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GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene lashes out at reporter as Democrats ramp up expulsion campaign

After getting a reporter nearly arrested on Wednesday for asking her a tough question at a town hall, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GA, the infamous freshman Republican House member known for her QAnon and anti-mask beliefs, is now facing intense criticism from her colleagues, including some whom she previously called for violence against.

The local reporter, Meredith Aldis with Chattanooga’s WRCB, was invited into Greene’s event with press credentials. However, when Aldis asked Greene about her past support of violence against members of Congress on social media, Greene blew up.

“I’m talking to my constituents!” she insisted, “This isn’t a press conference.”

Aldis rebutted that she herself is a taxpayer, but Green ignored the reporter, waiting for her staffers and the Whitfield County Sheriff’s deputies to escort Aldis out of the event, during which Aldis says she was threatened with an arrestAccording to Patrick Filibin, a Chattanooga Times Free Press reporter attending the town hall, Adlis’ ejection “was instant, like they were taking no chances.”

Those who attended the event were required to submit their questions for Greene beforehand, leaving little opportunity for Greene’s constituents to challenge her on her past, current (and likely future) improprieties. During the town hall, Greene reaffirmed her support for impeaching President Joe Biden, outlawing abortion, and discriminating against transgender student-athletes.

In 2019, Greene liked a comment on Facebook that suggested Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, should receive “a bullet to the head.” In 2018, Greene also liked a comment calling for President Barack Obama and other Democrats to be hanged for facilitating the Iran Deal, which Greene framed as a nefarious conspiracy. 

“Your conduct does not reflect creditably on the House, and you should resign,” Democratic Rep. Don Beyer of Virginia tweeted to Greene. 

Greene has also bandied the notion that the 2018 Parkland shooting –– in which 17 people were killed and another 17 injured –– was a false-flag affair, or a “planned” event meant to obfuscate who is criminally liable. A video recently surfaced of Greene harassing one of the teenage victims of the shooting, David Hogg, a founding member of Never Again MSD, a student-led political action committee aimed at pushing lawmakers to enact tighter gun control regulations. Greene called Hogg, eighteen at the time, “a coward” and likened him to “little Hitler.”

Following the barrage of social media skeletons that have surfaced from Greene’s closet, several members of Congress have called for her immediate removal.

On Wednesday, Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-CA, vowed to introduce a resolution to expel Greene from the House, a move unlikely to procure the two-thirds vote it needs remove the freshman. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-GA, promised to have a “conversation” with Greene in light of her indecency — but he first assigned her to plum committee assignments, like on Education and Budget, respectively. 

McCarthy “must explain how someone with this background represents the Republican party on education issues,” House Education and Labor Committee Chairman Rep. Robert C. “Bobby” Scott, D-Va, said in a statement. 

“The GOP conference committed an offensive error in placing her on the committee,” Michigan Democratic Rep. Haley Stevens, who serves on the Education and Labor Committee, told CNN. “I am praying for Rep. Greene and I hope the GOP conference moves swiftly to right this wrong.” 

House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, a Massachusetts Democrat, tweeted, “And they wonder why we don’t want Members carrying guns onto the House Floor.”

Filibin expressed that Greene has a tendency to avoid uncomfortable questions, often diverting blame to others. For example, when pressed on her controversial social media activity, Greene blamed those running her account and decried media bias, “saying that the media doesn’t cover her other posts about Bible verses, congratulating friends on social media, etc.” 

In June of 2020, Greene posted on Twitter, “I have read a book on leadership. It’s called the Bible […] Only twisted lies tickle your ears and make you feel good.” However, with Greene finally being called upon to answer for her lies, one would hope she’s feeling a little less “ticked” than usual.

Why horror flick “The Night” is the first American film to be released in Iran in four decades

In the eerie Iranian horror film, “The Night,” Babak (Shahab Hosseini, of “The Salesman“), Neda (Niousha Jafarian) and their baby, Shabnam (Leah Oganyan) check into the Hotel Normandie to get some rest. But that soon proves impossible — and not just because Babak is suffering from a throbbing toothache. The guests are repeatedly disturbed by knocks at their door, noises from above, and even a voice whispering “Mommy.” When Babak takes Shabham to get some milk, he experiences an unusual encounter that unsettles him. Is Babak dreaming this nightmare, which gets worse — the family is unable to leave the hotel — as the night goes on? 

Director and co-writer Kourosh Ahari creates a moody little psychological thriller, complete with jump scares, a mysterious black cat, a dripping faucet, a strange tattoo, and more. “The Night” can certainly be read as an allegory for the harassment of displaced Iranians in America. It can also be viewed a parable about honesty and trust in a marriage. Ahari wisely leaves the interpretation up to the viewer as the characters find themselves in a liminal space where the only the truth can set them free.

Ahari and Hosseini spoke with Salon via Zoom (and with the assistance of an interpreter) about “The Night.” 

What was the worst night you ever had in a hotel?

Kourosh Ahari: It wasn’t anything crazy, but there was this one hotel I took my wife to, and the bathroom situation was unpleasant. [Laughs.] We had a crazy night trying to find someone to fix it. 

Shahab Hosseini: I was at reception to check out of a hotel and they fined me $150 for smoking in a non-smoking room. I smoked and I paid. [Laughs] That was a bad memory.

“The Night” is a psychological thriller. The hotel is a crucible. What can you say about configuring this nightmare, which at times feels like a dream?

Ahari: I see it, as truly, a psychological thriller. There are elements of immigration, and things, but I see it as our internal fears of our secrets being revealed — or any sort of fear. The whole horror element comes from that. We didn’t try to make it scary or have external fear sources. It’s all coming from within. The characters find themselves in a hotel as a symbol of the world we are living in, and how we check into this world, and how we check out and go about our lives. What we try to be honest about, and what we try to hide, and how that affects us.

You use silence and sound, shadows, and empty spaces to create a sinister atmosphere and a sense of dread in a liminal space. Can you talk about creating the unsettling mood and tone? 

Ahari: A lot of that goes to the great work by our cinematographer, Maz Makhani, and Jennifer Dehghan, who did our production design and all the technical lighting. The concept of it, as Maz and I talked about, goes back to the characters themselves. If we see a lot of shadow and darkness, it goes back to the image of their internal fear — that shadows are where they try to hide the truth. That was the idea behind the tone and the lighting — how dim and dark we wanted this to be.

The film has moments of bloodshed. What are your thoughts about this and other horror motifs?

Ahari: There are elements like the tattoo, the black cat, the shadow Babak sees, and there are different interpretations of it. Everything, I promise you, is answered in the movie. You may not catch it in the first time. You may catch it the second or third time. People have said they were baffled the first time, and they saw the film again and said they saw more and get what’s happening. I heard interpretations that come closer and closer to what I had in mind. I do reserve that information, but I enjoy hearing different interpretations. But in the end, it does come down to the audience; what they get from the film and the elements they are seeing has to do with their point of view and the psychological and internal fear they relate to.

Babak is hurting from his toothache, he has been drinking, he is over-tired, and he is unsettled. Shahab, your movement expresses so much of his physical and psychological pain. What can you say about mindset of your character?

Hosseini: My idea of “The Night” was that there is a chronic toothache that leads to a nightmare. I shared this with Kourosh and he liked it. Through the film, gradually, the tooth thing gains in intensity to the point where it frustrates him. He tries to assuage it through drugs and drinking alcohol, and that becomes a gateway to the nightmare. I had not decided in advance what to do or what not to do. I basically went with the story. We have the feeling of the toothache which might start out as a joke of sorts, or a headache that is temporary, but gradually it turns into a full blown nightmare and he finds himself in a swamp he gets deeper and deeper into with no way out.

Babak is stubborn, he refuses to capitulate to his wife; he is haunted. Can you discuss his character and how you built his backstory? 

Hosseini: Usually, all of our nightmares are things that have happened in our lives and are a direct result of our behavior. Those who are more selfish, and those who are more indifferent and angry at the world around them, are more likely to be afflicted with a nightmare. Babak acted selfishly in the past. He himself had forgiven himself, but had not sought others for forgiveness, and life, in the form of a nightmare, has now entrapped him and made him face the truth.

The power shifts back and forth between Babak and Neda. What observation do you have about their dynamic? 

Hosseini: That’s the truth of life; life is not a completely black or white. I think, in most cases there is a great range and shade of gray — going from lightness to darkness. You cannot say this person is always right, or be completely hateful to another. Everything is relative. We cannot love everyone at the same time or hate everyone at the same time. There is good and bad in everyone.

There are thoughts expressed in the film that the characters have been cursed, there are symbols and omens, and ideas expressed by the displaced man that truth will set the characters free. And the film even opens with a game (Mafia) where players lie. What can you say about these incorporating these ideas? And were there specific Iranian references?

Ahari: The game of Mafia is popular in the youth culture and people do play it. Everything we used — a tattoo or the black cat — was to be universal, so that everyone can connect to it. There are certain [cultural] beliefs about a black cat, or a tattoo, but we didn’t pinpoint any of these things to be a factor for what was happening. There are reasons for those things to be there. It has cultural meanings for me, but when it comes to the story — and how these elements play into the story — it doesn’t directly connect to my cultural beliefs. I don’t want to [explain] why it was there. The displaced man is a character who was in opposition to everything happening to the characters. Who he was, and why those elements were there — these things were all answered in the film; I want people to have their own interpretation.

Hosseini: My interpretation, my belief, is that truth, and lying, and treachery are things that do not have a nationality. All kinds of people, all over the world, feel similarly about these things. We did not make an effort to show an Iranian theme other than the fact that the nationality of the family at the center at this plot. The movie could have happened to anyone in the world. It was the human dimension to the story that was of interest to us, not the nationalist aspect. Art knows no boundaries and are is something easily understood by all nations.

Your film is the first American film to receive a release in Iran since 1979. What can you say about that distinction?

Ahari: Well, it’s very exciting, and I think the reason it happened was because we wanted it to happen, and we made a decision to make it happen. The opportunity has always been there, and there are, of course, differences in culture and rules and how we can present the film, but to me, it mattered because I wanted my fellow countrymen to experience something a little bit different. This genre is not celebrated in Iran, compared to other places, and I know there is a wide range of interest and fans for this genre. To be the first is an amazing coincidence.

Hosseini: The movie “The Night” is a production of Mammoth Pictures as well as 7Skies Entertainment. Kourosh, Alex [Bretow, a producer of “The Night”], and I have created a company called Pol Media. Pol is a Farsi word meaning “bridge.” Our goal is to create communication between the two nations that have been separated for many years. I don’t want to say anything about the politics between Iran and America because politics is not my line of work. I am an artist. I have always wished for this to occur, and I believe The Night” has opened the path and has made the bridge stronger. This will be the first film in which the two countries are able to work together through art. 

“The Night” will be available in select cinemas, digital and cable VOD Friday, Jan. 29.

Biden has already visited more local D.C. restaurants than Trump as president—here’s why it matters

After attending morning mass at Holy Trinity Catholic Church on Sunday afternoon, President Joe Biden stopped for a bagel.

Well, photos taken by White House press pool members showed a small swarm of black SUVs parked in front of Call Your Mother, a Jewish deli in Georgetown, while Biden and his granddaughters, Finnegan and Maisy, remained in the car. His son, Hunter, and a number of secret service members, waited at the take-out window where they retrieved a bag of sesame bagels and some tubs of cream cheese, according to the deli.

While some Americans fanned out over the sheer normalcy of the concept of a president who spends his Sunday afternoon grabbing some post-church lunch, others inevitably served up a side of cynicism. About the perceived frivolity of the photos (“Not newsl!!!!” one Twitter user wrote); about the fact that Biden opted for a toasted bagel; and about the fact that Jeff Zients, who was recently announced as the coordinator of Biden’s coronavirus task force, used to be a part-owner of the trendy deli. (The trip apparently wasn’t pre-planned, and Zients divested his interest in the restaurant before joining the administration, according to The Washington Post.)

RELATED: Trump’s self-destructive diet: Psychiatrist says unhealthy food choices may affect his mental health

But one interesting statistic emerged from tug-of-war between the “Oh, that’s wholesome” reactions and the incessant calls from conservatives to revisit the invented Hunter Biden scandal. With that one Sunday afternoon visit — which took place after the president had been in office for about 100 hours — Biden had officially visited as many D.C.-area restaurants during his fledgling administration than former President Donald Trump did during his entire four years in the White House. 

Trump is known to have visited only one restaurant during his time in Washington: BLT Prime by David Burke at the Trump International Hotel, where he ordered a well-done steak and a side of ketchup. It’s worth noting that BLT Prime was a replacement restaurant: José Andrés decided to back out of his Trump Hotel restaurant deal in 2015, citing the former president’s disparaging comments about Mexican immigrants as the reason for his decision.

Many in the restaurant industry and food media turned on Burke for his decision — and subsequent allegations that he attempted to poach Andrés’ staff — including the late Anthony Bourdain, who famously told Eater in 2016, “Burke’s a steaming loaf of s**t as far as I’m concerned, and feel free to quote me.”

Trump never had a particularly high opinion of D.C.-area restaurants, saying in 2016 that “there aren’t that many [great restaurants] in Washington, as you know.” Meanwhile, Bon Appetit declared Washington the “restaurant city of the year” that same year.

Instead, he would send bodyguards on McDonald’s runs and stock formal White House dinners with a buffet of Filet-O-Fish sandwiches and slices of Domino’s pizza, all washed down with a dozen daily Diet Cokes, which were summoned using a special button on the Resolute Desk since removed by Biden. Trump occasionally teased visits to area restaurants like the Georgetown Italian restaurant Cafe Milano — which was so popular with his staff that Page Six dubbed it “the second White House cafeteria” — but nothing ever manifested.

Of course, there’s speculation about how well Trump would have been received at local restaurants. Refusing service to politicians — or otherwise allowing that service to be disrupted — picked up during Trump’s administration, as Salon has previously reported.

In June 2018, former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was asked to leave the Red Hen, a popular Virginia restaurant, because the owner said “that many members of her LGBT staff were uncomfortable serving Sanders.” Days earlier, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was met with protests at a Mexican restaurant in Washington.

“Secretary Nielsen, how dare you spend your evening here eating dinner as you’re complicit in the separation and deportation of over 10,000 children,” shouted a member of the group.

The protesters proceeded to chant “shame, shame, shame” and left after about 15 minutes. Restaurant management chose not to intervene, according to The Washington Post. These incidents, in combination with 2019 reports of Eric Trump being spit on by an employee at Chicago’s Aviary and Mitch McConnell having his leftovers dumped into the street by a fellow diner, illustrate how Trump likely would have been greeted if he would have been seen in public by fellow diners. Many restaurants might also not have wanted to be associated with the president or his administration.

Why does it matter that Biden opted to support a local establishment within his first week as president? Local restaurants are hurting so badly right now, largely because Trump didn’t take curtailing the pandemic seriously until it was too late.

In 2020, the National Restaurant Association released a survey showing that nearly 1 in 6 American restaurants — a total of 100,000 — have closed either permanently or long-term due to restrictions enacted to mitigate the spread of the novel coronavirus. Nearly 3 million industry employees are still out of work, and the industry is on track to lose $240 billion in sales by the end of the year.

In the face of those numbers, Biden stopping for a bag of bagels is a miniscule gesture, but it’s one leaders in Washington’s dining scene hope will prompt patrons following suit by supporting local restaurants across the U.S.

Kathy Hollinger, the president and chief executive of the Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington, told The Washington Post that the Call Your Mother stop was “a much-needed boost.”  

“I think that psychologically it gives the kind of lift that not only the small-business operators need but also the residents who are very invested into this community and who are such supportive diners,” she said. “They like to see that the president is also connected in that way.”

The Washington restaurant community, which overall leans Democrat, noticeably improved during the Obama years, Hollinger added.

“Any time there was an appearance [by Obama or the first family], there was this excitement,” she said. “There was an interest to go visit, as well, knowing that if the president ate here or stopped by that we want to check out what they’re eating and . . . what they’re finding so interesting in terms of cuisine choice.”

The industry — both locally and across the nation — is obviously confronting different challenges today. But there are hopes that Biden’s immediate personal support of local restaurants will soon be followed by systemic changes. Trump never provided local restaurants with any targeted relief, and many are pushing for Biden to immediately enact the RESTAURANTS Act. The $120 billion grant program would effectively bail out bars, food trucks, and other struggling culinary establishments.

As one Twitter user aptly put it, “Bagels are great, but a bail out is better.”

Amnesia nation: To “forget” the Trump era is a toxic act of privilege — and very dangerous

Gore Vidal once warned that Americans do not remember anything that happened before Monday morning. America is an amnesiac country that pretends it has no history.

Vidal, in many ways, was prophetic. Joe Biden has only been president for a week. Donald Trump’s presidency was not 40 years ago, or 400. There has been nothing close to a proper reckoning for Trumpism and American fascism and all the harm it has caused, and is still causing). Ultimately, in too many ways the swamp of Trumpism is still overflowing and threatening to flood the entire country.

But already, there is a rush to forget Donald Trump and his regime. Online and elsewhere, this organized forgetting is summoned by words and phrases such as “Donald Trump is gone! Stop talking about him!” or “Who cares! Donald Trump isn’t president anymore!” or “Please stop. I don’t want to read about Donald Trump anymore!” or “Biden is president now!”

The news media and many opinion leaders want to move on from the Age of Trump because they crave a return to “business as usual”. Those elites also want to put the Age of Trump behind them as a way of avoiding responsibility for all the ways they enabled and empowered Trump and his movement by downplaying or denying the danger that he and his movement represent to American democracy and the nation.

And of course, Republicans now want to have “unity” and to “move forward” and avoid “division” — because whatever the private misgivings of some political figures may be, the Age of Trump was a great victory for their policy agenda. “Moving forward” will also do the work of helping the Republicans avoid any public backlash or other consequences for being co-conspirators in Trump’s fascist plot to overthrow democracy. Throwing Donald Trump down the memory hole is a way of continuing Trump and the conservative movement’s political crime spree without sharing any of the responsibility or stigma. On Twitter, grassroots activist and artist Bree Newsome described the Republican strategy to great effect:

Sorry we tried to assassinate you & overthrow the election. We didn’t expect it to fail & create this awkwardness between us. Let’s move forward & get back to normal with us blocking any legislation you introduce while we continue to feed a racist terrorist movement.

What so many survivors of this first iteration of Trumpism really want is for the last four or five years in America to be deleted and declared never to have happened. Unfortunately, such a thing is not possible.

On this, Charles Yu writes in a new essay at Harper’s:

The idea that we have been living in an alternate timeline — that the world in which Donald Trump never became president exists alongside the horrible funhouse world we’ve been forced to occupy for four years — has been a common social-media trope. This is partly an incredulous response to the sheer strangeness of our situation, but implicit in the joke is the idea that we might somehow find our way back to that other place. …

Yu observes that there’s no “easy way to usher Trump offstage,” as Philip Roth did with American fascist Charles Lindbergh in the alternate-history novel “The Plot Against America,” but that even if there were, “that would not return us to the ‘normal’ world.”

That world does not exist. We will never again live in a country where Trump was not president, and because of that, a perpetual fear may simply be part of our lot from now on. But there is also some hope to be found in the fact that we can’t return to the timeline Trump disrupted. The reason no such timeline exists is that the future is not determined — not by Trump or by anyone else. The question we face now is how to live after Trump, and the question is our own to answer.

Yu concludes by observing that “a signature feature of Trump’s presidency” was his remarkable ability “to colonize every square inch of our lives, including many areas seemingly removed from politics.” Changing that is not something Joe Biden can accomplish: All of us “will need to find a way to replace Trump, to figure out what happens next.”

Perversely enough, the end of Trump’s presidency has left an absence of sorts. Some people, because of the color of their skin, money and other material resources, or just as a function of sheer luck and life circumstances, have the privilege of ignoring and forgetting what has recently happened (and is still happening) in America.

There are other people who enjoy no such privileges. They have lost their jobs or have slipped into economic ruin because of Trump’s plague and his willful negligence in responding to it. Their families have been torn apart by Trump’s regime and his de facto declaration of war on nonwhite migrants, refugees and undocumented immigrants. Many have lost parents, partners, children, relatives, neighbors and friends to Trump’s plague. Perhaps they and their community, like so many other Americans, are experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder and other emotional and physical maladies. The Age of Trump has caused a large increase in violent hate crimes against nonwhite people, Muslims, Jews and other marginalized groups.

When Trump’s fascist mob attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 in an obvious attempt to overthrow Biden’s victory and subvert multiracial democracy, it was again shown how Black and brown people do not have the privilege of forgetting the Age of Trump and all that it has wrought.

The Black Freedom Struggle has endured for centuries. To forget or “move on” from the Age of Trump without true justice and a proper reckoning is to further empower white supremacy.

Then there are the people who have been touched by Trumpism and its harm and perfidy, but who now choose to deny that ever happened. Such people have embraced delusions and denial and confused it with self-care.  

At the Guardian, David Rieff reflects on the balancing act between collective memory and forgetting:

What if collective historical memory, as it is actually employed by communities and nations, has led far too often to war rather than peace, to rancor and resentment rather than reconciliation, and the determination to exact revenge for injuries both real and imagined, rather than to commit to the hard work of forgiveness?

This is what happened in the American south after 1865, where after the guns of the civil war fell silent, another form of battle raged over whose version of the conflict — the victorious Union or the defeated Confederacy — would prevail. As the recent debate in the U.S. over the Confederate flag demonstrated, that battle over memory, though diminished, still goes on today. …

These are the cases in which it is possible that whereas forgetting does an injustice to the past, remembering does an injustice to the present. On such occasions, when collective memory condemns communities to feel the pain of their historical wounds and the bitterness of their historical grievances it is not the duty to remember but a duty to forget that should be honored.

But Trump and his movement are not “historical,” in the sense of “being gone.” They are still alive, still with us. Joe Biden has been president of the United States for barely a week and Trump is already working the gears of his own shadow presidency and seeking to activate the tens of millions of people who are members of his political cult. Trump controls the Republican Party. He even has his own cult religion in the form of the QAnon conspiracy theory, which has been damaged by Biden’s victory but clearly not destroyed. 

To put oneself outside or above this present moment is to exercise the privilege of being separate and apart from history and its pushes and its pulls, successes and failures, joy and pain, lived consequences and experiences. Such a state of being is literally “ahistorical” — and quite likely an expression of malignant narcissism. The privilege of such grand, hubristic forgetting all but guarantees that American fascism will continue to grow in power and influence — and that Trump himself or some newer, more efficient model will emerge to finish the original’s vile work.

If and when that occurs, no one will have the privilege of denial and forgetting. When American democracy is overthrown entirely, there will be no hiding place. 

Forget about a GOP crack-up: Republicans rally around a defeated Trump because they understand power

File it under too good to be true: The much-anticipated great Republican crack-up is not coming.

Last weekend, the Washington Post ran a story headlined, “Trump jumps into a divisive battle over the Republican Party — with a threat to start a ‘MAGA Party.'” It focused on the internal battle between the (relatively few) Republicans who are angry about Donald Trump inciting an insurrection on the Capitol and the more numerous Republicans who are gung-ho about this turn towards fascism and cannot wait to push it further. This followed earlier reporting about a “[b]itter split GOP” promising “Republicans in open warfare” and similar reporting from the New York Times promising that “bitter infighting underscores the deep divisions” in the GOP. 

There were similarly exciting stories about how business leaders were pulling away from the Republican Party and Republicans in battleground states were changing their party registration. Even we here at Salon got in on the action, with Heather “Digby” Parton writing a piece about “the inevitable post-election Republican implosion” resulting from the conflict between the QAnon types and the more staid (though also democracy-hostile) Republicans like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. 

I was skeptical, believing as I do that there are three inevitabilities in life: Death, taxes, and that Republicans are far too attached to power to demobilize.

They may believe that there’s an international cabal of blood-drinking Satanist pedophiles, but Republicans aren’t so dumb as to think that there’s anything to be gained from third parties or withholding their votes altogether. That level of self-defeating stupidity is a solidly progressive flaw. Republicans know that power means winning elections and winning elections means sticking together. That is how it always is and always shall be, or at least until they can end this whole “holding elections” business altogether. 


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Sure enough, on Wednesday, the same two reporters who recently wrote the Washington Post article about Republicans in disarray — Josh Dawsey and Michael Scherer — circled around with a very different headline: “Republicans back away from confronting Trump and his loyalists after the Capitol insurrection, embracing them instead.”

The Post’s follow-up report looks at how Republican leadership is now lining up behind the fascistic ex-president and fighting Democratic efforts to convict Trump and prevent him from running again. Here at Salon, Parton Wednesday’s column hit on the same theme, nothing that “Mitch McConnell believes in power,” and that falling in line behind the Trump faction is apparently what he believes will get it for him. 

And all those supposed Republican voter de-registrations? Philip Bump and Lenny Bronner of the Washington Post did an in-depth analysis of historical trends. Their conclusion to the question of whether Republicans are bleeding support: “Eh, not really.”

As for all those business leaders supposedly peacing out, well, it’s important to read the fine print. For instance, Google snagged laudatory headlines for withdrawing donations to any Republicans who voted to overthrow Joe Biden’s electoral win, but buried in the text was that Google “will not be making any contributions this cycle.” Emphasis mine, because this is an off-year with no federal elections. Google has likely just hit a temporary pause to let the bad press pass. Then it’s back to giving money to people who are using their elected office to keep undermining the idea of elections altogether.

I’m not denying that there’s a power struggle between the flagrantly bonkers faction of the Republican Party and the somewhat less bizarro faction. But ultimately, that power struggle is more about aesthetics and tactics than goals. The McConnell wing prefers to undermine democracy through procedural obstructionism that slips the notice of the average voter. The Trump wing wants violent insurrection and in your face gun-waving. Either way, the objective is the same: Installing minority rule, gutting democracy, and shutting the majority of Americans out of power. And so it was inevitable that the power struggle would be limited in scope and would never actually drive anyone out of the Republican Party. 

One case study is the spectacle around Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a full-blown QAnon nut who has been drawing embarrassing coverage for her hateful antics, such as calling for the deaths of Democrats and harassing a school shooting survivor with her wild conspiracy theories. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, D-Calif., promised he’d have “a conversation” with Taylor Greene, drawing hopeful speculation that he would contain her or even censure her. 

Instead, Taylor Greene was handsomely rewarded for being the worst:

As Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D.-N.Y., said on MSNBC Wednesday, “Kevin McCarthy answers to these QAnon members of Congress, not the other way around.”

Outside of Congress, we have the case study of Meghan McCain, co-host on “The View”, daughter of former Arizona Sen. John McCain, and self-admiring protector of the supposedly sane wing of the Republican Party. Her mother, Cindy McCain, was targeted for censure for anti-Trump heresies by the Arizona Republican Party, headed by Kelli Ward, a Taylor-Greene-style figure. 

“I’ll die fighting for [the GOP]. I mean, I’m a lifelong conservative, unlike a lot of these heretics,” Meghan McCain dramatically declared on “The View” on Tuesday. “I mean, I was born into this, raised into it, it’s my whole entire life in all ways and truly at the bottom of my soul, I think as all of you know, I believe in the principles I was raised on.”

What McCain avoided noting, however, is that she’s married to Ben Domenech, who runs The Federalist, a far-right website that has been avidly defending the insurrectionists and floating conspiracy theories blaming the violence on “antifa,” instead of the Trump supporters who are actually responsible for a riot that left 140 Capitol police officers injured, one murdered, and two dead by suicide. Domenech himself is more irate about social media platforms taking down pro-insurrection voices than he is about the actual attack. 

Perhaps McCain and her husband just politely disagree on the acceptability of armed insurrection to overturn free and fair elections. Nonetheless, their marriage is a perfect symbol of how the GOP operates. There might be some room for mild disapproval of fascistic behavior, but at the end of the day, they’ll all stick together.


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Power is what really matters to them.

The slightly less nutty Republicans aren’t going to break up with the blatant fascists any more than McCain plans to leave Domenech. These stories about Republican in-fighting are catnip to progressives, for understandable reasons. It would be so nice if the GOP would be sunk by intra-party squabbling, the same way Democrats get sunk over and over again. Wouldn’t it be nice if it were Republicans, for once, who understood the pain of watching candidates like Hillary Clinton or Al Gore lose elections they should have won because of in-fighting? It’s a beautiful, tempting fantasy. 

But that’s all it is: A fantasy.

Republicans don’t demobilize. They aren’t stupid just because they’re crazy. They know that they win by sticking together. They know that their differences matter less than their shared goal of maintaining power. No matter how baroque the conspiracy theories get or overt the fascist sentiment, Republicans aren’t going to see much attrition. Beating them will continue requiring mass mobilization on the left, as hard as that can be. The GOP is here to stay, and the sooner Democratic voters accept that, the more disciplined they’ll be at defeating them. 

Extremist with pipe bombs, 49 guns and “white privilege” card plotted to keep Trump in power: FBI

A California man accused of being a right-wing extremist faces dozens of federal and state charges after he was arrested with a cache of weapons and text messages appearing to threaten Democrats and social networks, according to the FBI.

Ian Rogers, 44, was arrested on weapons charges after local law enforcement and FBI agents found five pipe bombs, bombmaking materials, 49 firearms, and thousands of rounds of ammunition during a raid of his Napa County home and auto repair shop, according to an FBI affidavit filed on Tuesday. Some of the guns appear to have been modified, including one that was intended to look like a Nazi-era machine gun and appears to be “capable of firing fully automatic,” the complaint said. Investigators also found a Nazi flag, according to prosecutors.

Rogers admitted that he built the pipe bombs but claimed they were for “entertainment purposes only,” the FBI said. But investigators found messages suggesting he planned to “attack Democrats and places associated with Democrats in an effort to ensure Trump remained in office.”

“I want to blow up a democrat building bad,” he wrote in one text message on Jan. 10, days after the deadly Capitol riot, according to the affidavit. “The democrats need to pay,” he wrote in another, “let’s see what happens, if nothing does I’m going to war.”

“I hope 45 goes to war if he doesn’t I will,” he said in another message, according to the complaint.

Rogers also expressed his intent to attack Facebook and Twitter, which banned former President Donald Trump in the wake of the riot and are both based in Northern California.

“We can attack Twitter or the democrats, you pick,” he texted someone else, according to the FBI. The other person suggested they instead “go after” liberal billionaire George Soros, who has been a frequent target of right-wing and anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.

“We can attack Twitter and democrats easy right now burn they’re shit down,” Rogers replied, according to the affidavit. Targeting Soros, he said, would require a “road trip.”

The FBI affidavit alleged that Rogers was planning to “engage in acts of violence himself locally if there was not an organized ‘war’ to prevent Joe Biden from assuming the presidency.”

“I’m thinking sac office first target,” he wrote in a message that the FBI believes referred to the Sacramento office of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat. “Then maybe bird and face offices,” he added, allegedly referring to the offices of Twitter and Facebook.

“Sad it’s come to this but I’m not going down with a fight,” he wrote, according to the complaint. “These commies need to be told what’s up.”

Rogers’ car also had a sticker bearing the logo of the Three Percenters, which the FBI described as an “extreme anti-government, pro-gun” movement whose name refers to the historically incorrect belief that only 3% of American colonists fought against the British in the American Revolution. Several arrested members of the Capitol mob were also identified as Three Percenters. Members of the group were also linked to an alleged plot to kidnap and publicly execute Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

Investigators also found a plastic “white privilege card” that said it “Trumps everything,” in an apparent reference to the former president, the FBI said.

Rogers faces up to 10 years in prison for illegal possession charges. Napa County District Attorney Allison Haley told the Los Angeles Times he also faces 28 state felony charges “for possession of the explosives and weapons, including possession of an illegal silencer and multiple unregistered assault weapons.” Rogers is now being held on $5 million bond on the state charges.

A spokesperson for the Napa County Sheriff’s Office told the outlet that authorities began investigating Rogers after someone close to him reported that he had weapons and was “potentially dangerous to the community.” Rogers’ lawyer, Jess Raphael, told CNBC that a “disgruntled former employee” fired by Rogers sent a tip to investigators in September and again in October but “nothing was done about it until Jan. 15, after the Capitol riot.”

“Why they did nothing for months, I do not know,” Raphael told the outlet.

Raphael said that Rogers was “not a member of any militia or hate group, nor did he espouse extremist views” and insisted he was just a “strong adherent of President Trump and a gun collector,” though she acknowledged he attended a barbecue hosted by the Three Percenters.

She told The Washington Post that his text messages were a “bunch of hyperbole and pro-Trump histrionics that follow in line with, I guess, tens of millions of other people who supported Mr. Trump.”

The arrest comes after California and states across the country stepped up security around the State Capitol and Newsom’s home in response to potential threats following the U.S. Capitol attack, which led to Trump’s impeachment on one charge of inciting the riot.

“The information contained in the federal criminal complaint regarding Ian Rogers is an all too real reminder of the frightening consequences dangerous political rhetoric can have especially in emboldening violent extremism,” Sahar Robertson, a spokeswoman for Newsom, told the Los Angeles Times.

The Justice Department has charged at least 135 people in the Capitol riot but the FBI is still searching for the person who planted pipe bombs at the Washington headquarters of the Democratic National Committee and Republican National Committee on Jan. 6. Tens of thousands of National Guard troops were on hand for Biden’s inauguration and many remain stationed in the D.C. area in response to multiple potential threats.

The Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday issued a bulletin warning of a “heightened environment across the United States” that it believes will persist “in the weeks following the successful presidential inauguration.”

“Information suggests that some ideologically-motivated violent extremists with objections to the exercise of governmental authority and the presidential transition, as well as other perceived grievances fueled by false narratives, could continue to mobilize to incite or commit violence,” the bulletin said.

DHS also warned of potential threats from domestic violent extremists “motivated by a range of issues, including anger over COVID-19 restrictions, the 2020 election results, and police use of force” who may have been “emboldened” by the Capitol riot, though it did not name any specific groups.

“In my view, it is domestic terrorism mounted by right-wing extremists and neo-Nazi groups,” Michael Chertoff, who served as Homeland Security secretary under George W. Bush, told The New York Times. “We have to be candid and face what the real risk is.”

“Keep her away from children”: CNN host outraged QAnon congresswoman to serve on Education Committee

CNN’s Alisyn Camerota on Thursday begged Republicans in Congress to do something about QAnon-loving Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) after video emerged of her harassing teen school shooting survivors.

During a discussion about the House GOP’s new QAnon-believing lawmakers, Camerota referenced video showing Greene chasing after Parkland school shooting survivor David Hogg and accusing him of being a “coward” for ignoring her.

“This is a poisonous person,” she said. “Please, leader McCarthy, keep her away from children. please keep her away from children. And yet she’s been rewarded with a committee post to the House Education and Labor Committee? How? How can this be happening?”

CNN’s David Chalian slammed Republican leadership for trying to ignore the controversies surrounding Greene, as he said that many Republicans feared that GOP primary voters would oust them if they criticized her.

“There’s a moral bankruptcy going on right now inside the Republican Party that is — for anyone who has watched, observed, reported on the Republican Party for the last few days — it’s becoming unrecognizable,” he said. “There’s always been a fringe and now it’s just become the actual mainstream of the party.”

 

How California’s top hospital lobbyist is influencing the state’s COVID response

SACRAMENTO — As intensive care units filled and coronavirus cases surged over the holidays, Carmela Coyle invoked a World War II-era quote attributed to British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to rally her own troops: “If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

Coyle is head of the California Hospital Association, and her “troops” are the highly paid hospital executives she represents. Throughout the pandemic, as in the December memo in which she quoted Churchill, she has employed battlefield rhetoric to galvanize their massive political and financial clout.

That’s because Coyle believes hospitals are quite simply “in battle conditions” — a sentiment she has impressed upon the state’s top health care officials.

While Coyle, 60, is unknown to many Californians, she is a power player in the state Capitol, one whose profile and influence have grown in the past year. She has used her position as president and CEO of the association to lobby for the multibillion-dollar hospital industry, including asking officials to temporarily relax guidelines intended to safeguard patients and workers.

Along the way, she has been granted personal access to Gov. Gavin Newsom and other top officials, helping shape the state’s response to covid-19.

“Having spent many, many hours embedded with the Governor’s team in the state’s Office of Emergency Services, everyone is working 18-plus hours a day,” she wrote to hospital executives in March, “and the dedication to supporting what hospitals need to do their jobs is impressive.”

Though she hasn’t won every battle, Coyle has scored some big wins for the industry.

She successfully petitioned the Newsom administration to relax nurse-to-patient ratios and allow health care workers exposed to the coronavirus to continue to work — critical but contentious rule changes intended to keep hospitals staffed that were approved over union objections.

When hospitals started to fill with covid patients last summer, Newsom agreed with Coyle that hospitals could care for them while also performing moneymaking elective surgeries, which hospitals had voluntarily canceled in the spring.

Newsom invited her to a July press briefing to explain that logic to the public. At the briefing, he described Coyle as an “outstanding partner” and a leader with a “seriousness of purpose.”

“I just can’t thank her enough, more publicly than I have in the past, but I need to repeat it yet again,” Newsom said. “We’re all being put to the test, particularly our hospital system at this moment.”

That Coyle, a relative newcomer to Sacramento politics, is such an influential advocate in the Capitol comes partly with the job. She represents more than 400 hospitals that provide not just critical care, but also jobs to Californians in every corner of the state.

In the first three quarters of 2019, California’s hospitals earned about $101.7 billion in net patient revenue, according to financial data filed with the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. During the same time last year, they earned about $97.6 billion — representing a 4% decline — despite the loss of elective surgeries and a drop in emergency room visits early in pandemic.

The California Hospital Association is a health care heavyweight in Sacramento, along with the doctors’ lobby, the dialysis industry and others. It spent nearly $5.3 million on lobbying from Jan. 1, 2019, to Sept. 30, 2020, and $4.3 million to support state and local political campaigns, according to filings with the California secretary of state‘s office.

In 2019, the association paid Coyle $1.4 million, it said.

“The hospitals are such a big player that you have to be working with them,” especially during a public health outbreak, said David Panush, a Sacramento health care policy consultant who worked in state government for 35 years.

Coyle also has the ear of Mark Ghaly, secretary of the state Health and Human Services Agency. Ghaly and Coyle have corresponded often since March — sometimes multiple times a day — by phone and email about the state’s response to the pandemic, according to emails obtained by California Healthline.

For instance, in March, Coyle shared a letter with Ghaly that she had sent to hospital executives, in which she warned them — and by extension, him — that “we are in battle conditions, and it’s all hands on deck to turn the tide.”

In other letters and emails, Coyle pressed Ghaly to allow health care workers exposed to the virus to continue working as long as they didn’t show symptoms. Newsom later issued the rule in an executive order.

“Nurses are the heartbeat of the hospital,” said Stephanie Roberson, government relations director of the California Nurses Association — whose leaders, unlike Coyle, have not been invited into the governor’s state operations center since it was activated in March. “Instead, we have someone who basically represents the opposite of nursing interests standing alongside the governor discussing the importance of public health.”

In a recent statement, Ghaly said the pandemic has required the state to work not only with hospitals but also with doctors, nurses, public health departments, nursing homes, laboratories and emergency services agencies to save lives.

“I am grateful to Carmela and our hospital partners for their tremendous work, particularly during this current surge when hospitals are overwhelmed with patients and intensive care units are filled,” Ghaly said.

It took the administration six months to direct hospitals to test health care workers for covid at least once a week after requiring nursing homes to do so — a testament, critics say, to the hospital industry’s political and economic impact.

“The association exists to increase profits for hospitals, increase the bottom line,” said Sal Rosselli, president of the National Union of Healthcare Workers. The union lobbied for the mandatory testing rule, which took effect in December. “That’s why they oppose every patient care advocacy issue, every worker issue.”

Coyle countered that hospitals have no choice but to make trade-offs while they provide crisis care. She emphasized that the hospitals’ requests for exemptions are temporary.

“If we don’t flex some of these requirements, it means that people will not get the care they need and, worse, people may die,” she said at a news conference earlier this month.

Coyle, a Minnesota native, is known for her intelligence and the expertise she has honed working on health care policy for more than 30 years.

As head of the Maryland Hospital Association for nine years before she took the California job in 2017, Coyle built a reputation as a consensus builder even as she looked out for her constituency. For instance, she cultivated relationships with Maryland’s congressional delegation and lobbied it for federal funding in 2014 to help the state’s hospitals prepare for and treat Ebola patients, most of whom were American health care workers who had contracted the virus in Africa.

“She really understood the old maxim that there’s no such thing as permanent friends or permanent enemies. There are only permanent interests,” said Stan Dorn, a senior fellow at the advocacy group Families USA, who previously served on a Maryland commission on health care costs with Coyle. “She understood that it’s good to have good relationships with everybody because you never know, day after tomorrow, who is going to be important to your cause.”

Along with her credentials comes a strong streak of determination. After Coyle graduated from Minnesota’s Carleton College with degrees in economics and Spanish literature, she worked at a Washington, D.C., flower shop until the Congressional Budget Office offered her a two-year internship. She had called to check on her application every Friday for three months.

Coyle “was raised to know” such perseverance as she grew up in a working-class family, the daughter of a Colombian immigrant father.

“Kids teased me and called me names when I was a kid, my father being dark-skinned and having a heavy accent,” Coyle said. “I was dark-skinned as well, and they just thought we were so strange.”

Laughed at for the way her father spoke, Coyle today unabashedly harnesses the power of language to sway government officials and public opinion — and to marshal her own hospital forces to lobby “with one voice.”

#SB977 would give California’s AG unprecedented decision-making authority over your health care. Tell #CAleg to support access to quality health care. #NoOnSB977 pic.twitter.com/6ch0svvqeu

— California Hospital Association (@CalHospitals) August 31, 2020

In the waning days of last year’s legislative session, Coyle warned hospital executives of the battles before them in the Capitol: bills that would come with hefty costs to hospitals should they pass.

In the end, the industry succeeded in blocking a bill that would have made it harder for hospitals to consolidate. But they didn’t get legislative approval to delay seismic retrofits at hospitals, as they had wanted. Lawmakers also passed a bill opposed by hospitals that requires them to maintain a 45-day stockpile of personal protective equipment, which Coyle had argued was unreasonable given that it has been in short supply.

“They’re not all-powerful, but certainly they’re influential,” said state Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), who chairs the Senate Health Committee. “And during covid, they’re taking care of patients. They’re the ones saving the lives of people who are intubated.”

When Coyle readied her troops for the legislative fights, she acknowledged they weren’t going to win every battle. She borrowed another World War II quote, this time from Gen. Douglas MacArthur, to explain to hospital executives that they may need to compromise.

“In war, you win or lose, live or die,” she wrote. “And the difference is just an eyelash.”

California Healthline correspondent Angela Hart and KHN data editor Elizabeth Lucas contributed to this report.

Methodology

To compile total contributions from the California Hospital Association, California Healthline analyzed filings from two committees, both controlled by the association: the California Hospitals Committee on Issues and the California Hospital Association PAC.

To assess California hospitals’ net patient revenue, California Healthline analyzed quarterly financial data reported to the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. We summed the “total net patient revenue” for all hospitals that filed reports in each of the first three quarters of 2019 and 2020, and excluded any that reported only sporadically (representing less than 1% of revenue).

This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Donald Trump’s Big Lies: How millions of Americans were radicalized

Adolf Hitler used the “Big Lie” strategy to help kill democracy in his country. He had one Big Lie after another. Hitler used a Big Lie to explain away Germany’s defeat in World War I and it set the stage for his meteoric rise in power.  He blamed the Jews for Germany’s loss, which was patently untrue. He promulgated that lie over and over. And it led to the biggest, and deadliest, lie in history — that Jews had to be exterminated.

Donald Trump used multiple Big Lies during his presidency. It was his propaganda technique. He took a page right out of Hitler’s playbook — and it almost destroyed American democracy. The sad truth is that many Trump surrogates who remain within our government continue to stoke the remaining embers of the Big Lies. The goal of Trump’s lies was to establish him as a dictator devoid of laws, rules or norms. He wanted absolute power. He wanted to amass greed with impunity. He wanted to be as corrupt and criminal as he wished. 

Trump wanted to overturn our democratic way of life. He had no interest in public service. He had no desire to serve and protect the public. In fact, he wanted the public to serve him by acknowledging and accepting his absolute power.

Trump’s biggest lie was that the national election was rigged and stolen from him; a lie he telegraphed in 2016. This was totally false, and he knew it. Trump lost fair and square. It was the most open and transparent election in history. There were recounts and more than 60 adjudicated lawsuits. No legitimate claims of voter fraud were ever presented by Trump or his allies. But it was this Big Lie that Trump hoped to ride to overthrow our democracy in order to remain in power. His incitement of the insurrection at the Capitol was a direct outgrowth of this Big Lie.

Another Big Lie was that the coronavirus pandemic was a hoax — or was overblown or exaggerated or was totally contained. Trump minimized and denied its severity from the beginning. His federal response was weak and passive. Despite the deaths of nearly 400,000 Americans, Trump continued the Big Lie and did almost nothing. For months he didn’t even mention the pandemic or the thousands of deaths. Trump did not want the pandemic to ruin his re-election chances. All he cared about was maintaining power. He was cruel and callous about the mounting numbers of cases and deaths. His Big Lie successfully muzzled our nation’s experts on infectious disease and epidemiology

A third Big Lie was that the free press is the “enemy of the people” because it produces “fake news.” This lie was long-lasting yet completely false. Trump wanted no oversight and no accountability, and viewed the press as a threat to the continuation of his power. Let us be clear: The free press is protected by the Constitution and is a defining feature of our representative democracy. Trump’s Big Lie here was completely self-serving, disingenuous and false.

So Trump’s three Big Lies — individually and in combination — defined his presidency. His idea of governing was to use propaganda to solidify his grip on power. But more than that, his “Big Lies” reflected his anti-democratic and anti-American beliefs. Trump does not love democracy and does not love our country.

There were many Big Lies spread by Trump during his tenure. His claims that Robert Mueller’s investigation was a hoax was a Big Lie. His “perfect” call with the Ukrainian president was a Big Lie. His claim that he would save protections for pre-existing conditions in health care coverage was a Big Lie. In fact, it has been shown that Trump lied more than 30,000 times in four years.

It is undeniable that Trump’s plan was to ride his Big Lies into a dictatorship. He is an authoritarian at heart. He is a fascist in his thinking and in his impulses. 

Trump’s plan was to activate an anti-democratic movement in the country. The way he connected with millions of supporters was through his Big Lies. That was his hook to capture the attention and irrational passion of his supporters. He was the pied piper of Big Lies.

The Republican Party has been complicit with Donald Trump for four years and counting. They have supported his anti-democratic and anti-American Big Lies. Until and unless the party extricates itself from Trump, millions of Americans will continue to believe in their cult leader and his Big Lies.  

Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley and many others must change course and condemn Donald Trump. They must correct the Big Lies — and to this point there is no sign they will do so. If they don’t, they will take the Republican Party down a rabbit hole of darkness, doom and failure. 

Here is what should be verbalized by every single Republican: “I condemn Donald Trump. The election was not stolen. He completely botched the response to the pandemic. The free press is crucial to our democracy. The Republican Party needs new leadership to maintain our democracy.” Members of Congress who cannot make this statement openly and loudly should be expelled. Yes, this should be a litmus test for our democracy. Democracy cannot truly prevail until Trump and his Big Lies are renounced and defeated. His anti-democratic rhetoric, behavior and intentions cannot continue to circulate like a metastasizing cancer. Trump’s propaganda agenda is still alive. His Big Lies must be repudiated before any healing and unity are even possible. 

This is urgent and necessary. Our democratic experiment hangs in the balance.

38 countries have declared a “climate emergency.” Should the U.S. be next?

In April of 2019, thousands of protesters descended upon London. They blocked bridges, dragged a pink boat into one of the city’s central squares, and, at one point, some stripped nearly naked in the House of Commons. Their goal? Get the United Kingdom to become the first country in the world to declare a “climate emergency.”

After 10 days of protests, Britain’s Parliament did a surprising thing: Its members approved a proposal to declare a state of emergency in response to the rapidly overheating planet. And while the U.K. was the first country to do so, it wasn’t the last. Today, at least 38 countries around the world — including the whole of the European UnionJapan, and New Zealand — and thousands of towns, cities, and counties have issued some kind of resolution declaring climate change a crisis. According to an estimate from the Climate Mobilization, a U.S.-based advocacy group, 950 million people, or 12 percent of the world’s population, currently live under a “climate emergency.”

A week into his term, President Joe Biden is already under pressure to do the same. Although the new president has frequently spoken about the “climate emergency” — and referred to it that way on the White House priorities list — he has stopped short of issuing a formal declaration. And that’s not enough for many climate advocates. In December, more than 380 environmental groups sent a letter to Biden’s transition team, urging him to issue an executive order invoking the National Emergencies Act. That same month, António Guterres, the secretary-general of the United Nations, encouraged every country in the world to adopt emergency resolutions until carbon dioxide is no longer building up in the atmosphere.

Proponents argue that calling climate change an “emergency” could pressure governments to take sweeping and immediate action on global warming. Treating the crisis like a war or a pandemic, the thinking goes, would focus governments on a single objective — and, in the U.S., could even unlock new presidential powers and billions of dollars in funding. But even after dozens of national declarations, there’s limited consensus on what the term means, or whether it actually leads to cutting CO2 emissions. “It can be quite useful to have people declare emergencies,” said Tom Burke, the co-founder of E3G, a European climate change think tank. “The downside is it also allows people to declare an emergency and then not do anything.”

* * *

The concept of a “climate emergency” is part of a broader trend in activism, one that attempts to accelerate the normally sluggish timeline of action. It’s what drives Greta Thunberg, the teenage Swedish climate activist, to tell the world’s economists that “our house is on fire,” or pushes Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from New York to say that if humanity doesn’t address climate change by 2030, “the world is going to end.” Some environmentalists have watched the governments of the world stand around and do nothing for decades — and they’ve run out of patience.

“There’s this ongoing conversation within the climate community about how fast we need to move,” said Laura Berry, the research and policy director at the Climate Mobilization. “We see it as a way to shift how people conceptualize the climate crisis to an actual immediate emergency situation — something akin to a wildfire or an earthquake.”

The Climate Mobilization has been helping to organize an activist movement in the U.S. to push cities to declare climate emergencies of their own. To date, more than 100 cities and counties have done so, including San Francisco, New York City, and Boston. Berry says that the goal is to get local governments and members of the public committed to the idea that they can’t wait until 2050, or even 2030: Action needs to happen now.

For cities, declaring an emergency can be a gateway to addressing the climate problem; sometimes local governments pair the declaration with a promise to go carbon-neutral or to create special, global-warming focused task forces. But cities don’t have the technology or the money to decarbonize alone, and at the national level, the benefits of declaring an emergency are murkier.

Of the dozens of countries worldwide that have declared an emergency, only eight are on track to meet their commitments under the Paris Agreement. Sometimes, the cognitive dissonance between emergency rhetoric and actual policy is dizzying. In June of 2019, the day after Canada’s parliament declared a national climate emergency, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau approved an expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline that would triple the amount of crude oil transported from the Alberta tar sands to the West Coast and shipped around the world.

“There’s a potential for abuse” of the term, said Burke. “Both greenwashing abuse and political abuse.”

In the United States, however, declaring an emergency could be more than empty words. Unlike in most other countries — where emergencies have been invoked through largely symbolic parliamentary resolutions — U.S. law gives the president extra powers to use in a crisis. Under the National Emergencies Act, the president can simply proclaim an emergency and then tap into a suite of more than 100 additional powers. Such declarations aren’t uncommon, either: According to one count, presidents have declared 60 national emergencies since 1976. President Donald Trump famously used the act twice: once in an ill-fated attempt to get money to build a wall along the Mexican border in 2019, and again at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic

“The specific powers are scattered through all these different laws,” said Dan Farber, a professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley. For climate change, “many of them are pretty irrelevant,” he said. “But there are some that could potentially be useful.”

If Biden declared an emergency, he could theoretically redirect billions of dollars from the Pentagon toward construction of renewable energy (much as Trump tried to shift $3.6 billion from military construction projects to the border wall), impose sanctions against countries that overuse fossil fuels, like Russia or Saudi Arabia, or reinstitute a ban on U.S. exports of crude oil. He could also use the Stafford Act to send emergency aid packages to states, tribes, and local governments pummeled by climate-related weather events. But without the cooperation of Congress, which still sets the federal government’s budget, these actions would also come with significant limits — and maybe a backlash from the House and Senate. “The disadvantage would be that it could make it harder to do other things, by getting members of Congress riled up,” Farber said. And, he added, even these executive powers don’t add up giant action on climate change. “You’re not going to be able to say, ‘Oh, it’s a national emergency, we’re doing the Green New Deal,'”

Some also worry that emergency declarations could give governments a way to sidestep democracy. “They’re dangerous in a world where democratic norms are under challenge,” said Burke. Trump’s move to redirect funding toward his border wall was viewed as such a breach of normal politics that it resulted in open rebellionamong fellow Republicans — and any truly significant use of emergency powers to fight climate change might fall into the same trap. Burke is concerned that, in the hands of the wrong government, the emergency framing could be used not to boost renewable energy or cut emissions, but to block immigrants fleeing climate-induced droughts and floods.

At the moment, however, many climate emergency declarations have a surprisingly democratic flavor. After the United Kingdom made its emergency announcement, the government also announced the creation of a “citizens’ assembly” on climate change, inviting over 100 people to advise the government on its response. The city of Oxford, England, has done the same.

Berry points out that just pushing local governments to make emergency declarations can get people engaged who wouldn’t otherwise have a foothold in politics. “Local governments tend to be the most accessible form of government,” she said. An older woman living in a small town in Maine, for instance, might not be able to push the president or Congress to pass laws limiting greenhouse gas emissions, but she could show up at a city council meeting and urge the members to declare a climate emergency, face-to-face.

Most calls for an emergency aren’t intended to create lasting policy; instead, they’re a way of building momentum for larger action. And even if they seem purely symbolic in the short term, activists can use them as ammunition in the long term. After Canada’s pipeline controversy, organizers fought back, using the Trudeau government’s own emergency declaration against it. (The pipeline, for now, is still under construction.) “What you have is a situation where activists are actually able to leverage those public statements made by political officials,” Berry said.

Burke, who is generally skeptical of declaring climate change an ’emergency’, says that there is no doubt that the term has reshaped the conversation around climate change. “Declaring emergencies as a piece of symbolism has been quite important,” he said. “And anybody who doesn’t understand the importance of symbols in politics hasn’t been paying attention to Mr. Trump.”

Mark Meadows performed life-changing favors for Madison Cawthorn, then turned on him. Why?

Last November, North Carolina Republican Madison Cawthorn became the youngest person elected to Congress in modern history, at age 24. He was homeschooled through high school, and does not hold a college degree. According to his own claims in a sworn deposition, his work experience as recently as two years before his congressional run was limited to a job at Chick-fil-A, along with a part-time gig in a district office of former Rep. Mark Meadows. He later supplemented that by creating a real estate entity that shares its name with a slogan often embraced by white nationalists.

Cawthorn claims the slogan is simply “a term for Rome.”

Yet in the 2020 Republican primary for the seat that Meadows vacated when he resigned from Congress to become Donald Trump’s White House chief of staff, Cawthorn beat out Meadows’ handpicked successor, as well as a former top aide and old political hand. But perhaps even stranger, in a sense Cawthorn had to beat Meadows himself: The onetime leader of the House Freedom Caucus veteran went so far as to throw campaign funds and taxpayer resources — perhaps unlawfully — into an effort to defeat the young man who, by all appearances, just a couple of years prior had been his protégé.

Cawthorn’s relationship with Mark Meadows and the Meadows family has shaped some of the most formative moments of the young conservative’s life, including the 2014 car accident that left him partially paralyzed and in a wheelchair. Indeed, in the four years between 2013 and 2017, Meadows recommended Cawthorn for the U.S. Naval Academy; had his son, Blake Meadows, find a Florida attorney to handle Cawthorn’s insurance case; hired Cawthorn in his congressional office; and apparently played a role in helping Cawthorn gain admission to Patrick Henry College, which he attended for just one semester, before dropping out with a self-reported D average.

The earliest clear connection between the two men emerged when Meadows nominated Cawthorn for admission to the Naval Academy in December 2013, five months the nearly fatal car accident in April 2014, which occurred as Cawthorn and his best friend were headed home from a spring break trip to Florida. Cawthorn has sometimes implied that his plans to attend the Naval Academy where derailed by his serious injuries. In fact as AVL Watchdog has revealed, Cawthorn has testified that the academy had already denied him admission on academic grounds before the April accident. 

(According to sworn depositions, Cawthorn’s friend fell asleep at the wheel, at around 5 p.m., about an hour into the first leg of their drive across Florida. The friend was unhurt, but Cawthorn, who allegedly fell asleep with his feet on the dash, was nearly killed.)

The crash precipitated a convoluted series of lawsuits that are still dragging out in court to this day: At one point, Cawthorn tried to sue his best friend for $30 million. According to court records, shortly after the crash Roger Cawthorn, Madison’s father — who works as a financial adviser at Edward Jones, where Meadows and his wife have several investment accounts — had a heated conversation with an insurance adjuster that for unclear reasons left him uncertain about a promised $3 million settlement. The next day, the Cawthorns tapped the Meadows family to bring in extra legal firepower.

Under questioning in a 2017 court deposition, Madison Cawthorn claimed that after that contentious call, his mother told Mark Meadows’ wife Debbie the details, in hopes that the Meadows family could help them find  a lawyer. Mark’s son, Blake Meadows, a law school student at the time, contacted Florida attorney and leading Meadows donor Dean Colson on the Cawthorns’ behalf, giving him a rundown of the injuries, the parties involved and the potential jurisdictional issues. Colson accepted and a firm partner took over Madison’s case.

Several months after that, Mark Meadows offered Cawthorn a job in his district office. Cawthorn described the moment to The North State Journal, saying that at a Meadows victory party, the congressman got on his knees, at Cawthorn’s eye level, and asked him to come work for him. Cawthorn told the publication that the job pulled him out of a dark place and convinced him, “I can still do this.”

At the time, Meadows’ office was facing personnel problems: His chief of staff, Kenny West, had been accused the month before of sexual harassment by multiple women. An internal investigation upheld the allegations in November, the same month Meadows offered Cawthorn the job. Meadows kept West on the team through the following spring, and paid him through August, a lapse in judgment for which Meadows was ultimately cited and fined $40,000 by the House Ethics Committee. The Tea Party conservative later told Congress that he had gone “back and forth, maybe longer than I should have” about cutting West loose, “wrestling with what was fair and what was not.”

Cawthorn joined Meadows’ staff in January 2015. In the meantime, he had rejected an initial settlement offer of $3 million in the injury case, in favor of a more aggressive suit that also involved his friend, the driver at the time of the crash. Meadows kept Cawthorn on the payroll part-time for the next full year, then paid him negligible sums through August 2016. During his 2020 campaign, Cawthorn falsely claimed that this was a full-time job that had lasted for two years. Wayne King, who served as Meadows’ deputy chief of staff at the time, did not reply to Salon’s request for comment. (After what a source close to Meadows and King described as a falling-out, King himself ran unsuccessfully against Cawthorn in the jam-packed 2020 GOP primary. After this article ran, King told Salon that he and Meadows have a strong relationship.)

It’s unclear what specific work Cawthorn did for Meadows, and unclear whether in that time he ever discussed Kenny West’s behavior with Meadows or with other staffers.

One senior aide at the time, Alyssa Farah, had run communications for Meadows and the House Freedom Caucus, and went on to serve in the Pentagon and later with Meadows in the White House. Farah had studied journalism at Patrick Henry College, a small, nondenominational Christian private school in Purcellville, Virginia. She graduated in 2011, overlapping with Blake Meadows, the congressman’s son. In 2018, Mark Meadows himself gave the commencement address at the college.

In the fall of 2016, Cawthorn himself matriculated at Patrick Henry College. He paid his own way and bought a house in the area for cash, but dropped out after just one semester, saying his failure was caused by “heartbreak.” He also said that cognitive impairment from his brain injury made academic life difficult, and that his grades were poor.

Last October, weeks before the general election, more than 150 of Cawthorn’s former fellow students at Patrick Henry — roughly half the school’s total student body — wrote a letter alleging that his during his brief stint there he had engaged in “sexually predatory behavior,” lied habitually and committed vandalism.

“Cawthorn’s time at PHC was marked by gross misconduct toward our female peers, public misrepresentation of his past, disorderly conduct that was against the school’s honor code, and self-admitted academic failings,” the letter said. His former classmates described him as a “sexual predator” who often asked women to go for “joy rides” in his Dodge Challenger, during which he would drive them “to secluded areas, lock the doors, and proceed to make unwanted sexual advances.”

“It is a pattern of predatory behavior,” one of the authors told Blue Ridge Public Radio. “People say that he’s in a wheelchair and ask, how could this be? But when you’re in his car with him and he locks the door, there’s no escape.”

Coming off his “heartbreaking” experience at Patrick Henry, Cawthorn filed another lawsuit against the auto insurance company, Auto-Owners, claiming they had acted in “bad faith” and demanding $30 million, in addition to the $3 million he had already been paid. The next year he put some of his money toward a European vacation that included a trip to Adolf Hitler’s vacation home, a spot that Cawthorn had said was on his “bucket list,” referring to Hitler as “the fuhrer.”

Somewhere around that point, Meadows’ and Cawthorn’s paths seemed to diverge, and Meadows apparently fell into increasing financial distress. When they converged again, in late 2019, it was with a vengeance: Meadows announced his surprise retirement from Congress in December and threw his political clout behind Lynda Bennett, a close friend of his wife’s, as his successor. In fact, Meadows’ brother had already registered the domain for her campaign two months prior. His eleventh-hour retirement announcement, coming just before campaign filings were due, forced Republican hopefuls to scramble and gave rise to accusations that Meadows had sandbagged the field to favor his surrogate — but Cawthorn and former top aide Wayne King both managed to get in under the wire. Over the next several months, as Salon first reported, Meadows acted as a silent booster for Bennett against his old friends.

In a cryptic Facebook post from February 2020, Cawthorn shared a photo of Blake Meadows, Mark’s son, allegedly speaking at a Cawthorn campaign event.

“So thankful for one of my closest friends, Blake Meadows, coming all the way out to the Ag Center to help with the campaign,” Cawthorn wrote. “Your prayer was awesome, brother, thank you!”

Cawthorn easily beat Bennett and King, despite Meadows’ increasingly desperate and apparently unlawful support for Bennett — including an endorsement from former President Trump — then won a comfortable victory in the deep red district in November.

It’s unclear what relationship the two men may have today. Salon’s requests for comment to Cawthorn and Mark Meadows did not receive responses. Debbie Meadows appeared to return Salon’s call using a blocked number, but declined to answer questions. 

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article reported that Roger Cawthorn, the father of Rep. Madison Cawthorn, was a financial adviser to Mark Meadows’ family. Although Roger Cawthorn works at Edward Jones, the investment firm where the Meadows family holds investment accounts, additional reporting has clarified that he does not serve as their adviser. The story has been updated. 

Blind spot: The eye doctor, the U.S. senator and one of Trump’s last-minute intercessions

As in any household where an abusive patriarch intoxicated by his power has exited the scene after beating up his family, we are all breathing a collective sigh of relief.

The civil servants, mostly people of color, have cleaned up the excrement and graffiti in the marble hallways of the Capitol — built by their slave ancestors — that was left behind by Trump’s army of neo-Confederates, who killed a police officer in the name of their uncivil war.

It’s tempting to focus on the reassuring avuncular presence of President Joe Biden, who is working overtime to restore that sense of basic decency that’s been lacking for so long.

Like the family that’s returned from vacation to find a ransacked home, we have yet to compose an accurate inventory of what was stolen. Are the crooks still in the basement? Are the pets still alive? Is great-grandma’s wedding ring where Mom left it?

We were so distracted by the violent frontal assault on our Capitol by Trump’s minions that we have failed to properly account for his “out the door” crime wave, committed in the final hours of his presidency with his pardons of 70 people and commutations of prison sentences for another 73.

Trump and his posse have fled for the swamps of Florida, but we need to put the bloodhounds on the scent given off by the stench of so many of these pardons. We need the names of the facilitating law firms and lawyers, cross-referenced with their corporate clients, so there can be a proper accounting.

No doubt, some on the list were meritorious, cases of righting true miscarriages of justice through executive action. But as we might expect, health care fraudsters with New Jersey connections made Trump’s rogue’s-gallery roll call. When our elected politicians wonder aloud how to account for our stark race-based health and wealth inequalities revealed by COVID-19, they should read some of these people’s rap sheets to get a clue.

One of those who benefited from a Trump commutation was Dr. Salomon Melgen, a Florida ophthalmologist, who was a major campaign donor to Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and got a 17-year federal sentence for his conviction in a $73 million Medicare fraud case. Now, thanks to support from Menendez and dozens of others, he gets 13 years shaved off his sentence.

In 2015, Menendez was indicted on federal corruption charges. The Justice Department alleged that between 2006 and 2013, he had taken close to $1 million worth of “lavish gifts and campaign contributions from Melgen in exchange for using the power of his Senate office to influence the outcome of ongoing contractual and Medicare billing disputes worth tens of millions of dollars to Melgen and to support the visa applications of several of Melgen’s girlfriends.”

In 2017, a hung jury resulted in a mistrial and prosecutors opted to not retry the case. Menendez pitched that as a kind of exoneration and cast himself as a victim.

“I want to thank the jury, 12 New Jerseyans who saw through the government’s false claims and used their Jersey common sense to reject it,” Menendez told reporters, Politico reported.

“The way this case started was wrong, the way it was investigated was wrong, the way it was prosecuted was wrong, and the way it was tried was wrong as well,” he said. “Certain elements of the FBI and of our state cannot understand or, even worse, accept that the Latino kid from Union City and Hudson County can grow up and be a U.S. senator and be honest.”

Throughout his Melgen tribulations the leadership of New Jersey’s Democratic establishment rallied around Menendez with the same partisan blindness displayed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy toward Donald Trump.

Yet what the jury could not see, his Senate colleagues did. In April of 2018, Menendez was “severely admonished” by the bipartisan U.S. Senate Select Committee on Ethics for, over a six-year period, taking and not disclosing “gifts of significant value from Dr. Melgen” while at the same time using his position “as a member of the Senate to advance Dr. Melgen’s personal and business interests.”

Lost in all this was Melgen’s offenses, which were awful. These were not white-collar victimless violations. There was real flesh and blood to these crimes.

All too often when we see a headline like “$73 million Medicare fraud,” our jaundiced eyes glaze over. Here in the Soprano state, that could be a couple of municipal bond offerings or the proceeds from a few Big Pharma insider stock tips.

But Melgen, one of the nation’s most prolific Medicare billers in his day, was so much more industrious and disciplined in his efforts that they merit closer examination and appreciation.

Melgen specialized in treating macular degeneration, the major cause of vision loss for people 50 or over. According to Judge Kenneth Marra, who presided over Melgen’s sentencing, his practice “was conducted in a manner where he routinely, and as a matter of standard practice, diagnosed patients with medical conditions they did not have in order to allow him to bill for diagnostic procedures and medical services that were not medically necessary or justified.”

Judge Marra continued. “Specifically, the Court finds that Defendant routinely falsely diagnosed patients with either wet or dry Age-Related Macular Degeneration. This mis-diagnosis allowed Defendant routinely and as a matter of standard practice to subject his patients to medically unjustified procedures and treatment, and then fraudulently bill for those procedures.”

All totaled, the Miami Herald reported prosecutors proved that “about 77 percent of Melgen’s wet macular degeneration and 61.8 percent of his dry macular degeneration diagnoses were unsupported by medical records.”

But that wasn’t all.

Melgen was also tagged by federal regulators for using single vials of Lucentis, a drug that is injected in the eye to slow the loss of eyesight related to diabetes, to treat three patients, although an individual vial is prescribed to be used only a single patient. Not only did this scam net Melgen a huge windfall but, according to the Centers for Disease Control drug guidelines, put his own patients at risk of infection.

 The Palm Beach Post quoted Dr. Robert Bergen, a retired New Jersey retinal specialist who reviewed for prosecutors the charts of more than 300 of Melgen’s patients. He said that Melgen was notorious in the world of specialty eye medicine. “Everybody knew about this guy,” Bergen told the paper after he testified that Melgen’s treatment of his patients was “totally disgraceful.”

“It’s the most egregious example of totally taking advantage of patients, not caring about diagnosing them properly, it was the antithesis of what a decent physician should do,” said Bergen.

As federal health regulators were zeroing in on Melgen, Menendez appealed for intervention with his Senate colleagues and the Secretary of Health and Human Services for a reinterpretation of the regulations under which the government was pursuing Melgen.

It was Palm Beach Post columnist Frank Cerabino who seemed to see the scale of the miscarriage of justice here most clearly. “It wasn’t just the tens of millions of dollars that Melgen had bilked from taxpayers,” wrote Cerabino. “That was bad enough. But not the heart of it.”

He continued: “There was an element of unnecessary physical pain for those unsuspecting patients who had to endure Melgen’s self-enriching, medically dubious eye treatments, which included eye injections and retinal laser blasts.”

Cerabino went on to point out that Melgen’s treatments were described at trial by expert witnesses as “elder abuse,” “unconscionable” and “horrifying.”

“That’s the guy who needs to be set free?” he asked rhetorically. “The guy who found a way to get rich by mistreating old people’s eyes?”

Evidently the suffering of Melgen’s army of unsuspecting elderly patients was of no consequence for Menendez, who according to his statement after Trump commuted Melgen’s sentence was still willing to use his influence on a major donor’s behalf.

“Months ago, I was asked if I could offer insight about an old friend, and I did, along with what I understand were more than 100 individuals and organizations, including his former patients and local Hispanic groups familiar with Sal’s leadership and philanthropy in the South Florida community,” Menendez said in a statement.

The blind spot endures.

The rubble of empire

How can you tell when your empire is crumbling? Some signs are actually visible from my own front window here in San Francisco.

Directly across the street, I can see a collection of tarps and poles (along with one of my own garbage cans) that were used to construct a makeshift home on the sidewalk. Beside that edifice stands a wooden cross decorated with a string of white Christmas lights and a red ribbon — a memorial to the woman who built that structure and died inside it earlier this week. We don’t know — and probably never will — what killed her: the pandemic raging across California? A heart attack? An overdose of heroin or fentanyl?

Behind her home and similar ones is a chain-link fence surrounding the empty playground of the Horace Mann/Buena Vista elementary and middle school. Like that home, the school, too, is now empty, closed because of the pandemic. I don’t know where the families of the 20 children who attended that school and lived in one of its gyms as an alternative to the streets have gone. They used to eat breakfast and dinner there every day, served on the same sidewalk by a pair of older Latina women who apparently had a contract from the school district to cook for the families using that school-cum-shelter. I don’t know, either, what any of them are now doing for money or food.

Just down the block, I can see the line of people that has formed every weekday since early December. Masked and socially distanced, they wait patiently to cross the street, one at a time, for a Covid test at a center run by the San Francisco Department of Health. My little street seems an odd choice for such a service, since — especially now that the school has closed — it gets little foot traffic. Indeed, a representative of the Latino Task Force, an organization created to inform the city’s Latinx population about Covid resources told our neighborhood paper Mission Local that

“Small public health clinics such as this one ‘will say they want to do more outreach, but I actually think they don’t want to.’ He believes they chose a low-trafficked street like Bartlett to stay under the radar. ‘They don’t want to blow the spot up, because it does not have a large capacity.'”

What do any of these very local sights have to do with a crumbling empire? They’re signs that some of the same factors that fractured the Roman empire back in 476 CE (and others since) are distinctly present in this country today — even in California, one of its richest states. I’m talking about phenomena like gross economic inequality; over-spending on military expansion; political corruption; deep cultural and political fissures; and, oh yes, the barbarians at the gates. I’ll turn to those factors in a moment, but first let me offer a brief defense of the very suggestion that U.S. imperialism and an American empire actually exist.

Imperialism? What’s That Supposed to Mean?

What better source for a definition of imperialism than the Encyclopedia Britannica, that compendium of knowledge first printed in 1768 in the country that became the great empire of the nineteenth and first part of the twentieth centuries? According to the Encyclopedia, “imperialism” denotes “state policy, practice, or advocacy of extending power and dominion, especially by direct territorial acquisition or by gaining political and economic control of other areas.” Furthermore, imperialism “always involves the use of power, whether military or economic or some subtler form.” In other words, the word indicates a country’s attempts to control and reap economic benefit from lands outside its borders.

In that context, “imperialism” is an accurate description of the trajectory of U.S. history, starting with the country’s expansion across North America, stealing territory and resources from Indian nations and decimating their populations. The newly independent United States would quickly expand, beginning with the 1803 Louisiana Purchase from France. That deal, which effectively doubled its territory, included most of what would become the state of Louisiana, together with some or all of the present-day states of New Mexico, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming, Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana, and even small parts of what are today the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Of course, France didn’t actually control most of that land, apart from the port city of New Orleans and its immediate environs. What Washington bought was the “right” to take the rest of that vast area from the native peoples who lived there, whether by treaty, population transfers, or wars of conquest and extermination. The first objective of that deal was to settle land on which to expand the already hugely lucrative cotton business, that economic engine of early American history fueled, of course, by slave labor. It then supplied raw materials to the rapidly industrializing textile industry of England, which drove that country’s own imperial expansion.

U.S. territorial expansion continued as, in 1819, Florida was acquired from Spain and, in 1845, Texas was forcibly annexed from Mexico (as well as various parts of California a year later). All of those acquisitions accorded with what newspaper editor John O’Sullivan would soon call the country’s manifest — that is, clear and obvious — destiny to control the entire continent.

Eventually, such expansionism escaped even those continental borders, as the country went on to gobble up the Philippines, Hawaii, the Panama Canal Zone, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and the Mariana Islands, the last five of which remain U.S. territories to this day. (Inhabitants of the nation’s capital, where I grew up, were only partly right when we used to refer to Washington, D.C., as “the last colony.”)

American Doctrines from Monroe to Truman to (G.W.) Bush

U.S. economic, military, and political influence has long extended far beyond those internationally recognized possessions and various presidents have enunciated a series of “doctrines” to legitimate such an imperial reach.

Monroe: The first of these was the Monroe Doctrine, introduced in 1823 in President James Monroe’s penultimate State of the Union address. He warned the nations of Europe that, while the United States recognized existing colonial possessions in the Americas, it would not permit the establishment of any new ones.

President Teddy Roosevelt would later add a corollary to Monroe’s doctrine by establishing Washington’s right to intercede in any country in the Americas that, in the view of its leaders, was not being properly run. “Chronic wrongdoing,” he said in a 1904 message to Congress, “may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation.” The United States, he suggested, might find itself forced, “however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international police power.” In the first quarter of the twentieth century, that Roosevelt Corollary would be used to justify U.S. occupations of Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Nicaragua.

Truman: Teddy’s cousin, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, publicly renounced the Monroe Doctrine and promised a hands-off attitude towards Latin America, which came to be known as the Good Neighbor Policy. It didn’t last long, however. In a 1947 address to Congress, the next president, Harry S. Truman, laid out what came to be known as the Truman Doctrine, which would underlie the country’s foreign policy at least until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. It held that U.S. national security interests required the “containment” of existing Communist states and the prevention of the further spread of Communism anywhere on Earth.

It almost immediately led to interventions in the internal struggles of Greece and Turkey and would eventually underpin Washington’s support for dictators and repressive regimes from El Salvador to Indonesia. It would justify U.S.-backed coups in places like Iran, Guatemala, and Chile. It would lead this country into a futile war in Korea and a disastrous defeat in Vietnam.

That post-World War II turn to anticommunism would be accompanied by a new kind of colonialism. Rather than directly annexing territories to extract cheap labor and cheaper natural resources, under this new “neocolonial” model, the United States — and soon the great multilateral institutions of the post-war era, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund — would gain control over the economies of poor nations. In return for aid — or loans often pocketed by local elites and repaid by the poor — those nations would accede to demands for the “structural adjustment” of their economic systems: the privatization of public services like water and utilities and the defunding of human services like health and education, usually by American or multinational corporations. Such “adjustments,” in turn, allowed the recipients to service the loans, extracting scarce hard currency from already deeply impoverished nations.

Bush: You might have thought that the fall of the Soviet empire and the end of the Cold War would have provided Washington with an opportunity to step away from resource extraction and the seemingly endless military and CIA interventions that accompanied it.  You might have imagined that the country then being referred to as the “last superpower” would finally consider establishing new and different relationships with the other countries on this little planet of ours. However, just in time to prevent even the faint possibility of any such conversion came the terrorist attacks of 9/11, which gave President George W. Bush the chance to promote his very own doctrine.

In a break from postwar multilateralism, the Bush Doctrine outlined the neoconservative belief that, as the only superpower in a now supposedly “unipolar” world, the United States had the right to take unilateral military action any time it believed it faced external threat of any imaginable sort. The result: almost 20 years of disastrous “forever wars” and a military-industrial complex deeply embedded in our national economy.  Although Donald Trump’s foreign policy occasionally feinted in the direction of isolationism in its rejection of international treaties, protocols, and organizational responsibilities, it still proved itself a direct descendant of the Bush Doctrine. After all, it was Bush who first took the United States out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and rejected the Kyoto Protocol to fight climate change.

His doctrine instantly set the stage for the disastrous invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, the even more disastrous Iraq War, and the present-day over-expansion of the U.S. military presence, overt and covert, in practically every corner of the world. And now, to fulfill Donald Trump’s Star Trek fantasies, even in outer space.

An Empire in Decay

If you need proof that the last superpower, our very own empire, is indeed crumbling, consider the year we’ve just lived through, not to mention the first few weeks of 2021. I mentioned above some of the factors that contributed to the collapse of the famed Roman empire in the fifth century. It’s fair to say that some of those same things are now evident in twenty-first-century America. Here are four obvious candidates:

Grotesque Economic Inequality: Ever since President Ronald Reagan began the Republican Party’s long war on unions and working people, economic inequality has steadily increased in this country, punctuated by terrible shocks like the Great Recession of 2007-2008 and, of course, by the Covid-19 disaster. We’ve seen 40 years of tax reductions for the wealthy, stagnant wages for the rest of us (including a federal minimum wage that hasn’t changed since 2009), and attacks on programs like TANF(welfare) and SNAP (food stamps) that literally keep poor people alive.

The Romans relied on slave labor for basics like food and clothing. This country relies on super-exploited farm and food-factory workers, many of whom are unlikely to demand more or better because they came here without authorization. Our (extraordinarily cheap) clothes are mostly produced by exploited people in other countries.

The pandemic has only exposed what so many people already knew: that the lives of the millions of working poor in this country are growing ever more precarious and desperate. The gulf between rich and poor widens by the day to unprecedented levels. Indeed, as millions have descended into poverty since the pandemic began, the Guardian reports that this country’s 651 billionaires have increased their collective wealth by $1.1 trillion. That’s more than the $900 billion Congress appropriated for pandemic aid in the omnibus spending bill it passed at the end of December 2020.

An economy like ours, which depends so heavily on consumer spending, cannot survive the deep impoverishment of so many people. Those 651 billionaires are not going to buy enough toys to dig us out of this hole.

Wild Overspending on the Military: At the end of 2020, Congress overrode Trump’s veto of the annual National Defense Authorization Act, which provided a stunning $741 billion to the military this fiscal year. (That veto, by the way, wasn’t in response to the vast sums being appropriated in the midst of a devastating pandemic, but to the bill’s provisions for renaming military bases currently honoring Confederate generals, among other extraneous things.) A week later, Congress passed that omnibus pandemic spending bill and it contained an additional $696 billion for the Defense Department.

All that money for “security” might be justified, if it actually made our lives more secure. In fact, our federal priorities virtually take food out of the mouths of children to feed the maw of the military-industrial complex and the never-ending wars that go with it. Even before the pandemic, more than 10% of U.S. families regularly experienced food insecurity. Now, it’s a quarter of the population.

Corruption So Deep It Undermines the Political System: Suffice it to say that the man who came to Washington promising to “drain the swamp” has presided over one of the most corrupt administrations in U.S. history. Whether it’s been blatant self-dealing (like funneling government money to his own businesses); employing government resources to forward his reelection (including using the White House as a staging ground for parts of the Republican National Convention and his acceptance speech); tolerating corrupt subordinates like Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross; or contemplating a self-pardon, the Trump administration has set the bar high indeed for any future aspirants to the title of “most corrupt president.”

One problem with such corruption is that it undermines the legitimacy of government in the minds of the governed. It makes citizens less willing to obey laws, pay taxes, or act for the common good by, for example, wearing masks and socially distancing during a pandemic. It rips apart social cohesion from top to bottom.

Of course, Trump’s most dangerous corrupt behavior — one in which he’s been joined by the most prominent elected and appointed members of his government and much of his party — has been his campaign to reject the results of the 2020 general election. The concerted and cynical promotion of the big lie that the Democrats stole that election has so corrupted faith in the legitimacy of government that up to 68% of Republicans now believe the vote was rigged to elect Joe Biden. At “best,” Trump has set the stage for increased Republican suppression of the vote in communities of color. At worst, he has so poisoned the electoral process that a substantial minority of Americans will never again accept as free and fair an election in which their candidate loses.

A Country in Ever-Deepening Conflict: White supremacy has infected the entire history of this country, beginning with the near-extermination of its native peoples. The Constitution, while guaranteeing many rights to white men, proceeded to codify the enslavement of Africans and their descendants. In order to maintain that enslavement, the southern states seceded and fought a civil war. After a short-lived period of Reconstruction in which Black men were briefly enfranchised, white supremacy regained direct legal control in the South, and flourished in a de factofashion in the rest of the country.

In 1858, two years before that civil war began, Abraham Lincoln addressed the Illinois Republican State Convention, reminding those present that

“‘A house divided against itself cannot stand.’ I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved — I do not expect the house to fall – but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or all the other.”

More than 160 years later, the United States clearly not only remains but has become ever more divided. If you doubt that the Civil War is still being fought today, look no farther than the Confederate battle flags proudly displayed by members of the insurrectionary mob that overran the Capitol on January 6th.

Oh, and the barbarians? They are not just at the gate; they have literally breached it, as we saw in Washington when they burst through the doors and windows of the center of government.

Building a Country From the Rubble of Empire

Human beings have long built new habitations quite literally from the rubble — the fallen stones and timbers — of earlier ones. Perhaps it’s time to think about what kind of a country this place — so rich in natural resources and human resourcefulness — might become if we were to take the stones and timbers of empire and construct a nation dedicated to the genuine security of all its people. Suppose we really chose, in the words of the preamble to the Constitution, “to promote the general welfare, and to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.”

Suppose we found a way to convert the desperate hunger for ever more, which is both the fuel of empires and the engine of their eventual destruction, into a new contentment with “enough”? What would a United States whose people have enough look like? It would not be one in which tiny numbers of the staggeringly wealthy made hundreds of billions more dollars and the country’s military-industrial complex thrived in a pandemic, while so many others went down in disaster. 

This empire will fall sooner or later. They all do. So, this crisis, just at the start of the Biden and Harris years, is a fine time to begin thinking about what might be built in its place. What would any of us like to see from our front windows next year?

Copyright 2021 Rebecca Gordon

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Joe Biden outlines ambitious climate change agenda: “Environmental justice will be at the center”

President Joe Biden signed a series of bold executive orders on Wednesday that he reassured the public would help combat climate change, which poses an existential threat to humanity.

The series of executive orders declared that addressing climate change is a national security priority, revoked all new gas and oil leases on public lands and waters, stopped new fossil fuel leases on public lands, fostered development of renewable energy sources, vowed to conserve no less than 30% of federal oceans and lands by 2030 and established new interagency groups and government offices to promote environmental justice, create jobs and clean up pollution.

“It’s about coming to the moment to deal with this maximum threat that is with us now, facing us, climate change, with a greater sense of urgency. In my view, we’ve already waited too long to deal with this climate crisis,” Biden said in a statement prior to signing the executive orders. “We can’t wait any longer.”

He emphasized in his statement, “Environmental justice will be at the center of all we do.”

Gina McCarthy, who Biden appointed as the first ever White House National Climate Advisor, told reporters at a press briefing that the United States would announce its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) — or each country’s commitment to reduce carbon emissions, a stipulation that is required in the Paris Climate Accord which Biden rejoined — prior to a climate summit on Earth Day, April 22.

“We’re going to be out of the gate working with the agencies to see what kind of reductions and mitigation opportunities there are,” McCarthy told reporters.

The Biden administration also said that it would be willing to take a tougher stance toward China, which is the world’s largest emitter of carbon dioxide gas. Special presidential envoy for climate John Kerry told reporters during the briefing that although the United States and China have conflicts on issues like intellectual property theft, “those issues will never be traded for anything that has to do with climate,” adding that “President Biden is very, very clear about the need to address the other issues with China. And I know some people have been concerned. Nothing is going to be siphoned off into one area from another.”

McCarthy and Kerry were not the only Biden administration officials to discuss China’s problem as the world’s worst climate change offender. Rhode Island Gov. Gina M. Raimondo, who Biden has nominated as his commerce secretary, told lawmakers during her confirmation hearings on Tuesday that she would both fight China on its unfair trade practices and use the government’s power to help address climate change.

“Together, the US and China could basically make major progress into climate change issues and carry along the rest of the world through peer pressure,” Dr. Kevin Trenberth, a Distinguished Senior Scientist in the Climate Analysis Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, told Salon by email. “But this requires a unified US approach first. Unless that is clear, China will be hard to change course. China does what is best for China. They are cognizant now of climate change and how it adversely affects China (drought, floods, typhoons etc).”

Biden’s executive orders may foreshadow even more assertive action to address climate change, as Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer hinted when he told MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Monday that Biden will also explore using his emergency powers to declare climate change as a national emergency if necessary. Schumer explained that “I think it might be a good idea for President Biden to call a climate emergency,” adding that “then he can do many, many things under the emergency powers of the president that wouldn’t have to go through — that he could do without legislation.”

“This is the boldest climate plan that has ever been put forward by an American president,” Dr. Michael E. Mann, a distinguished professor of atmospheric science at Penn State University, told Salon by email. “It is comprehensively addressing every facet of the climate issue, from the need to block new fossil fuel infrastructure, to clean energy stimulus, to leadership in the global community, to addressing climate in matters of security, defense, finance, agriculture, and recognizing the need to help out front line communities and those displaced by the necessary transition away from fossil fuels.”

He added that it was “pretty remarkable stuff” and said he hopes “this will convince even the most ardent ‘skeptics’ that this administration is SERIOUS about climate action.”

David Rothschild, a British ecologist and environmentalist, expressed similar views, telling Salon in a private message on Twitter that he is “very encouraged.” He added that he has “faith and hope in humanity,” arguing that “acknowledging the crisis is the first step” and that policymakers need to create and effectively implement an “ambitious plan” going forward.”

“Reducing our pollution is the easiest way but we need to invest in clean energy tech, harvesting energy in all aspects of life,” Rothschild argued. “And to recycle on a near 100% rate as we consume more every minute.”

Biden’s new policies are a stark contrast to those of his predecessor. 

During his presidency, Donald Trump pulled America out of the Paris climate accord, ordered the government to stop studying the effects of climate change on the planet, gutted the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and rolled back regulations implemented by President Barack Obama to address climate change.

“It is one thing for the Trump administration to decide that more people should be killed from particulate air pollution, because their lives are worth less than the money to be made from loosened regulations,” Dr. Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Department of Global Ecology told Salon by email in 2019. “It is another thing entirely to enter an Orwellian world, in which we pretend that the loosening of regulations will not result in more people dying. Trump complains about fake news, but then to justify his policies, his minions create fake science and then use it to create real policy.”

A Biden administration official told Salon that the president and his staffers recognize the importance of making sure that accurate information about the climate change crisis is relayed to the American people.

COVID-19 face masks: How high-filtration masks — like the KN95, N95 and KN94 — differ

You’ve heard of N95 and KN95 masks — but have you heard of the KF94, and what’s the difference between the three? 

There are many high-quality masks on the market with different letters and numbers. Understandably, this can be confusing. However, to decipher their differences and how each one works, one must have an understanding of what the different letters and numbers represent.

“The number on all of those refers to its filtration efficiency, so the percentage of articles that it stops from getting through,” said Dr. John Volckens, a professor of Mechanical Engineering at Colorado State University.

A KN95 filters 95 percent of particles, and so does an N95. A KF94 filters 94 percent of particles. The difference between the letters is the government standard certification.

“The N in N95 stands for NIOSH [The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health], and that’s the U.S. standard, and it’s an occupational standard,” Volckens said. “KN95 is a Chinese standard that is close to the U.S. standard and KF94 is a Korean standard.”

“N” is also a NIOSH-rating for masks that are non-resistant to oil.

KF literally stands for “Korean filter.” Notably, a study published in 2020 showed that KF94 masks are comparable to the N95 in blocking SARS-CoV-2 particles, and more effective than a surgical mask. However, the study was quite limited as only seven patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection participated in it.

“KF94s seem to be more readily available than the N95, less expensive [generally under $2 each] and easier to use for many people,” Sonali Advani, an assistant professor of medicine at Duke University, told NPR. “KF94 is actually intended for public use. In Korea they are often worn by ordinary citizens to filter out dust or pollution.”

Volckens explained that N95 masks are only certified by one lab that is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and that is partly why supply can’t meet demand right now.

“They’re very stringent on who they let become an N95, which is why you don’t see a lot of them on the market anymore because they’ve all been purchased,” Volckens said. “The problem with KN95 and KN94s is that there are a lot of imposters on the market, and we don’t know what you’re buying.”

When it comes to N95 masks, each mask has a stamp that states it was certified by NIOSH with a certification number that you can look up online. Volckens added there are also masks that have ASTM [American Society for Testing and Materials] standards that are “nearly equivalent” to N95 masks— like the FFP2, which stands for “filtering face-piece two level” mask.

In some parts of Europe, like Germany, the federal and state governments are mandating that FFP2 masks are used in stores and on public transportation now. According to NPR, Austria is making similar recommendations. In France, the High Council for Public Health announced it is also recommending people wear surgical masks in public— instead of fabric masks.

In the U.S., the CDC continues to recommend fabric masks for the general public, as long as they have at least two layers.

Volckens said if you’re buying a fabric mask, you should look for three key characteristics: fit, filtration and breathability.

“Filtration ability of the fabric, you want a highly-effective filter, you want a fit — and that’s a personal thing, but you want to get the mask to fit closely all across your face, and then breathability, you have to be able to breathe through the mask normally,” Volckens said. “Otherwise, if it’s uncomfortable to breathe through you’re not going to wear it, and it could be unsafe.”

Of course, it’s difficult to know the fit of a mask until it’s purchased. But Volckens said people should buy masks from a supplier that has been filter tested. Regarding the fit of the mask, that can be reconciled by double masking.

“That’s why you can double mask because you can buy a mask that doesn’t fit well but then use something else to hold that mask closer to your face,” Volckens said. “That’s what we talk about double masking being effective on fit.”

“Harry Potter” & the problematic creator – What’s left for a fandom raised on false tolerance?

If you look at a graph detailing the frequency and dates of Google searches for the term “separate art from artist,” there has been a veritable mountain range of high peaks and minor dips from April 2017 onward. It’s a digital representation of the initial stirrings, and subsequent explosion, of the #MeToo Movement, which left many people contemplating whether they could still, in good conscience, enjoy works by filmmakers and artists like R. Kelly, Harvey Weinstein, Louis C.K. and Jeffrey Tambor, all of whom faced credible allegations of sexual assault or harassment. 

Numerous thinkpieces considered various ways into a single question, “Can you actually separate the art from the artist?” Inherent to this discussion are a number of lingering sub-questions: Should a creator’s checkered biography or personal views affect how their art is and continues to be seen? Does it matter if they are living or dead? There’s concrete differences between the alleged actions of, say, comedian Aziz Ansari and director Rob Cohen. Should their work be treated or boycotted in similar ways? 

Separating art from an artist is messy business precisely because there’s no uniform answer to any of these questions, which are all so heavily intertwined with topics like cancel culture, ethical consumption and the growing trend of trial by social media. Emerging from the quagmire is the concept of problematic faves; it’s a phrase used to denote beloved cultural touchstones that have become sullied, either because of issues within a piece or the people who brought it to life.

This is the landscape in which a “Harry Potter” live-action series – which, according to the Hollywood Reporter, is rumored to be in early development at HBO Max – appears. It’s been 24 years since “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” was first published and 20 years since the movie adaptation globally immortalized the characters, and a lot has changed in the interim. 

As a millennial, I feel like I grew up with the “Harry Potter” series. I aged alongside the characters and like to think that I absorbed at least some of the values the books promoted — the idea that bravery can come in many forms, that people can surprise you and that it’s okay to lean on your friends when you need support. 

The sense of online community surrounding the series was unprecedented, as well. As Constance Grady and Aja Romano wrote for Vox, people wanted to talk, sometimes obsessively, about what they read, and this pattern coincided with the rise of “Web 2.0,” a term to describe the advent of more participatory websites. Readers of young adult fiction, fantasy and science fiction were able to cultivate early internet fandoms. 

“This was still a pretty bold concept in the early 2000s; geek culture was largely still underground, and fantasy was seen mainly as an immature hobby — for instance, in 2003, critic A.S. Byatt’s excoriation of ‘Harry Potter and the childish adult’ claimed that adults ‘like to regress’ when they read children’s literature,” they wrote. “But between ‘Harry Potter,’ the ‘Lord of the Rings’ film adaptations, and the emerging visibility of online ‘Harry Potter’ fandom, it was increasingly difficult to ignore fantasy and science fiction as a driving force of culture, and to write off fans of these genres as niche.” 

They continued: “By the time ‘Twilight’ took over from ‘Harry Potter’ as the reigning young adult phenomenon in 2005, the idea of a modern, mainstream fandom coalescing around a major sci-fi/fantasy series was well-established and generally accepted.” 

In many ways, that fandom is still thriving, boosted in recent years by the opening of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios, the play “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” and the development of the “Fantastic Beasts” franchise. But simultaneously, criticism of the series’ depiction — or lack thereof — of characters of color and LGBTQ characters has intensified, as have calls for boycotts due to creator J.K. Rowling’s vocal transphobia. 

Therefore, the creators of a new series have a number of considerations to keep in mind to create a show that feels right for contemporary viewers. It raises some questions, too. Can the wizarding world be adapted to be more reflective of “Harry Potter” fans? Due to the proposed series’ proximity to Rowling, is this a situation in which art can be separated from artist? Or is it preemptively doomed to become, for some, a problematic fave? 

Let’s break it down. 

What do we know about the proposed television series? 

According to the Hollywood Reporter, sources told the publication that HBO Max executives have had multiple meetings with potential writers centered on expanding the “Harry Potter” universe to television. “Sources say broad ideas have been discussed as part of the early-stage exploratory meetings,” Lesley Goldberg wrote. 

Conversations are still in the very early stages, and no talent or writers are officially confirmed for the proposed series. However, as Goldberg wrote, continuing to release new content related to the series remains a priority for HBO Max and Warner Bros., which along with creator J.K. Rowling, controls rights to the property. 

These talks come at a time where HBO Max is leaning heavily into its most valuable assets and intellectual property, like DC Comics films, with reboots or reunions also planned for seminal series like “Friends” and “Sex and the City.” Additionally, HBO is also expanding the “Game of Thrones” universe with the development of “House of the Dragon” and the newly announced “Tales of Dunk and Egg,” both of which would live on HBO Max, as well. 

How inclusive are the original “Harry Potter” stories? 

The “Harry Potter” books, as well as the subsequent films, notably lack diversity. Think about it. Harry, Ron, Hermione, Dumbledore, Severus Snape, Draco Malfoy, Dolores Umbridge, Professor McGonagall — even Voldemort. This is a series that is primarily centered on white characters and their journeys. 

The few characters of color felt incomplete, or like an afterthought based on tired real-world stereotypes. Take, for example, Cho Chang. Readers have pointed that, in a universe filled with the colorfully named Luna Lovegood and Bellatrix Lestrange, Cho’s name is a lazy mashup of two very common surnames — Korean and Chinese, respectively — ostensibly as a way to overtly signal the character’s Asian identity. 

Rowling also opted to perpetuate the “studious Asian” stereotype through Cho, by making her a Ravenclaw whose defining characteristics include that she is serious about her academic studies, and that she is a meek first love interest for Harry Potter (who serves as a counterpoint to Ginny Weasley’s forcefulness later in the series). 

Similar narrative shortcomings could be seen with the depictions of the Patil twins, Padma and Parvati, and especially with Nagini, who was played by Claudia Kim in “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald.” As a refresher on Potter lore: Nagini was Voldemort’s faithful snake servant and Horcrux, who was actually a Maledictus — a woman who carries a genetic curse that causes her to eventually morph into a serpent. 

“In the books, Nagini is literally a servant enacting the wishes of a dominant white male, Voldemort, and is never given any real personality or voice – she’s defined by her relationship to Voldemort,” Megan C. Hills wrote for Marie Claire. “It goes without saying that nobody should be defined by another person, but there’s a colonial undertone here that reinforces white superiority that’s kind of gross.”

Those problematic characterizations aside, Rowling has made an effort to appear more of an ally of inclusivity, especially after Black actress Noma Dumezweni was cast to play the role of Hermione Granger in the two-part play “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” after Hermione in the films was portrayed by white actress Emma Watson. Defending the casting choice, Rowling tried to retroactively state that Hermione could be interpreted as having been written as Black and tweeted: “Canon: brown eyes, frizzy hair and very clever. White skin was never specified. Rowling loves black Hermione.” 

However, readers were quick to point out that in Chapter 21 of “The Prisoner of Azkaban,” one line reads, “Hermione’s white face was sticking out from behind a tree.” As one Reddit user posted, “[Rowling] clearly intended Hermione to be white and to state otherwise is a slap in the face to our intelligence.”

“I had a bunch of racists telling me that because Hermione ‘turned white’ – that is, lost color from her face after a shock – that she must be a white woman, which I have a great deal of difficulty with,” Rowling told The Guardian prior to the play’s opening. “But I decided not to get too agitated about it and simply state quite firmly that Hermione can be a black woman with my absolute blessing and enthusiasm.”

This discussion also reignited a controversy that plagued the “Harry Potter” film franchise. The character of Lavender Brown was played by three different actresses over the course of the eight films — the first two actresses were Black, the final was white. Lavender starts out as a minor character, who eventually grows into a larger role as Ron’s love interest, as well as one of the original students who joined Dumbledore’s Army, an organization meant to stand up against Dolores Umbridge.

The recasting from Black to white took place as her narrative arc was really taking off. Some sites, like Screen Rant, speculated that Warner Bros. simply opted to “go with a more established actress in Jessie Cave,” since the previous two appearances were non-speaking roles. However, many fans pointed out that the decision felt like unnecessary whitewashing — why not simply find an older, more experienced Black actress to play the part? 

With that in mind, hopefully the writers of the rumored “Harry Potter” live-action series will not only cast diverse actors to populate the narrative, but will truly endeavor to provide those characters with nuanced and imaginative stories to tell. Additionally, while race-bending in film and television can give opportunities to people of color and improve overall representation (as in the case of Hermione on stage), whitewashing is an act of erasure that negates that good work.

Were there any LGBTQ characters in the original series? 

Much in the way Rowling came out after the publication of the books to retroactively amend — or at least comment upon — Hermione’s race, she revealed in a 2007 panel with fans that Albus Dumbledore, the Hogwarts headmaster, was actually gay. This was done after the publication of the final book in the original series. 

She doubled-down on this assertion in DVD commentary for “Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald,” wherein she said that Dumbledore and Gellert Grindelwald, a dark wizard, had a relationship with a “sexual dimension.”

In the DVD commentary, Rowling says: “Their relationship was incredibly intense. It was passionate, and it was a love relationship. But as happens in any relationship, gay or straight or whatever label we want to put on it, one never knows, really, what the other person is feeling. You can’t know, you can believe you know. So I’m less interested in the sexual side — though I believe there is a sexual dimension to this relationship — than I am in the sense of the emotions they felt for each other, which ultimately is the most fascinating thing about all human relationships.”

But, as Washington Post columnist Richard Morgan wrote in 2019, these “retcon revisionist” statements are a display of false allyship and queerbaiting, or the act of creators hinting at same-sex romance or LGBTQ representation, but never actually depicting so as not to offend bigots who dislike inclusive plotlines. 

“Viewers and readers especially can’t know feelings between two characters when neither uses words nor actions to express them. There’s a word for that: Closeted,” he wrote. “By imbuing Dumbledore with a sexuality that does not speak its name, ink its page, or fill its screen in 2019, Rowling outs herself again as a 1990s throwback of a grandstanding faux-ally.”

Other than Dumbledore and Grindelwald, there are no other confirmed LGBTQ characters present in the Wizarding World. The live-action series could change that, either by expanding on current characters’ backstories or including new plotlines and romances. 

Why is J.K. Rowling’s stance on trans people problematic for fans?

Many fans of “Harry Potter” are disappointed and angry with Rowling because of her vocal transphobia. For several years, fans had murmured about Rowling’s apparent alliance with leaders of the TERF — or trans-exclusionary radical feminist — movement, but it wasn’t until 2019 that Rowling confirmed her views online. Rowling tweeted in support of Maya Forstater, a tax expert whose contract with the Centre for Global Development, wasn’t renewed after she posted statements like “men cannot change into women,” and “it is unfair and unsafe for trans women to compete in women’s sport” online. 

Then in 2020, Rowling mocked a headline that included the phrase “people who menstruate.” 

“I’m sure there used to be a word for those people,” she wrote on Twitter. “Someone help me out. Wumben? Wimpund? Woomud?”

Rowling went on to write several blog posts, including a 3,500-word essay, filled with tired transphobic talking points, like the idea that allowing individuals to use the public restroom associated with their gender identity is a greenlight for predators to harass young women. 

“I want trans women to be safe. At the same time, I do not want to make natal girls and women less safe,” Rowling wrote. “When you throw open the doors of bathrooms and changing rooms to any man who believes or feels he’s a woman—and, as I’ve said, gender confirmation certificates may now be granted without any need for surgery or hormones—then you open the door to any and all men who wish to come inside. That is the simple truth.”

Many trans “Harry Potter” fans have had to come to terms with the fact that the author of a series that guided them through their adolescence didn’t recognize them as individuals deserving of protections. They, and their allies, had to determine whether the fandom could exist separate from Rowling after her views were made public. 

Some, like Vox writer Aja Romano — who identifies as nonbinary — realized they would have to view their participation in the fandom as something from their past. 

“I still talk nearly every day to people I’ve known in ‘Harry Potter’ fandom since my earliest days there,” Romano wrote. “I resolved to compartmentalize my ‘Harry Potter’ fandom identity as something over and done with, instead of thinking of it as a cornerstone of my identity.” 

Others, as the New York Times reported, have endeavored to make the fandom more inclusive, regardless of Rowling’s personal views. “J.K. Rowling gave us Harry Potter; she gave us this world,” Renae McBrian, a young adult author who volunteers for the fan site MuggleNet, told the publication. “But we created the fandom, and we created the magic and community in that fandom. That is ours to keep.”

With all this in mind, how should fans respond to the new series?

Even if the proposed live-action series is a gripping addition to the Wizarding World universe, filled with diverse characters and plotlines, this tension between Rowling’s transphobia and the values of many in the “Harry Potter” fandom (and those of even just casual fans) is going to be the biggest hurdle facing its creators. 

While there was some understandable excitement about the prospect of the new series, after the news reached Twitter on Monday, many fans shared a similar sentiment once it was clarified that Rowling still controls the rights to the property, along with Warner Bros. “Wanting more ‘Harry Potter’ content but not wanting J.K. Rowling to make any money off it,” one user wrote. 

“J.K. Rowling will profit from any and all new ‘Harry Potter’-related media,” another wrote. “If you spend money consuming that media, you are giving J.K. Rowling money. That’s it. That’s the tweet.” This was echoed by another user, “It’s time to do the ‘Stop enabling J.K. Rowling from getting royalties challenge.'” 

As a fan of 20 years, I think about a line found at the end of “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” Dumbledore commends Neville Longbottom for trying to stop Harry, Ron and Hermione from sneaking out of the Gryffindor dorms. 

“‘There are all kinds of courage,’ said Dumbledore, smiling. ‘It takes a great deal of bravery to stand up to our enemies, but just as much to stand up to our friends.'” In the case of any future “Harry Potter” projects, I think the courageous, or at least right, stance for me personally to take is against someone who continues to dehumanize already-marginalized communities, no matter how beloved she, and the world she created, once were to me. If I really want to revisit my childhood, I’ll put my money behind the upcoming “Percy Jackson & The Olympians” live-action series, instead. 

 

Syfy’s charming “Resident Alien” lets its star(man) shine, despite muddled metaphorical aspirations

No character actor does awkward like Alan Tudyk, the man who gave "Firefly" its goofy soul and stole "Rogue One" out from under nearly everyone else in the cast despite never appearing onscreen in his own flesh.

Syfy's "Resident Alien," based on a comic book series, splits the difference by casting Tudyk as an extraterrestrial stranded on our planet after his malicious mission goes awry. Here, Tudyk is a being who goes by the highly unusual name Dr. Harry Vanderspeigle and forces the citizens of Patience, Colorado to live up to the town's name in virtually every interaction with him.

The remoteness of the place and its need for a new town doctor pretty much forces them to after their longtime physician turns up dead. In the way of all out-of-the-way places where the odds are good and the goods are odd, Harry's weirdness and flat affect seem harmless. The guy whose life he swiped happens to be a wealthy part-time resident, and that also helps immensely since nobody truly knew him.

On the whole the audience sees his character as most townsfolk see him, as another human who isn't comfortable in his own skin, hasn't quite mastered the subtleties of body language or what to do with his face and with negligible interpersonal skills.

A couple of people see the "doctor" for the huge-eyed amphibian-looking creature that he actually is, and that frightens him and them, until fright gives way to curiosity and curiosity evolves into something like caring.  

This is the story "Resident Alien" is trying to tell from the perspective of Tudyk's bizarre yet charming character, and when it does that it's a sweet series that plays to the actor's natural ability to surprise us in every episode.

If you were to judge by the title's dual significance – the term "resident alien" is used to describe an immigrant who attains lawful resident status in the United States – you may be expecting the show to use Harry's situation to metaphorically examine the obstacles faced by newcomers in a land that seems welcoming but actually isn't.

Presenting Tudyk's character as both the stranger in a strange land and in the role of interspecies bigot enables the show to approach this well-worn concept in an unusual way. He's an outsider hiding in plain sight who learns English and Earthly customs by binge-watching "Law & Order," but he's also a member of a race utterly convinced of its own superiority.

Harry explains in one of the show's many instances of voiceover narration that if the universe had a scale for intelligence, "humans would land right below lizards." Crashing on our planet forces him to interact with the lower life forms he believes us to be, and he slowly begins to realize the many ways his kind misunderstands and underestimates humans.

Nevertheless he refuses to veer from his original directive even as it increasingly is at odds with his burgeoning emotions and evolving connections with the people around him like Asta Twelvetrees (Sara Tomko), the physician's assistant who works with him at the town's medical clinic.

Harry and Asta make a wonderful platonic pair because they both feel like outsiders, and the people who are the most interesting to follow also fit this description even if they don't specifically say it out loud. And they each nurture relationships that are established solidly enough to make for interesting storylines.

Asta's best friend D'Arcy (Alice Wetterlund) is a heavy-drinking bartender with dollar signs in her eyes who throws herself at Harry, and her efforts to overlook his complete lack of charisma allow Wetterlund to shine through her antics.

But a nerdy kid named Max (Judah Prehn) can see through his disguise, and this preoccupies Harry more than a horny whiskey-slinger ever could. The alien quickly makes it a priority to eliminate this tiny menace but predictably Max turns out to be a worthy adversary.

Viewing the world through Harry's calculating, emotionally chilled perspective enables the show to circumvent potential discomfort with addressing any realistic issues related to race and culture in Patience, at least initially.  Small moments acknowledge the existence of ordinary human prejudice in this world, particularly when a subplot involving Max's smarter friend, a classmate who wears a hijab, comes into play.

All told, though, Patience is a kindly and TV-diverse type of town that breaks free of the usual portrayals of small town tensions in ways that can be a tad cloying. Corey Reynolds, for example, plays the town's sheriff Mike Thompson as a combination of Boss Hogg and Rosco P. Coltrane, and in case we're not picking up the homage he loudly dotes on his designer pooch Cletus.

He's also the only Black man you see on the streets of this mountain town, which could be a clue that he's overshooting in his efforts to fit into the culture. Or maybe this is an entirely unnecessarily flourish.

Playing up the ridiculousness of its characters gives the show a slight "Northern Exposure" flavor.  Building upon this is the script's considerate exploration of Tomko's character through the lens of her personal life also highlights Asta's Native American heritage in ways that feel genuine and unforced, and the fact that I have to point that out tells you how unusual that still is in TV.

Where "Resident Alien" doesn't entirely work is its desire to be many shows at the same time as it meanders its way to figuring out which stories it eventually wants to tell. The alien-as-metaphor for immigrants or outsiders is a well-trodden path in TV, seen in series that treat it with solemnity ("Alien Nation" and "Roswell" come to mind) and with a surfeit of humor ("A.L.F.", "3rd Rock from the Sun" and "Mork & Mindy" which, like this show, is set in Colorado).

"Resident Alien" takes what we know about those shows and gestures at modernizing its paradigm to connect with 2021 audiences with a semblance of profundity through this alien that is equal parts genius and ignoramus.

If his misadventures and Asta's emotional journey were the season's main events, that would be more than enough to successfully sustain the first season. Instead the writers decide that every character needs several cases to keep them busy. Just because a show is blessed with an able ensemble cast doesn't mean that every character needs a mystery to chase in order to seize our interest, but if that's the approach they'd better be doing something vital to the main plot or something absolutely fascinating. This not the case here.

I haven't even mentioned the government agency pursuing Harry through these episodes because the representatives of said agency aren't even interesting enough to mention. You could cut most of the scenes featuring this D-plot and have a leaner, more meaningful tale.

When "Resident Alien" resists the urge to meander and sits with Harry's various epiphanies about the human need to belong and yearning to forge bonds with others, it glimmers with the potential to be a show that's as heartfelt and contemplative as it is dark and funny. These strengths become lost in its initial journey, but with Tudyk serving as its beacon that may not matter. He'll just keep on stealing our attention until the rest of the show figures out where it need to go.

"Resident Alien" premieres Wednesday, Jan. 27 at 10 p.m. on Syfy.

Grading Biden’s first week: Public health experts give new president an ‘A’ for COVID-19 response

Salon reached out to public health experts regarding their assessments of President Joe Biden’s early performance fighting the COVID-19 pandemic… and graded him with an A.

“I would give him a solid A,” Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease doctor and professor of medicine at the University of California–San Francisco, told Salon by email. “He is doing great.”

Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, expressed a similar view, writing to Salon that “he gets an A+ from me so far for his first week of office.”

Both doctors told Salon that they valued Biden’s determination to use medical science as the basis for shaping public policy, something that his predecessor Donald Trump repeatedly refused to do. They were not alone in expressing this sentiment.

“The single most important policy that affects all the multiple components of Biden’s coordinated national pandemic strategy is a commitment to objective, data-driven scientific evidence, public health recommendations and full transparency with the American people,” Dr. Russell Medford, Chairman of the Center for Global Health Innovation and Global Health Crisis Coordination Center, wrote to Salon. “This is a clear break from the past and the positive impact this is having on the morale and by extension the operational effectiveness of the scientific, medical and public health communities in our fight against COVID-19 should not be underestimated.”

In terms of specific policies, Benjamin praised Biden for “creating a unified national approach by writing and releasing a comprehensive plan,” setting a positive example “especially his mask guidance,” making sure that the process for developing public policy remains transparent and “working to ensure a reliable and sustainable vaccine supply.”

Gandhi argued that Biden’s most important policies included “signing the executive order to invoke the Defense Production Act, which will enable more nimble production of PPE, vaccines and testing agents” and “promising today to purchase an additional 200 million doses of vaccine for the U.S. population – 100 million from Moderna and 100 million from Pfizer — which will allow more supply to quickly get to states to administer since mass vaccination roll-out is the most effective way we have to get to the end of the pandemic.”

In terms of what Biden needs to do next, Gandhi stressed the importance of developing herd immunity through mass vaccinations.

“At this point, the more conventional ways of controlling COVID-19 transmission (masks, distancing, ventilation, testing, contact tracing, isolation and quarantine) are important but only mass vaccination will get us to the end of this pandemic through herd immunity,” Gandhi wrote. “So, I would advise a daily press conference from either President Biden or a member of his team on progress on procuring vaccines and rolling out to states. This is the issue of the day!”

Going forward, Medford argued that Biden needs to make sure he sticks to his plan, identifying as the three most crucial points that he “crush, as soon as possible, COVID-19 nationally through mass vaccination, mask wearing and social distancing,” that he “ensure that the global COVID-19 response is similarly effective” and that he “enhance the nation’s rapid testing and genetic surveillance capabilities to identify and develop effective countermeasures to new SARS-CoV-2 variants as they arise.”

Benjamin expressed a similar view, telling Salon that Biden must “maintain the momentum and implement his plan,” including making sure to “strengthen the ‘last mile’ vaccine delivery system to get shots in arms” and “plan to rebuild the nation’s public health system and implement it.”

White House sign language interpreter linked to right-wing group, appeared in video attacking Biden

Heather Mewshaw, an ASL interpreter chosen by the White House to be present at all news briefings, appears to manage a group of ASL interpreters who provide sign language accompaniments to right-wing videos, TIME reports.

The videos promote vaccine misinformation, conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and the riot at the U.S. Capitol, and false claims about Michelle Obama being transgender. Mewshaw recently appeared in a video attacking President Joe Biden:

 

Mewshaw’s group was originally titled “Right Side ASL” but later changed its name to “Hands of Liberty” after its previous Facebook page was deleted in November for violating the community standards of the platform. When TIME reached out to Mewshaw for comment, the Hands of Liberty Facebook page was deleted.

While the group claims to offer its service to the general public, the vast majority of videos it has chosen to interpret are right-wing and pro-Trump in nature.

“For me, it would be problematic for someone who has aligned herself with alt-right discourses to be the public face of the White House for the deaf communities and people who are curious about ASL,” Jon Henner, an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina Greensboro who studies ASL and is deaf, told TIME.

Susan Collins suggests going light on Donald Trump while lashing out at Chuck Schumer

Senators Susan Collins, R-ME, and Tim Kaine, D-VA, are privately floating the idea of censuring Trump as the chances of a post-impeachment conviction grow slimmer without substantial Republican support, according to Axios.  

On Tuesday, forty-five Senate Republicans voted against holding a trial for Trump’s impeachment, dismissing the trial as “unconstitutional.” While the 45-55 split will allow the trial to move forward, such a critical mass of Republican opposition does not bode well for a proper conviction, which would require a two-thirds majority in the Senate. A least seventeen more Senate Republicans will be needed to convict.

“I think it’s pretty obvious from the vote…that it is extraordinarily unlikely that the president will be convicted,” Collins said following the vote, “Just do the math.”

The Maine Republican who spent nearly the entirety of Trump’s term in a perpetual state of disappointment seems to hold more animosity for her new Senate Leader, Chuck Schumer, D-NY.

“What this campaign taught me about Chuck Schumer is that he will say or do anything in order to win,” Collins recently told CNN. “It was a deceitful, despicable campaign that he ran.”

Sen. John Boozman, R-AR, joined Collins’ pessimism that Republicans could possibly hold a former president accountable for inciting an insurrection. “I can’t see how you get 17,” said Boozman, “I think that that was a test vote.”

Now, Senators Collins and Kaine reportedly have their eyes set on a censure, which would require a 60-vote margin in the upper chamber. Unlike an impeachment trial, a censure cannot be challenged as unconstitutional, closing the escape hatch used by Senate Republicans to condemn the trial on procedural grounds without having to address Trump’s problematic conduct leading up to the Capitol riot. A censure would be a symbolic denunciation of the former President’s actions, which several Republicans have already acknowledged as completely unacceptable.

In fact, a small coterie of House Republicans led by Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-PA, introduced a censure earlier this month, calling Trump’s “attempts to undermine the outcome of the 2020 election…unconscionable.” Those backing the effort included Reps. Young Kim, R-CA, John Curtis, R-UT, Peter Meijer, R-MI, Tom Reed, R-NY, and Fred Upton, R-MI. At the time, however, House Democrats shut down the Republican-backed censure, deriding it as a lukewarm attempt to hold the President accountable.  

Despite the lack of support needed in the Senate, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, has vowed to nevertheless hold a proper impeachment trial, tabling a point order by Senator Rand Paul, R-KY, a vocal objector to the trial. 

Schumer called the Republicans’ move to dismiss the trial “deeply irresponsible.”

“I would simply say to all of my colleagues,” Schumer declared, “There will be a trial, and the evidence against the former president will be presented in living color for the nation and every one of us to see once again.”

Schumer faces challenges from both ailes as questions over the filibuster loom large with a 50-50 Senate split. Even with Schumer and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s, R-KY, power-sharing agreement –– which seeks to circumvent procedural impasses in committee organizing –– the debate surrounding the filibuster is far from over. 

Progressive Democrats see the filibuster as an outdated holdover that Republicans have historically used to undermine legislative progress, posing Congressional obstacles for a Biden presidency. As Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-NY, tweeted last September, “The filibuster wasn’t made w/ purpose. It’s the result of an accident in rulebook revision & bloomed as a cherished tool of segregationists,” adding, “Now it empowers minority rule. That’s not “special,” it’s unjust.” Sen. Elizabeth Warren has likewise expressed a strong interest in killing the filibuster. 

More centrist Democrats are, however, less enthused with the idea of eliminating the procedural relic. Senators Joe Manchin, D-WV, and Kyrsten Sinema, D-AZ, are holding out hope for bipartisan cooperation. “Busting the filibuster under any conditions is wrong,” said Sen. Manchin, “We can organize the Senate. I’m sure we can work through that.

Meanwhile, Schumer –– a Democratic centrist who has a reputation as a “consensus builder, not a dictator,” –– is still trusted by many of his GOP colleagues to live by this reputation with respect to the filibuster. Sen. Lindsey Graham called Schumer “capable, smart, hard-working, tenacious.” Graham told CNN, “I’ve found him to be honest […] He’s got a problem. He’s the majority leader with a primary challenge looming over his shoulder.”

With pressure on both sides of the aisle, Schumer will play a consequential role in determining the fate of the filibuster. Hopefully, Sen. McConnell, who did away with a 60-vote threshold to confirm President Trump’s three conservative Supreme Court nominees, is poised to get a taste of his own medicine.

The myth of bipartisanship: Will a fully radicalized GOP finally blow up D.C.’s silliest fantasy?

Well, now it’s official: On Tuesday, nine out of ten Republican senators blessed Donald Trump’s efforts at sending a mob to violently overthrow democracy. Despite the very real threat to their lives posed by the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 45 out of 50 Republican senators, answering the call of the ever-showboating Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, voted against proceeding with an impeachment trial of Trump for the crime of inciting an insurrection. This, even though Republicans know Trump is guilty. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., even previously admitted that Trump “provoked” the riot that led to 5 deaths and unhinged mobs roaming the Capitol looking to murder prominent politicians like Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and then-Vice President Mike Pence.

Yes, there’s some nonsense cover story about how it’s a procedural objection, but no one is fooled by this. Tuesday’s vote was a proxy vote for the belief that no consequences should flow to Trump for his attempt to violently overthrow democracy. This was made obvious by comments from Sen. Lindsay Graham, R.-S.C., who is helping Trump on his defense and told reporters, “He just needs to keep doing what he’s doing, and the trial will be over in a couple of weeks.”

Really, it should be no surprise. The Capitol insurrection was just the last-ditch move by Trump, who spent the two and a half months prior looking for every angle he could to void the election results and declare himself a second term president by fiat. At every point in Trump’s failed coup, GOP leadership passively supported him — and often actively, as happened with the effort to throw out the election results in Congress that was led by Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri

As Heather “Digby” Parton wrote at Salon Wednesday morning, there’s “a concerted effort on the part of the entire GOP establishment to cleanse Donald Trump of any responsibility for what he did so that he might emerge once again as the hero they’ve all been waiting for.”

Republicans’ consistent support of Trump really should be putting more of a damper on the mewlings about compromise with the GOP from centrist Democratic holdouts like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Sen. Joe Manchin. These two senators have been in the news lately because of their stated opposition to ending the filibuster. Even President Joe Biden, despite his welcome interest in forging ahead with a series of progressive executive orders, has expressed concerns about eliminating the filibuster, which gives the Republican minority veto power over any meaningful legislation. 

The idea that that filibuster is some marvelous tool of bipartisanship has long been a childish fantasy. Republicans have manipulated it so they can pass their priorities — tax cuts and federal judicial appointments — with a straight majority vote, yet it magically remains in place as an insurmountable obstacle for Democratic priorities, such as ethics reform and a minimum wage hike.

Moreover, the notion that a Democratic majority can “work together” with a Republican minority is a cruel joke.


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The only goal of Republicans is to make sure not just that Democrats fail, but that government itself fails, so they can continue campaigning on a fatalistic, cynical anti-government platform. This has been true since at least Barack Obama’s presidency and has only become more so since them. In light of the widespread GOP support for Trump’s insurrection, however, the calculus of the bipartisan feint has shifted even more into the negative. Now it’s not only silly and delusional to imagine there can ever be a “working with” Republicans — it’s what the kids might call problematic.

Republicans, after all, are the party of Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene of Georgia, whose calls for Democrats to be assassinated were just exposed by CNN. And while there’s some performative hand-wringing from some Republican leaders on this, the easy bet here is that nothing will be done to sideline or eject Taylor-Greene from their caucus. It is for the same reason that 90% of Republican senators just signed off on the idea of not blocking Trump from running for office again, due to his fascistic insurrection. They know most of their voters are fine with outright overturning democracy now and are only too happy to follow suit. 

This isn’t a mere matter of political differences. This is an entire political party rejecting the very idea that political differences should be hammered out with democratic deliberation. Instead, they’re backing — however cowardly, with their disingenuous process arguments — a president who tried to end democracy through violence. 

Democrats have long liked to talk up “bipartisanship” and “compromise” because mainstream pundits reward them for it and voters — especially the kinds of voters who barely follow politics — react warmly to those words during focus groups. It sounds so nice, doesn’t it, getting together with people who you disagree with, having a beer and coming to some sort of agreement? Of course, people like that fantasy, especially if they’re largely unfamiliar with how obstructionist Republicans have become in the past couple of decades. 

And sure, it makes raw political sense to appeal to those fantasies in campaign ads and even to make theatrical but ineffectual gestures towards bipartisanship in public. But what has been foolish for a long time now is actually trying to make good on the idea of compromise with Republicans so radical that their idea of “unity” and “compromise” is they get everything they want and Democrats can walk off a short pier. 

Now, the situation has grown more dire. Sitting in a room trying to compromise with Republicans means trying to work with people who are just fine with Trump sending a violent mob after Congress. So fine, in fact, that they aren’t interested in taking what should be a sensible step in convicting Trump so that he can’t run for office again.

And no, the fact that Trump’s coup failed is no excuse to not take it seriously. At the risk of having people yell “Godwin’s law” at me (though Mike Godwin himself said it doesn’t count in with actual fascism on the rise), it’s worth remembering that Hitler’s first attempt to overthrow democracy also failed. Giving men like Trump a chance to regroup and try again is not a good idea!


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Even the most devout believers in “bipartisanship” must understand that the idea is built upon a more fundamental idea, which is democracy itself. That’s the whole point of democratic governance, that different political factions have to work through problems deliberatively, instead of trying to cheat or use violence.

The Republicans have become radicalized against democracy itself. They’ve elected to put themselves outside of the systems of democratic discourse. It’s really okay to take them at their word and stop trying to work in the system with people who are happy to destroy the system. It is furthermore a moral obligation to minimize contact and compromise with people who are just fine with sedition. 

There are a lot of reasons to overturn the filibuster sooner rather than later, starting with the fact that Americans elected Democrats to get things done and will not re-elect them if they fail to make good on that promise. But the moral seriousness of the problem just rose dramatically with Tuesday’s vote. Republicans are faced with a stark choice between supporting or rejecting democracy. As long as they continue to do the latter, Democrats should shun Republicans as much as possible, instead of carrying on like everything is normal. 

Kevin McCarthy to have “conversation” with Marjorie Taylor Greene over support for killing Dems

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy vowed to have a “conversation” with freshman Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., after she expressed support for killing Democrats and spread conspiracy theories on social media before and after joining Congress.

Greene “repeatedly indicated support for executing prominent Democratic politicians” in 2018 and 2019, CNN reported on Tuesday, and discussed an outlandish conspiracy theory alleging that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was recorded killing a child in a satanic ritual and wearing her face like a mask in Facebook comments flagged by Media Matters. The Georgia lawmaker, who came under fire during her campaign for supporting the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory, also drew condemnation last week when Media Matters found Facebook comments in which she agreed that the 2018 Parkland school shooting was a fake “false flag” event and that 9/11 was an inside job.

The reports drew calls for Greene’s resignation or ouster from Congress. Axios likened the scandal to the one that effectively ended former Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King’s political career after he defended “white nationalism” and “white supremacy” in a 2019 interview.

But while McCarthy stripped King of his committee assignments following those comments, his spokesman said the Republican leader currently only has plans to have a talk with Greene.

“These comments are deeply disturbing and Leader McCarthy plans to have a conversation with the Congresswoman about them,” spokesman Mark Bednar told CNN.

Greene has not denied the reports but claimed in a statement posted to Twitter that “teams of people” had posted and liked posts using her personal Facebook account and accused “Fake News CNN” of citing “posts from random users to try to cancel me and silence my voice.”

“Many posts have been liked. Many posts have been shared. Some did not represent my views. Especially the ones that CNN is about to spread across the internet,” she wrote.

A growing number of Democrats have called for Greene to be removed from Congress.

“So you aren’t denying you … called for the deaths of political leaders, you aren’t taking responsibility, you aren’t apologizing, you aren’t even saying it was wrong,” Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., said on Twitter. “You’re just blaming others. Your conduct does not reflect creditably on the House, and you should resign.”

Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., added, “If Members wearing overcoats are not allowed on the floor of The United States House of Representatives, why would we allow those who’ve liked posts calling for the execution of fellow elected officials?”

CNN’s review of Greene’s Facebook history found that she liked a January 2019 comment that said “a bullet to the head would be quicker” than impeachment as a way of removing Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. She also liked comments about executing FBI agents who were investigating former President Donald Trump, comments calling for top Democrats to be hanged, and a comment calling for “civil war 2.0,” according to the report. Greene also liked another post flagged by Media Matters alleging that Democratic leaders were using the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program “for human trafficking pedophilia in high places and organ harvesting,” echoing some of the unfounded claims popular in the QAnon movement.

A user asked Greene whether “we get to hang” former President Barack Obama and Clinton over the Iran nuclear deal. “Stage is being set,” Greene replied, according to screenshots published by the outlet. “Players are being put in place. We must be patient. This must be done perfectly or liberal judges would let them off.”

She also suggested in 2019 that Pelosi should be executed for treason for her support of sanctuary city policies in videos posted to Facebook.

“It’s a crime punishable by death is what treason is,” she said in one video. “Nancy Pelosi is guilty of treason.”

Another live video recorded from Pelosi’s office in 2019 showed Greene saying the speaker would “suffer death or she’ll be in prison” for her “treason.” She said in another video later that day that Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., was “just as guilty of treason as Nancy Pelosi.”

Greene also discussed the unhinged “Frazzledrip” conspiracy theory, which is linked to QAnon and the Pizzagate conspiracy theories, which claims that there is a video showing a satanic ritual in which Clinton and former top aide Huma Abedin cut off a child’s face, wore it as a mask and drank her blood.

“Yes familia,” she wrote in response to a user who discussed the video as proof of “another hillary hit,” referring to the long-running right-wing conspiracy theory that Clinton has had her enemies murdered.

“I post things sometimes to see who knows things,” Greene wrote in another comment on the post. “Most the time people don’t. I’m glad to see your comment. I’ve decided it’s time to start doing a lot more videos and engage further in the fight. Most people honestly don’t know so much. The [mainstream media] disinformation warfare has won for too long!”

Earlier this month, Media Matters surfaced comments in which Greene agreed that the Parkland school shooting, which killed 17 people, was a “false flag” event.

“I am told that Nancy Pelosi tells Hillary Clinton several times a month that ‘we need another school shooting’ in order to persuade the public to want strict gun control,” she wrote in 2018.

In another post, a user alleged that former Broward County sheriff’s deputy Scot Peterson, who failed to enter the school during the shooting, received a retirement pension as a “payoff to keep his mouth shut since it was a false flag planned shooting.” Greene replied: “Exactly.”

“Paid to do what he did and keep his mouth shut!” she wrote in another comment.

Fred Guttenberg, the father of slain 14-year-old Parkland victim Jaime Guttenberg, resurfaced a video on Wednesday that was recorded in 2019 showing Greene heckling Parkland survivor David Hogg while he was on his way to testify before Congress.

Media Matters also flagged posts in which Greene appears to agree that the 9/11 attacks were perpetrated by the U.S. government and falsely claims there was no evidence that a plane crashed into the Pentagon on that day.

Greene, who has only been in Congress a few weeks, also pushed Trump’s conspiracy theory that the election was stolen despite zero evidence and referred to Jan. 6 as “our 1776 moment.” Days after the deadly Capitol attack, she used her Twitter account to call Democrats “the enemies of the American people” and vowed that “they will be held accountable.”

Twitter last week temporarily suspended her account after she posted a video in which she continued to push the unfounded stolen-election conspiracy theory, but has since reinstated her.

Despite calls from Democrats and gun control groups for Greene to resign, she is set to join the House Education and Labor Committee, as well as the Budget Committee. It’s unclear whether the Republican Party will withdraw either committee assignment after McCarthy’s “conversation.” McCarthy previously said he had a talk with Greene after she claimed to have filed articles of impeachment against President Joe Biden days after he took office, based on debunked conspiracy theories about Biden’s involvement in his son Hunter’s overseas business dealings.

Greene, who says she condemns all violence, has faced calls to resign since days after he was sworn in.

“You believe in #QAnon. A batshit crazy conspiracy,” Rep. Jimmy Gomez, D-Calif., wrote days after QAnon adherents played a major role in the Capitol riot. “You have no credibility. You’re unfit for public office. Resign.”

Gomez said on Wednesday that he will introduce a resolution to “investigate and expel” Greene.

My grandfather survived the Holocaust. Here’s what his story tells me about today

I didn’t grow up belonging to a synagogue, but my grandfather, Ludwig Joseph, was a Holocaust survivor. Technically, he didn’t grow up entirely Jewish either. He was, according to the Nuremberg Laws, a “Mischling,” which was the slur used in Nazi Germany to describe people of mixed Jewish descent. His mother was a Protestant; his father was Jewish. They lived in Germany, a country they loved, and one in which the unimaginable happened and took everything from them. My grandfather’s story is one of miracles and resilience, but it’s also one of what happens when antisemitism and white supremacy are tolerated and even amplified.

On January 20, 2021, President Joe Biden officially became the 46th president of the United States. I teared up on my burnt-orange couch in Oakland watching him say “and at this hour, my friends, democracy has prevailed.” Just two weeks before I, like many Americans, watched a starkly different scene unravel on those same steps. An angry mob full of Donald Trump supporters attacked the Capitol and tried to stop Biden from becoming president. The people who attacked the Capitol, like the guy in a Camp Auschwitz” hoodie or the men in vests adorned with far-right symbols, didn’t want democracy to prevail. They wanted a man who refused to denounce white supremacists, and who approved of how Kim Jong Un treats North Koreans, to prevail.

Historians will surely study the Trump presidency for decades to come. I believe their analyses, refined by the gift of hindsight, will show with more certainty just how close America came to becoming an authoritarian regime. There have been many times throughout the Trump presidency that I paused to reflect on my grandfather’s life in Nazi Germany. I wondered if this was how it was in the beginning for him; a time of red flags minimized by complicity and disbelief. Was the breaking point more obvious during the build up of Nazi Germany, or was it more subtle? Ultimately, my grandfather’s immediate family didn’t leave, and they suffered for it. 

He passed away in 1997, when I was eight years old. Like many Holocaust survivors, he rarely spoke about that time of his life. And even if he did, I was too young at the time to fully comprehend his story. So to find answers, I read an article he wrote and rewatched a three-hour interview he did with the University of Southern California’s Shoah Foundation in 1996. Some historical details might be inaccurate, given the nature of trauma and memory, but I did my best to fact check what I could when reconstructing his story. What I learned is that by the time the situation became clearly dangerous for my family, it was too difficult to leave. The state of fear shifted to survival too fast. What kept them from taking action before that point? They just couldn’t fathom the state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews could happen to them, in their own country. 

* * *

Ludwig Joseph was born to Hertha Sommerfeld and Ernst Dieter Joseph on February 24, 1927. He grew up privileged in the bustling and exciting metropolis of Berlin. His father, Ernst, was an orthopedic surgeon and co-owned his practice with two other Jewish physicians. Hertha was a Protestant. She stayed at home and took care of my grandfather, and a couple years later she had her second son. The family had a governess, private driver, and a vacation home in the mountains, which was later occupied by Nazi officers. Life was good in the beginning, my grandfather said. Even though the Nazi party was slowly gaining power in Germany, nobody at the time could have predicted the horrific events to come.

“There was always an undercurrent of antisemitism; maybe it wasn’t an undercurrent, maybe it was more obvious,” my grandfather explained. He was too young to truly recognize and understand it, but in 1996, he recalled a story his mother told him about his father and his uncle before World War II officially started. They were on a “pleasure ride,” driving around Berlin, some time between 1929 and 1931. Their driver accidentally took a wrong turn on the highway and got lost. They stopped to ask for directions from farmers working nearby, who came over to the window. But a quick look at Ernst and his brother stopped them. “Jews,” they said, and walked away. They didn’t want to help them because they were Jewish.

In 1933, Adolf Hitler was named chancellor of Germany; Germans who upheld and agreed with these antisemitic acts, like those farmers, officially had a leader to follow. The same year Ernst received an earth-shattering letter from the Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Ärztebund (the Nazi government’s medical association) telling him that he could no longer own his practice. This was my family’s lifeline, and a major source of pride; his thriving practice wasn’t an easy one to give up. It was his entire livelihood. Ernst and Hertha put their heads together to find the best solution for their family — one that could retain some sense of normalcy for their children. They decided to divorce, and hand over the practice to Hertha. Technically, since she was Protestant and then registered as an “Aryan,” she could run the practice, but she couldn’t be married to a Jewish man. She also had to co-own it with a Nazi official. My great-grandparents lived apart to make it look like they were really divorced, and went through with the paperwork, but their love was far from over.

Of course, this terrified Hertha. At this point she wanted to leave Germany. Her brother, a pacifist and writer, warned them to leave too. My grandfather said he remembered his mother saying she was afraid. “A government that has authority that is capable of making them divorce because they were Jewish, what would be their next step?” he said. “This was all leading up to a very frightening course of events.” But his father wasn’t scared. According to a story that his mother told him, they were listening to one of Hitler’s “ramblings” on the radio one night. “Ernst would say ‘That man is an idiot, ‘That’s impossible’ [or] ‘He’s kidding,'” Hertha told my grandfather. Arno, Hertha’s brother, looked at Ernst and told him to leave. Take your family, transfer all your money and go to Switzerland, he said. “But my father did not believe that this could happen.”

My grandfather estimated that a year after Ernst got his license taken away from him, it was reinstated with segregationist stipulations. He had to wear a Jewish badge on his doctor’s coat and could only treat Jewish patients. But Ernst’s brother suffered too much from the degradation and humiliation already. He became despondent, my grandfather said, and engulfed in so much despair that he took his own life. His wife and children moved to Switzerland. A couple years later, in 1937, Ernst died from natural causes. “He died not knowing what terrible things would happen had he lived,” my grandfather said, almost grateful that he didn’t.

In 1938, my grandfather went to the German equivalent of high school. At this time, he was still allowed to legally attend school, but all students had to register whether they were Jewish, Aryan or half-Jewish. In the early years of the Nazi regime, he hadn’t faced much antisemitism from other kids, he said, but that changed as he got older and with the rise of Hitler’s Youth group, which became compulsory in 1936.

In 1942, another Nazi regulation stated that anyone who was half-Jewish could no longer attend high school, or any school. My grandfather remembered this day, and when the principal called him down to the office to deliver the news. “How could you choose a profession for the rest of your life?” he asked the principal, wondering what his future held at 15. “You can’t,” the principal told him. My grandfather noted that he felt the principal “honestly regretted” having to tell him that news. In some ways, my grandfather believed that it was for the best, as school had become increasingly unpleasant for him. “I wanted to learn and benefit as much as I could from an education, but it was almost made impossible,” he said. On Wednesdays, all the members of the Hitler Youth group would wear their brown shorts and swastikas to school, and on these days, his classmates felt especially emboldened to discriminate. “My English teacher asked me to read my homework and they would say ‘Shut up Jew, sit down’,” he recalled. “‘We don’t want to hear you.” His English teacher did nothing to stop it.

His mother tried to find different schools that would take him. A Jesuit school almost did, but ultimately refused because they were scared of potential consequences. His mother hired a private teacher to teach him shorthand and typing in secret. In the winter months, he had to sneak into this teacher’s apartment; it was his last grasp to continue his education. “This man took a very strong risk, I don’t remember his name, but I will always be grateful for him,” he remembered. At the same time, he held a fake job at an insurance company, to make it look like he was working, because all Germans had to work. His employer was a friend of his uncle’s, and he was trying to build another kind of insurance. “So he could say ‘I helped someone,'” my grandfather said. “A lot of people tried to build this kind of insurance for themselves.” 

By this time, his mother wanted to flee Germany, but now it was too late. The consequences of getting caught outweighed, they believed, the consequences of staying. They knew the precariousness of their situation. “I knew that our situation was pretty bad, almost hopeless, and everyday that we survived that was another day gained in our lives,” he said. In 1944, he received a letter requiring him to report to Berlin’s Steglitzer railroad terminal which would take him to the “Zwangsarbeitslager,” a forced-labor camp called Lager Zerbst. The farewell was a tearful one, as his mother, uncle and aunt tried to “look brave” on a cold November day. They didn’t know if they’d see each other again.

My grandfather ended up at a labor camp 200 miles southwest of Berlin that was part of a military base for a fighter squadron of the Luftwaffe. For the next six months, he worked seven days a week from 7 a.m to 6 p.m., and slept on a makeshift straw mattress on the floor in a barrack with 10 other men on bunk beds. Unlike in other concentration camps, he wasn’t tattooed or made to wear a striped uniform. But he was told most days that if he didn’t want to do the work — pouring concrete, schlepping massive machinery, and laying bricks — that he would go to a place “worse than this.”

At the time, not much was known about what was happening at concentration camps like Auschwitz or Dachau. There were “whispers,” he said, and they had an idea that they were “pretty sinister.” But the horrors of the Holocaust weren’t entirely realized until the Allies liberated camps across the Nazi-occupied Europe in 1945. The SS guard who visited weekly didn’t fail to provide hints to my grandfather and his fellow prisoners, though. “Your work is not buying you time to stay alive, because all Germans classified as half Jews will be killed soon under the final solution of the Jewish question under the Nuremberg Laws,” he’d say. This resulted in an unspoken “passive resistance” among prisoners, including my grandfather and those he referred to as his comrades. “People appeared to either be acting dumb or clumsy, but there was a very orchestrated effort to undermine the building of that airfield,” he said. It was in the name of survival, especially as some men became sick and died from lack of medical attention.

On April 14, 1945, artillery fires brightened the sky. That same day during morning roll call, they were told that they were going to be moved to a new camp in Bavaria, the only part of Germany still unoccupied by Allied troops. But around noon, U.S. bombers started an air raid on the camp and all bets were off. The guards of the camp got distracted trying to salvage furniture and their homes, which is when he noticed many of his comrades disappearing into a nearby forest. Crawling through the high weeds between the camp and the forest, he ran for his life once he and a friend reached the forest. The SS guards from the camp eventually caught on to what was happening and rode their motorcycles into the forest and tried to recapture them. An unexpected sneeze or a cough could have cost him his life as he hid in a furrow under thick brush. Once they heard the motorcycles leave, they walked four miles to a nearby town called Lindau. As they emerged from the forest, they were greeted by a farmer couple. At first, he worried they’d turn him in, but right away they gave him a plain coat and wished him well, congratulating him on his freedom.

For the next six months, he lived underground with a friend in Berlin until the Russians captured the city. Then, together, they hitchhiked to Munich, where he reunited with his family. After the war, he worked as a reporter for Die Neue Zeitung, a German daily newspaper published by the U.S. Army in 1945. In 1951, he emigrated to the United States. Germany never felt the same for him.

The Holocaust as we remember it today, the concentration camps and mass murder of six million Jews, didn’t happen overnight. It was the culmination of antisemitism tolerated by the public, emboldened by racist laws and an authoritarian leader, which turned into state-sanctioned violence, and eventually what Nazi leaders called “the Final Solution” over the course of nearly two decades. Hitler had promised that once he was in power, his foremost task would be the “annihilation of the Jews.” Historians don’t know exactly when he decided to murder European Jews in gas chambers; some suspect it was around 1941— eight years after my great-grandfather was told he couldn’t own his medical practice anymore because he was Jewish, and nearly ten years after a farmer refused to give his driver directions because he was Jewish.

* * *

My grandfather visited Germany often to see family after he moved to the United States, but admitted he had uneasy feelings when he did. “I can’t forget these times — the fear, the persecution and the humiliation,” he said in 1996. “And a lot of times when I’m traveling to see my brother in Germany I feel that the people I see of my generation, I wonder ‘What were they doing between 1933 and 1945?'”

In 1996, when my grandfather was interviewed by the USC Shoah Foundation, his final statement warned that the we must never let Holocaust denial go unchallenged.

“We would do a great injustice to all those millions of people, our brothers and sisters who were murdered in the concentration camps,” he said. “We must continue to go on, maybe some of us can forgive, but nobody can ever forget what happened to us.”

In 2014, a survey estimated that only 54 percent of the world’s population has heard of the Holocaust. It’s troubling to think about those who don’t believe the Holocaust happened, or who believe that the details of it have been overhyped, or are unaware of the depth of cruelty that happened less than 100 years ago. Not only does this do a great disservice to the memory of Holocaust survivors, like my grandfather said, but it also furthers the belief that such an atrocity could not repeat itself today. Democracy may have prevailed in this moment in American history, but that doesn’t mean we can stop fighting the forces of white supremacy and hate. There’s too much at stake.

Why Senate Republicans are still playing defense for Donald Trump

I believe all the reports that say Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., loathes former president Donald Trump with every fiber of his being. Apparently, he hasn’t spoken to him since the election and has made it clear to everyone who knows him that he would love to see Trump just retire to Mar-a-Lago never to be heard from again. He’s anything but a Trump true believer.

But Mitch McConnell believes in power. As he cast about trying to get a sense of where Republicans are in the wake of Trump’s disastrous performance since the election and the incitement of a violent insurrection on January 6th, he floated trial balloons about supporting impeachment and made some critical speeches. But he never had any intention of allowing Donald Trump to be convicted in a Senate trial, even if it were possible. How do we know this? As The Atlantic’s James Fallows tweeted:

-On January 13, when House voted for impeachment, McConnell said Senate could not consider it *until* Trump had left office. -From Jan 20 onward, McConnell has said Senate should not consider it *because* Trump has left office.

On Tuesday, when Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky, called for a vote on the question of whether impeaching a president after he was out of office was constitutional, Mitch McConnell and with 44 other Republicans signaled that they believe it is not. That’s why he delayed the trial. A year ago, Republicans argued against Trump’s first impeachment because the country was too close to an election.

Similarly, McConnell’s lugubrious paean to Senatorial comity as he held the Senate hostage demanding that Democrats agree not to eliminate the filibuster is a monument to shameless hypocrisy, as Fallows also demonstrates:

McConnell himself eliminated the filibuster for judicial confirmations and had no problem with it for regular legislation because they didn’t really legislate during Trump’s term. Republicans rammed through their massive corporate tax giveaway and a failed Obamacare repeal through the Senate’s budget reconciliation process because budget bills can’t be filibustered. So all McConnell did was kill legislation that passed the House and confirm federal judges on an assembly line. Republicans don’t really have a legislative agenda anymore. They are a purely obstructionist congressional party that depends entirely on judicial power to roll back existing programs and executive power to enact policy.

In any case, it’s clear that we don’t have to hold our breath wondering if the newly enlightened Mitch McConnell will join hands with the sane people to save the country from Trump’s radical mob. The idea was always laughable. What’s happening instead is a concerted effort on the part of the entire GOP establishment to cleanse Donald Trump of any responsibility for what he did so that he might emerge once again as the hero they’ve all been waiting for. They simply cannot quit him.

Take for instance Rand Paul’s speech on Tuesday, a tour de force of brazen bad faith.

“Impeachment is for removal from office, and the accused here has already left office — a trial would drag our great country down into the gutter of rancor and vitriol, the likes of which has never been seen in our nation’s history,” the Kentucky Republican thundered.

I’m pretty sure we saw the likes of that on January 6th when the greatest sore loser in history provoked an angry mob into storming the Capitol, chanting “hang Mike Pence” and “Nancy Pelosi, we’re coming for you!” Frankly, this country was dragged into the gutter of rancor and vitriol the day Donald Trump was elected president in 2016.

Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who has apparently taken a bet from someone that he can be even more sycophantic toward Trump than South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, characterized holding Trump accountable for siccing an angry mob on Congress to stop the certification of the electoral college as simply a “show” trial:

Again, if you’re talking about shows and vengeance, it’s pretty rich to try to misdirect people into believing it’s the impeachment rather than the events of January 6th in which Donald Trump staged a huge rally in D.C. on the day Congress was scheduled to certify Joe Biden’s win and told them he was going to lead them to the Capitol to stop the count.

Ted Cruz, one of the insurrectionist senators who backed Trump’s baseless claims of election irregularities in swing states Trump lost, unctuously declared that we now need to move on:

This from the man who flogged the Benghazi pseudo-scandal for years.

And then we have former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley making an earnest appeal to leave poor Trump alone:

“The actions of the president post-Election Day were not great. What happened on January 6 was not great. Does he deserve to be impeached, absolutely not … I don’t even think there’s a basis for impeachment. Now they’re going to turn around and bring about impeachment yet they say they’re for unity. I mean at some point give the man a break. I mean move on…

This is deja vu all over again. Every time Trump did something outrageously beyond the pale, there would be a flurry of hand wringing and pearl-clutching by Republicans followed almost immediately by excuses and deflecting blame once they got some blowback from the right-wing media and Trump’s supporters. The pattern was set back in the 2016 campaign when news of the Access Hollywood tape was published and half the GOP declared it was the last straw, claiming they could never look their children in the eye again if they supported such a crude, indecent man. Some said he should step aside for Mike Pence or even declared their intention to vote for Hillary Clinton. Mitch McConnell said that he strongly believed “Trump needs to apologize directly to women and girls everywhere, and take full responsibility for the utter lack of respect for women shown in his comments on that tape.”

He did not. And before long, the GOP response was more along the lines of Dr. Ben Carson’s, who claimed the Democrats had probably had the tapes for some time and had dropped them to distract attention from Wikileaks emails that supposedly said Hillary Clinton wanted “open borders.” (Those Wikileaks emails were actually released immediately after the Access Hollywood tape came out.)

As we know, all but a small handful of Republicans fell in lockstep with him shortly thereafter until the next time he did something abhorrent. A few apostates rebelled and ended up being chased out of politics for it but before long, most of them stopped even pretending to have any integrity or morals and the few that still felt compelled to say something when he went off the rails usually just made a half-hearted gesture and then went along.

And as usual, it appears this time that for most of the senators, even those who proclaimed their dismay at the violent mob that defiled the Capitol, their vote to fulfill their oath and certify the election took all the energy they could muster to protect our democracy. On Tuesday, only five Republicans managed to reject Rand Paul’s fatuous claim that the impeachment is unconstitutional, the vast majority signaling once again that Donald Trump can do no wrong.