“I know that many people consider Trump’s typical speech pattern to just be hyperbole. While it is…”

Thursday, October 27th, 2016

“I know that many people consider Trump’s typical speech pattern to just be hyperbole. While it is certainly that, I am not as generous in my interpretation. His speech is undeniably scattered, imprecise, absolute, and simplistic. The most parsimonious interpretation of this fact is that his thoughts are scattered, imprecise, absolute, and simplistic.”

Steven Novella, Do Wind Mills “Kill All the Birds?”

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tolkienteacher: micdotcom: Obama to Trump: “Stop…

Wednesday, October 19th, 2016

tolkienteacher:

micdotcom:

Obama to Trump: “Stop whining”

Donald Trump has stepped up his accusations that the election will be “rigged,” and in response President Obama told him to “stop whining” and focus on getting votes. Speaking at a press conference Tuesday, Obama continued by explaining what he’d expect of Hillary Clinton if Trump won.

I shall miss this man so much.

Trump’s actually been uncharacteristically strategic at not taking the bait (so far) either from the Michelle speech in New Hampshire and now this speech from Barack yesterday. In both cases the Obamas have gone out of their way to tweak him personally. Not that they’ve said anything untrue or unjustified. But just that they’ve made a point of putting themselves out there in a high-profile way calling him out with language guaranteed to push his buttons.

As with Alicia Machado, it’s clearly designed to get him to lash out, to squander his opportunity to attack Hillary by instead filling news cycles with attacks on people who are a) sympathetic and/or popular and b) not Hillary. The internal struggle inside the Trump campaign to keep him from going off over the last few days must have been intense.

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Source

Tuesday, October 11th, 2016

Source

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anonsally replied to your photoset:The whole thread is worth reading, if you can…I don’t…

Sunday, October 9th, 2016

I don’t think I can read it, but I’m glad someone broke down what he said.

There’s that old truism of political scandal that it’s not the crime [that’s so bad]; it’s the cover-up.

That runs the risk of sounding like I’m minimizing the badness of the crime (in this case, of Trump’s thoroughly gross conversation on the bus with Billy Bush, and the spooky way they both reverted to smarmy rape-culture-laced flirtation – if you can call it that – with actress Arianne Zucker when they got off). I’m not trying to minimize that. But what the tweetstorm from Leah McElrath does is to pick apart Trump’s two public “apologies” and show how they’re textbook abuser-talk.

It’s not like any of this is new information, and there’s the whole other thing of why it was this particular transgression that made (some) of the mainstream politicians who’ve been supporting Trump get scared enough to bolt. But it just makes it so obvious what’s going on when you subject Trump’s attempt to deal with the video’s fallout to this kind of scrutiny.

I’m now going back to trying my hardest not to mention that vile person or the deeply disturbing way that a large swath of my country’s ostensible leaders have minimized and normalized his awfulness in pursuit of their own selfish ends. Thank you (and anyone else who’s still around in spite of my descending into this) for your patience while I work through my feelings.

I mean for this blog to be a happy place. Rededicating myself to that.

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The whole thread is worth reading, if you can manage it.

Sunday, October 9th, 2016

The whole thread is worth reading, if you can manage it.

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Trump and the Convention and Where We Go From Here – Whatever

Friday, July 22nd, 2016

Trump and the Convention and Where We Go From Here – Whatever:

I like John Scalzi’s political commentary a lot. I don’t see much to disagree with here.

To my followers, most of whom are younger than me, I want to say something. I’m going to try not to say it too often, but I think it’s worth getting on the record for whatever teency amount of good it might do.

Please vote.

As a group, your political views are much better than those of fogeys like me (not me in particular, necessarily, but my age/race/gender cohort, who embarrassingly are by far the most likely to be voting Trump). It gives me hope for the future that so many of you (really, an overwhelming majority of you) see through his shtick.

The problem is that too few of you actually vote. As you age more and more of you eventually will, but for now, with your lives full of more pressing concerns than endorsing a crufty old political system, too few of you do.

We (all of us; fogeys, millennials, everyone in between) need to make an effort this time. It isn’t an ordinary election. Trump’s victory or loss, and the size of that victory or loss, will have effects that echo down through the rest of our lives. You’ll look back on this election when you’re gray and embarrassing. You’ll look back in pride or regret, but I guarantee you’ll look back.

Future you wants you to play your part.

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Donald Trump’s Ghostwriter Tells All

Monday, July 18th, 2016

Donald Trump’s Ghostwriter Tells All:

longform:

Writing The Art of the Deal made Tony Schwartz rich. He still regrets it.

Jane Mayer is one of my favorite writers on national politics. Her account of Tony Schwartz’s experience of ghostwriting Trump’s book is fascinating and horrifying.

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“What is genuinely alarming is the urge, however human it may be, to normalize the abnormal by…”

Saturday, July 16th, 2016

What is genuinely alarming is the urge, however human it may be, to normalize the abnormal by turning toward emotions and attitudes that are familiar. To their great credit, the editors of most of the leading conservative publications in America have recognized Trump for what he is, and have opposed his rise to power. Yet the habit of hatred is so ingrained in their psyches that even those who recognize at some level that Trump is a horror, when given the dangling bait of another chance to hate Hillary still leap at it, insisting on her “criminality” at the very moment when it’s officially rejected, and attempting to equate this normal politician with an abnormal threat to political life itself. They do this, in part, to placate their readership. In the so-called mainstream (call it liberal) media, meanwhile, the election is treated with blithe inconsequence, as another occasion for strategy-weighing. The Times, to take one example, ran a front-page analysis criticizing Trump for being insufficiently able to exploit a political opening given by the investigation into Clinton’s e-mail, with the complaint seeming to be that Trump just isn’t clever enough to give us a good fight—to be the fun opponent we want. If only he had some more skill at this! While the habits of hatred get the better of the right, the habits of self-approval through the fiction of being above it all contaminate the center.

A certain number of the disengaged insist that Trump isn’t really as bad as all that. And there may indeed be another universe in which Donald Trump is one more blowhard billionaire with mixed-up politics but a basically benevolent heart, a Ross Perot type, or perhaps more like Arnold Schwarzenegger, preaching some confused combination of populism and self-help and doomed to flounder when he comes to power. This would not be the worst thing imaginable. Unfortunately, that universe is not this one. Trump is unstable, a liar, narcissistic, contemptuous of the basic norms of political life, and deeply embedded among the most paranoid and irrational of conspiracy theorists. There may indeed be a pathos to his followers’ dreams of some populist rescue for their plights. But he did not come to political attention as a “populist”; he came to politics as a racist, a proponent of birtherism.

As I have written before, to call him a fascist of some variety is simply to use a historical label that fits. The arguments about whether he meets every point in some static fascism matrix show a misunderstanding of what that ideology involves. It is the essence of fascism to have no single fixed form—an attenuated form of nationalism in its basic nature, it naturally takes on the colors and practices of each nation it infects. In Italy, it is bombastic and neoclassical in form; in Spain, Catholic and religious; in Germany, violent and romantic. It took forms still crazier and more feverishly sinister, if one can imagine, in Romania, whereas under Oswald Mosley, in England, its manner was predictably paternalistic and aristocratic. It is no surprise that the American face of fascism would take on the forms of celebrity television and the casino greeter’s come-on, since that is as much our symbolic scene as nostalgic re-creations of Roman splendors once were Italy’s.

What all forms of fascism have in common is the glorification of the nation, and the exaggeration of its humiliations, with violence promised to its enemies, at home and abroad; the worship of power wherever it appears and whoever holds it; contempt for the rule of law and for reason; unashamed employment of repeated lies as a rhetorical strategy; and a promise of vengeance for those who feel themselves disempowered by history. It promises to turn back time and take no prisoners. That it can appeal to those who do not understand its consequences is doubtless true. But the first job of those who do understand is to state what those consequences invariably are. Those who think that the underlying institutions of American government are immunized against it fail to understand history. In every historical situation where a leader of Trump’s kind comes to power, normal safeguards collapse. Ours are older and therefore stronger? Watching the rapid collapse of the Republican Party is not an encouraging rehearsal. Donald Trump has a chance to seize power.

Hillary Clinton is an ordinary liberal politician. She has her faults, easily described, often documented—though, for the most part, the worst accusations against her have turned out to be fiction. No reasonable person, no matter how opposed to her politics, can believe for a second that Clinton’s accession to power would be a threat to the Constitution or the continuation of American democracy. No reasonable person can believe that Trump’s accession to power would not be.

Being Honest About Trump – The New Yorker
(via dendroica)

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“This isn’t getting a lot of attention. But it should. Everybody took note when Donald Trump…”

Wednesday, July 13th, 2016

This isn’t getting a lot of attention. But it should. Everybody took note when Donald Trump repeatedly claimed that American Muslims across the river in New Jersey celebrated and cheered as the Twin Towers fell on 9/11 – an entirely fabricated claim. Last night on Bill O’Reilly’s show and then separately at a rally in Westfield, Indiana he did something very similar and in so doing cemented his status as an impulsive propagator of race-hatred and violence…

Trump claimed that people – “somebody” – called for a moment of silence for mass killer Micah Johnson, the now deceased mass shooter who killed five police officers in Dallas on Thursday night. There is no evidence this ever happened. Searches of the web and social media showed no evidence. Even Trump’s campaign co-chair said today that he can’t come up with any evidence that it happened. As in the case of the celebrations over the fall of the twin towers, even to say there’s ‘no evidence’ understates the matter. This didn’t happen. Trump made it up.

The language is important: “When somebody called for a moment of silence to this maniac that shot the five police, you just see what’s going on. It’s a very, very sad situation.”

Then later at the Indiana rally: “The other night you had 11 cities potentially in a blow-up stage. Marches all over the United States—and tough marches. Anger. Hatred. Hatred! Started by a maniac! And some people ask for a moment of silence for him. For the killer!”

A would-be strong man, an authoritarian personality, isn’t just against disorder and violence. They need disorder and violence. That is their raison d’etre, it is the problem that they are purportedly there to solve…

We’re used to so much nonsense and so many combustible tirades from Trump that we become partly inured to them. We also don’t slow down and look at precisely what he’s saying. What he’s saying here is that millions of African-Americans are on the streets inspired by and protesting on behalf of a mass murderer of white cops.

This is not simply false. It is the kind of wild racist incitement that puts whole societies in danger. And this man wants to be president.

There’s no question these are very volatile times. So many of us saw the news Friday that a black man murdered five white police officers over anger at police harassment of black men. Beyond the horror of the act itself, those are the kinds of horrific, societal-fabric-tearing events that can pull our whole country apart and press us toward the abyss. But that hasn’t happened.

There have continued to be protests. There’s no reason why there should not be. But every Black Lives Matter leader of any note has spoken clearly denouncing Johnson’s atrocity. Indeed, if anything the continuing protests have been tempered calls for an end to violence on all sides. For all the horror, the outrage has spawned moments of bridge-building, unity. So these are combustible times. But they’re not the times Trump is describing. Indeed, what Trump said in the passage above is something verging on the notorious “big lie”. Micah Johnson didn’t inspire any marches. No one is marching on his behalf. Even the truly radical and potentially violent black nationalist fringe groups had apparently shunned him even before the shooting. No one called for a moment of silence on Johnson’s behalf or honored him in any way. This is just an up is down straight up lie served up for the purpose of stoking fear, menace and race hate.

These are the words – the big lies rumbling the ground for some sort of apocalyptic race war – of a dangerous authoritarian personality who is either personally deeply imbued with racist rage or cynically uses that animus and race hatred to achieve political ends. In either case, they are the words of a deeply dangerous individual the likes of whom has seldom been so close to achieving executive power.

Josh Marshall, A Propagator of Race Hatred and Violence

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A journalist went to a Donald Trump rally yesterday and came back shocked. Here are his tweets

Saturday, June 18th, 2016

A journalist went to a Donald Trump rally yesterday and came back shocked. Here are his tweets:

Trump isn’t creating this; he’s just tapping into it for his own (sad) purposes. But by tapping into it he reinforces it, amplifies it, and it becomes a kind of pollution of our collective social/political environment.

He’s a ruptured well-head spewing oil with no way to shut it off. Eventually (November?) the flow should stop on its own, but it’s going to take a long time to clean up the beaches.

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imaginarycircus: marc0-p0l0: Donald Trump telling Bernie supporters they’re welcome to support him…

Friday, June 17th, 2016

imaginarycircus:

marc0-p0l0:

Donald Trump telling Bernie supporters they’re welcome to support him feels like the scene where Voldemort declares that Harry Potter is dead and asks if anyone wants to start following him.

And makes Draco hug him.

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