace after escaping. Slavery is the result of the economic inequality demanded by conscience-free capitalism being taken to its natural conclusion; it is union-busting on steroids.

White supremacy not only excuses the inexcusable crime of treating people as property, it serves to drive a wedge between two natural allies: black slaves and white trash. Race is an invented concept used to explain away inequality as inherent and necessary, and to convince poor whites to throw in their lot with rich whites instead of poor (or, worse, enslaved) blacks.

If this sounds familiar, you need look no further than right-wing politics in America today, a con game in which the poor are convinced to throw in their lot with the rich by opposing progressive taxation, social programs, and civil rights. In fact, it’s the same trick: you can get white people to go against their own interests just by telling them that the policies which hurt them also hurt non-whites even more. They’ll gladly accept a relative win against the out-group over a rising tide that lifts all. Chumps.

Most recently, Trump rode a wave of white supremacy into power and immediately used it to cut taxes on the rich and corporate. This is not a coincidence; it is literally all that matters to the American oligarchs that support him. His imaginary wall is an icon to white supremacy that quite effectively distracts bigots from noticing that they’re being robbed.

All of these forms of inequality, whether economic or racial or sexual or any of the rest, form the many heads of a single hydra: hierarchy. No one head can be attacked without the others joining in to defend it. Plans that focus on fighting racism will be undermined by ongoing sexism and economic abuse. Plans that focus on soaking the rich will, as shown above, be undermined by racism and xenophobia. The only way to win is to fight all the heads at once.

This is what MLK grew to understand, but many of us have since forgotten. White “progressive” populists are focusing on economic equality while showing apathy towards civil rights, to the point of relegating them to mere “identity politics” and writing them off as irrelevant. In this form of trickle-down socialism, they’re claiming that the various minorities will get theirs as soon as straight, white, cis, abled men get theirs first.

The white supremacy of the extremist left is racist in policy, not rhetoric, and is not marked by displays of hatred. If asked, most of these “progressives” would honestly say that they support civil rights for all. And they do, in theory, just not in practice. The problem is that this support ranks very low on their list of priorities, to the point where it might as well not exist.

As a result, they ignore their natural allies among non-whites, non-males, non-straights, non-cis, non-able, and so on. They allow themselves to be divided and conquered by white supremacy, all the while insisting that they oppose it.

If MLK had lived to see the state of affairs today, by dodging that bullet and then making it to 90, he would be praying for sweet release now.

Where does the salad fork go?

I can tell you to use a fork with your salad, a spoon in your soup, and a knife on your steak, but when is a gun the appropriate tool? I guess as a weapon. Thing is, lots of tools, such as knives, hammers, and baseball bats, can be used as weapons. Guns are weapons; that is their primary purpose and they’re very good at it.

They’re not just weapons. Unlike various hand tools that can be turned to violence, or even a sword, which is designed to be a weapon, their successful use does not depend on being physically strong. Even skill isn’t much of a factor; any idiot with a shotgun can blow away whatever’s in the general direction they point at. This is seen as a virtue. Guns are called “the great equalizer” because, in the words of Reagan, “a small person with a gun is equal to a large person”.

Of course, if pressed, you could probably come up with some legitimate uses for guns outside the military. Particularly in rural areas, guns might be needed to protect livestock from predators or to hunt animals for food. But most guns are owned under the theory that they offer protection against violence. That’s what the overwhelming majority of gun owners say, with most of the rest citing hunting, sport shooting, and collecting. Less than a tenth use them for their jobs.

The problem with the case for self defense is the base rate fallacy. You can only defend yourself against violent crimes that actually happen to you, so unless you’re a cop or live in a western, these circumstances are exceedingly rare. As one researcher put it, “The average person […] has basically no chance in their lifetime ever to use a gun in self-defense. But […] every day, they have a chance to use the gun inappropriately. They have a chance, they get angry. They get scared.” In addition, being able to use a gun effectively in your defense requires skills above those you’d get from shooting at paper targets.

As a result, if you get a gun to protect your home, it’s unlikely you’ll ever use it for this purpose. It’s much more likely that someone in your home will use it to kill themselves or another person, either by accident or as suicide. Suicides account for two thirds of gun deaths and guns account for almost half of suicides. And studies have shown that making it harder to kill yourself makes it less likely that you’ll try, so these are mostly not deaths that would otherwise have happened.

Past the suicides, you have the accidents, often while cleaning a weapon or when a child gets access to it. And, of course, having a gun handy makes it easier for any personal disagreement to escalate to murder. It’s bad to get beaten up, worse to get shot in the head. (Ask me how I know!) Guns are not absolutely essential for killing, but they make it so much easier that they make it more common. More sensible countries create a natural experiment that confirms this.

Speaking of countries, in that Reagan quote above, the “Great Communicator” went on to repeat a popular myth: guns are for protecting the people against tyrannical government. Thing is, the police have fully-automatic rifles, body armor, and the training and organization to use both effectively as a group. Anyone who’s seen a tank, whether the military type or the paramilitary SWAT variety, knows that they render guns pretty much useless. For that matter, no gun is going to protect rebels from being carpet-bombed to oblivion from jets. And the military has nuclear weapons! We’re a long way from muskets and bayonets, so this argument is a farce.

A student of history will quickly find a more realistic, if sinister, purpose for mass gun ownership: it’s not about equalizing, it’s about keeping people down. Black people, mostly; the reason gun ownership was enshrined in the Bill of Rights was to protect the great American institution of slavery.

Laws rarely allowed free blacks to have weapons. It was even rarer for African Americans living in slavery to be allowed them. In slave states, militias inspected slave quarters and confiscated weapons they found. […]

These restrictions were no mere footnote to the gun politics of 18th-century America. White Americans were armed so that they could maintain control over nonwhites. Nonwhites were disarmed so that they would not pose a threat to white control of American society.

The restrictions underscore a key point about militias: They were more effective as domestic police forces than they were on the battlefield against enemy nations; and they were most effective when they were policing the African American population.

What the Second Amendment Really Meant to the Founders (WashPo)

This is not just another embarrassing historical fact, it’s a modern reality: gun ownership is for white people. This is made particularly clear in areas when open carry is legal, but black people with guns risk being killed by the police. I could fill pages with stories of black men killed by police claiming that they had a gun, and the NRA’s zeal for firearms is notably absent when the owner isn’t white.

Putting aside the inherent racist past and present of guns, there’s the problem of proportionality, of cost-benefit analysis. Today, very few hunters are doing it for the food, and even then it’s more choice than necessity. If meat were the goal, then hunters would focus on ducks, beavers, and squirrels, not hoofed mammals, which are not only more dangerous but often provide meat that’s too tough, lean, or stinky. If you want good meat, you’d do best hunting it in a supermarket. But if you’re aiming for food, you need a small-caliber rifle that won’t blow a varmint apart, not a big gun for elk, much less a fucking assault rifle to spray the forest down with bullets.

We need to be honest with ourselves. Guns are not for protection or food: for the most part, guns are toys and gun ownership is a hobby. Shooting a gun is fun, like throwing darts, except the projectile is far more deadly. They’re also something people collect, much like hording Beanie Babies. Half the guns in America are owned by 3% of the people and half of gun-owners have more than two. And they’re part of our movie-fueled image of rugged manliness, from cowboys to James Bond.

Of course, if a game like darts killed half as many innocent people as guns do, we would immediately regulate their use. We’d require darts to be kept behind the bar or at the range, and never taken home. We’d require strict background checks for darts to keep them out of the hands of those who would throw them at other people, and make it illegal to resell darts without going through these checks. We’d create a computerized national registry to let us track dart ownership, prevent straw sales, and match darts used in crime to their owners. And we’d make these laws national, so nobody could make a business out of smuggling darts from lenient backwoods jurisdictions.

We don’t, and it’s because of our Big Lie about what guns are for. We pretend they’re for safety when they measurably decrease safety. We pretend they haven’t always been a tool for racist oppression. We pretend that they’re needed to prevent tyranny. We pretend that we’re fucking action heroes who need guns to be cool. And, because we embrace these myths, our citizens die by the tens of thousands each year, disproportionately including minorities and children.

As a nation, our gun ownership is wildly out of proportion to our population. The rest of the world offers plenty of examples of how gun control works and people remain safe because there are fewer guns around, not despite. Despite the fact that the overwhelming majority want gun control, the NRA has systematically thwarted the will of the people. And so long as “they’ll take away our guns” is an effective rallying cry to excite right-wingers and send them to the polls, gun violence will be sustained.

We are so politically dysfunctional that even the occasional massacre of children is not enough to spur action. We did this to ourselves. Like most gun deaths, this is suicide.

P.S.
The choice of darts was an apt one because, after a child died in a lawn dart accident, we immediately banned them. Sadly, this act of unilateral disarmament left us utterly vulnerable to the attack of the balloon doggies, which was shaping up to be massacre until the wind shifted and saved the day for non-inflated people everywhere.