Showing posts with label Trumpocalypse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trumpocalypse. Show all posts

Saturday, March 18, 2017

A Vacation in Spain (1): Return to the Trumpocalypse

“O, wad some Power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as others see us!
It wad frae monie a blunder free us,
An' foolish notion.”
- Robert Burns, "To a Louse"

After almost four weeks traveling - mainly in Spain, I am back in the US.  I did my best to avoid news from the Land of the Trumpocalypse but it was inescapable.  Europeans are looking on in astonishment at Trump's tweets and his ongoing gaffs, outbursts and contradictions.  Nearly everyone we spoke with about the situation in the US was somewhat mystified and/or appalled by Trump's election, rhetoric and executive actions.  A BBC news anchor wondered how the Trump budget was in any way "populist". Spanish newscasters got a kick out of reporting the number of executive actions issued in the short time Trump has been president.

As Trump issued his second travel ban for six Islamic countries and continued blathering about a border wall with Mexico, I saw a "Refugees Welcome" banner on a public building in Madrid while on a city tour bus.  Spain's unemployment rate is among the highest in Europe - hovering around 18%.  Yet here is this huge banner draped atop a public building.  What a contrast to the statements and actions of the leader of the richest nation on the planet!

As in the US, European democracies are also under threat from the far right, complete with anti-immigrant and Islamophobic rhetoric.  Britain's exit from the European Union was partly due to the far-right's ability to play on those fears.  Trump's election in November and his right-wing cabinet and advisers seemed to be yet another victory for this nationalist/nativist "populism". 

Finally, though, some good news for democracy came out of the Netherlands.  Voters there rejected the far-right in the national election on Wednesday March 15.  "Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte won reelection by a wide margin on Wednesday, defeating anti-Islam and Euroskeptic candidate Geert Wilders in a vote that was seen across Europe as a crucial test of democratic liberalism." (Christian Science Monitor, March 16)  The Dutch put a finger in the dyke, so to speak, at least for now....France, Germany and Italy have national elections in the coming months and far-right politicians are trying to gain more power.

Now back home, I wonder how long it will take for working-class Trump supporters to realize how little is being done for them.  Tax breaks for the wealthiest, increased funding for the obscenely bloated defense budget, and drastic cuts in domestic spending, environmental programs and foreign aid: this first Trump budget moves the country further down the path of inequality.  Hardly what anyone would call populist.  Tim Murphy in a Mother Jones article notes the ways Donald Trump's budget screws over the people who elected him.

Or does Trump and his administration just have to toss out the occasional red meat of anti-immigrant, Islamophobic rhetoric, mix in accusations against our first black president, and demean Obama's policies to keep their allegiance?

On the last point, I wish a Republican voter or Congressman would tell me how a health care plan that almost immediately deprives 14 million Americans of their health insurance while simultaneously providing a huge tax break for couples making over $250,000/yr is better than Obamacare.  Even those on the right are scratching their heads over the Republican health care plan.

In an interview with Paul Ryan, Fox News political commentator Tucker Carlson "suggested that Ryan was missing the big picture.  'The overview here is that all the wealth basically in the last 10 years has stuck to the top end. That’s one of the reasons we have had all this political turmoil, as you know,' Carlson said. 'So, it’s kind of a hard sell to say, ‘We are going repeal Obamacare, but we are going to send more money to the people who have gotten the richest over the last 10 years.’ That’s what this does, no? I am not a leftist; that’s just true.' ” (Salon, Mar 9)

Health care protests are springing up across the country but the House is too overwhelmingly Republican for the protests to stop the health care plan from passing.  At least 23 representatives would have to defect against what has been the primary rallying call for the party's base for the past seven years. Assuming Republicans get their health plan through the House, it will then be up to Senate Democrats to stop it.  Even the most outrageous of Trump's cabinet appointees were approved by the Senate and there is no reason to think that 3 or more Republican Senators would vote against the health bill. Democrats will need to filibuster it.

The courts are keeping Trump within the bounds of the Constitution - most recently by throwing his own words back at him. "In placing a temporary restraining order on the revised version of a Trump executive order restricting entry from Muslim majority countries, a federal judge in Hawaii cited quotes from several TV and print interviews of Trump and his surrogates.  'These plainly-worded statements, made in the months leading up to and contemporaneous with the signing of the Executive Order, and, in many cases, by the Executive himself, betray the Executive Order’s stated purpose,' wrote District Judge Derrick Watson.  A second federal judge in Maryland made a similar case on Thursday in a second restraining order." (Time, March 16)

So thank the founding fathers for the checks and balances.  We may yet be able to avoid becoming an autocracy within the next four years.






Friday, January 27, 2017

Trumpocalypse Week One: Alternate Reality

Facts and the truth are not partisan. They are the bedrock of our democracy. And you are either with them, with us, with our Constitution, our history, and the future of our nation, or you are against it. 


It's a beautiful thing, the destruction of words.


If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. 
- Joseph Goebbels

It's been just one week since the inauguration of the man who, in the words of The Atlantic magazine,  "might be the most ostentatiously unqualified major-party candidate in the 227-year history of the American presidency."  His first week in office goes a long way towards proving that conjecture.  The ignorance and distorted sense of reality evidenced by Trump and his inner circle are stunning.

The most obvious demonstration of ignorance in Trumpocalypse Week One is the border wall "tariff".  After universal mockery, the 20% tariff was quickly disavowed by the administration as just one of the ideas to build the $15 billion Trump Wall without costing Americans anything.  You learn about how tariffs work in Economics 101: the tariff is passed on to the domestic consumer.  If a consumer buys the products, she pays the price.  Also, the administration seems to have missed the fact that rules that govern world trade prevent a country from unilaterally imposing such a tariff.

Note to the Trump Administration: you cannot make up your own rules...or, for that matter, your own reality.

Trump continues to claim he would have won the popular vote were it not for millions of illegal votes.  This totally unsubstantiated statement is being disavowed even by Republicans.

Trump says the Park Service understated attendance at his inauguration.  But photos and Metro fare figures don't lie.  You are starting your term with a 36% approval rating.  Get over it.

The "alternative facts" comment of senior Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway makes us wonder if we have fallen into a time warp and landed in George Orwell's 1984. (Not coincidentally, that book hit the number one spot at amazon.com this week.)

These comments may seem trivial but the "illegal voters" lie can have some serious consequences for American democracy - especially in this era of disenfranchisement and voter suppression. The comments come at a time when we will soon have an Attorney General who thinks the Voting Rights Act is intrusive and who prosecuted and lost a "voter fraud" case against African-American civil rights activists in 1985.

As if this weren't bad enough, the Washington Post reports today: "In a private meeting with congressional Republicans this week, Vice President Pence vowed that the Trump administration would pursue a wide-ranging probe of voting rolls in the United States to examine whether millions of people voted illegally in the 2016 election as President Trump has charged."

What nonsense.  Every study ever made on voter fraud in the United States has found it to be so rare as to be almost non-existent.  Now, the party that has disenfranchised and suppressed millions of voters is undertaking an investigation on voter fraud.  Perhaps they will find "alternative facts" that fit their bizarre take on democracy.

Climate change will, of course, also be "under review" in the administration of Donald "Climate change is a Chinese hoax" Trump.  As the Associated Press reported, the Trump administration is requiring that political appointees review all Environmental Protection Agency studies and data prior to public release,  I guess in search of some "alternative facts."

Rounding out the week:
An entire level of  career senior officials that manage the State Department, its outposts and its people resigned
- Our new ambassador to the UN warned U.S. allies that if they do not support Washington, then she is "taking names" and will respond
The administration ordered that "all contract and grant awards [at the EPA] be temporarily suspended, effective immediately" and imposed a blackout on communicating with the public about taxpayer-funded work at the Agricultural Research Service.

I can't wait 'til Trumpocalypse Week Two.











Monday, December 12, 2016

Trumpocalypse Survival Guide

"Trump won the Presidency by gas light. His rise to power has awakened a force of bigotry by condoning and encouraging hatred, but also by normalizing deception. Civil rights are now on trial, though before we can fight to reassert the march toward equality, we must regain control of the truth."


We are just one month or so away from the inauguration of Donald Trump.   As The Atlantic famously noted in a pre-election-day editorial, Trump "might be the most ostentatiously unqualified major-party candidate in the 227-year history of the American presidency,"


So, on January 20, 2017, with right-wing extremists more dominant than ever and an unqualified, politically-inexperienced businessman and reality TV star leading them, the Republicans will be in control of all three branches of the federal government.  Voting rights, Social Security, Medicare, the Affordable Care Act, the Iran Nuclear Agreement, immigration policy, environmental regulations, labor and consumer protections, social welfare programs such as Medicaid, food stamps, housing assistance, and aid to families with dependent children -  these and many other benefits for the common good are now at risk.  Add to this the empowerment and energizing of hate groups by the 2016 campaigns, and it is easy to conclude that we are in for a rough ride for the next four years.

So how does a progressive, rational person survive the next four years and maybe soften the blow?

1. Protest the Alt-Right's agenda.  Here's one example of what I hope to be many in the coming months:  Hundreds of students at Texas A&M protested against white nationalist/alt-right leader Richard Spencer's visit to the campus.  The Alt-Right is feeling triumphant right now.  We need to show them that the majority of Americans disagree with them and their extremist agenda.

2.  Support organizations that fight hate groups.  The Southern Poverty Law Center is an excellent starting point.

3. Stay informed of Republican efforts to weaken America's social safety net.  While their planned attacks on Obamacare and environmental regulations have been well publicized, some, like their plan to weaken Social Security, are not as well known.  "Josh Marshall [of Talking Points Memo] warns, 'Republicans apparently aren't going to be satisfied with phasing out Medicare. They're going to try to pass huge cuts to Social Security this year too. Not Bush-style partial phaseout but just big, big cuts. And you're out of luck even if you're a current beneficiary."  (Mother Jones, Dec 9)

4. Listen to some good, preferably uplifting, music.  Hell, along with protest marches, folk and rock got me through the '60's.  I guess the difference between then and now is that back then you felt things were going to change for the better.  Now, the election of Donald Trump has shown how divided the country still is and how much a role fear and hate play in our politics.  Fifty years on and we still have a long way to go.



5. Pressure Democratic Senators and Representatives to block the Republicans at every turn.  Let your Democratic congressmen know your support for progressives in leadership positions.  Becoming "Republicans-lite" will not work.

6. Regain control of the truth.  Hold news organizations accountable for reporting fallacious statements and tweets as news.  Fact-check organizations such as Politifact and FactCheck.org, can help.

7.  Act locally.  Support initiatives at the local and state level on gun control, the environment, the death penalty, immigrant protection, and criminal justice reform.

8. Volunteer at organizations that help the more vulnerable members of society.  Contribute more to your favorite charities.  If Republicans slash the governmental safety net as they have threatened, private actions will need to compensate.

9.  Enjoy and share the satirical sketches and posts following in the wake of Trump's election.

Seth Meiers on Trump's Lying His Ass Off 

Steven Colbert on Trump's choice for Secretary of Defense: "A secretary of defense with the name ‘Mad Dog’ does not automatically make me feel safer,..You’ve got a president with no experience of foreign policy with his finger on the button, and the other person in the room is a guy named ‘Mad Dog.’ That’s not a secretary of defense, that’s the sidekick on a morning zoo crew.”




10.  Keep your mind open for reasonable pronouncements from the Trump Administration.  Perhaps it won't be as bad as we imagine.

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Spice Girls and Jon Stewart images are from the OccupyDemocrats Facebook page.  Land of Hope  and Dreams video is from YouTube.