#^d 2019-10-20 #^h Weekend Roundup
Half a week here, after my Midweek Roundup came out on Thursday. Still too exhausted to write an intro.
Some scattered links this week:
Aaron Bady: Jedediah Purdy has an idea that could save us from capitalism and the climate crisis: Interview with Purdy about his latest book, This Land Is Our Land. Article doesn't live up to its premise, not all Purdy's fault, but I've never found his books all that satisfying.
Riley Beggin: Tulsi Gabbard calls Hillary Clinton "the queen of warmongers" in her latest clash with top Democrats. A point which was pretty obvious after Clinton called Gabbard "the favorite of the Russians." Clinton is also still bear-baiting Jill Stein; see Tessa Stuart: Green Party torches Hillary Clinton for claiming Jill Stein is 'totally' a Russian asset. I've seen people attempt to defend Clinton on this (e.g., Charles P Pierce: Hillary Clinton is more than qualified to judge the effectiveness of foreign-influenced candidates), but they're rubbing salt into a still tender wound. Russian interference in 2016 is well established as a fact, but neither explains nor excuses Clinton's loss to Trump, nor does it make Trump unworthy (although lots of other things do) let alone brand him as some kind of Russian stooge. Moreover, such charges appear to have the intent of worsening US-Russian relations, at a time when better relations with Russia would be helpful on many issues. When Clinton attacks Gabbard and Stein as "favorites of the Russians," she's really warning Democratic candidates that Russia is bad and they should repeat her 2016 sabre-rattling mistakes. That the net effect of her attacks has been to increase Gabbard's popularity only underscores how irrelevant Clinton has become. For something much deeper on Gabbard, see Kerry Howley: Tulsi Gabbard had a very strange childhood. [PS: Robert Wright on Clinton's attacks: Virality and virulence. Another valuable Wright post: How the New York Times distorts our view of Syria.]
Max Blumenthal: The US has backed 21 of the 28 'crazy' militias leading Turkey's brutal invasion of northern Syria: "Former and current US officials have slammed the Turkish mercenary force of 'Arab militias' for executing and behading Kurds in northern Syria. New data from Turkey reveals that almost all of these militias were armed and trained in the past by the CIA and Pentagon."
Hannah Brown: Wildfires are raging in Lebanon. Experts say they saw this coming. "Fires are burning across Lebanon during a record heatwave."
Jonathan Chait:
Trump writes unhinged 'legal' letter demanding that CNN pay him money.
'We do that all the time, get over it,' Mulvaney boasts about Ukraine plot. Later: James Downie: Mick Mulvaney tries to clean up his mess, and fails.
Two candidates, two investigations, one deeply flawed agency: Review of James B Stewart's book: Deep State: Trump, the FBI, and the Rule of Law.
Alvin Chang: The man who rigged America's election maps: "How Tom Hofeller shifted the balance of power by taking gerrymandering to the extreme."
William D Cohan: "There is definite hanky-panky going on": The fantastically profitable mystery of the Trump chaos trades: "The president's talk can move markets -- and it's made some futures traders billions. Did they know what he was going to say before he said it?" Related: Jake Johnson: Democrats demand federal investigation of 'suspicious' stock sales linked to Trump's economy-shifting trade war moves. Also: Hey Securities and Exchange Commission, if you are watching. Someone is trading on insider info.
Chas Danner: Ocasio-Cortez credits Sanders for her political awakening at Bernie's comeback rally in Queens.
Warren Davidson: Trump is right: Ending the endless wars starts in Syria. This is a little mealy-mouthed, but not exceptionally so for a House Representative (R-OH): I'd reject "after 9/11, America had a clear cause for war in Afghanistan" and some of the chest-beating about America's military, but this shows that some Republicans are eager to claim the mantel of peace, especially when Democrats cede that ground. Also note: Dhrumil Mehta: Republican voters are largely backing Trump's withdrawal from Syria. Also note: Syria critic Lindsey Graham reverses stance, says Trump's policy could succeed. It's getting really hard to overstate how completely Trump has the Republican Party under his thumb.
Anthony Faiola: Socialism doesn't work? An emerging middle class of Bolivians would beg to differ.
Steve Fraser: Existential threat versus existential crisis: "The Great Depression and the Climate Crisis, New Deals then and now."
Adam Goldman/William K Rashbaum: Review of Russia inquiry grows as FBI witnesses are questioned: After complaining about "witch hunts," Trump and Barr order up one more to their liking.
Fred Hiatt: It's not news that Trump is corrupt. What's new is how he is succeeding in corrupting our government.
Sean Illing:
Capitalism is turning us into addicts: Interview with David T Courtwright, author of The Age of Addiction: How Bad Habits Became Big Business.
How propaganda works in the digital age: Interview with Jason Stanley, author of How Propaganda Works (2015). I've read, and recommend, Stanley later book, How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them.
Christopher Ingraham: For the first time, workers are paying a higher tax rate than investors and owners: "The proximate cause of the shift was Trump's 2017 tax cut, which dramatically slashed taxes on corporate profits and estates."
Sarah Jones: Bernie Sanders hasn't killed identity politics: Maybe not, but he's defined an identity that transcends the usual boxes that Democratic Party proponents of "identity politics" like to tick off, partly because he's revived an old identity "centrist" Democrats have been trying to wash their hands of (the working class), and partly because he has no desire to make those other distinctions.
Ed Kilgore:
Jen Kirby: The UK Parliament just blew up Boris Johnson's Brexit plans: "Parliament just voted the make the prime minister seek a Brexit delay, even if his deal passes." Kirby previously wrote: The UK and EU have a new Brexit agreement. But it's not a done deal yet. More on Brexit:
Riley Beggin: In London, hundreds of thousands demand another chance to vote on Brexit; later: UK leaders insist Brexit will happen by Oct. 31 despite an extension request.
Rowena Mason: Labour seeks new alliance to kill off Boris Johnson's Brexit deal.
Amy Davidson Sorkin: Boris Johnson's bad Saturday and the contradictions of Brexit.
Jeff Klein: Syria, the Kurds, Turkey and the US: Why progressives should not support a new imperial partition in the Middle East.
Anita Kumar: Trump can't stop bragging to foreign leaders about his resorts.
Eric Lach: Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez make a show of force in Queens.
Michael Laris: Messages show Boeing employees knew in 2016 of problems that turned deadly on the 737 Max.
Eric Levitz: Biden's attacks on Medicare for All undermine the entire Democratic agenda.
Eric Lipton: Trump's choice to bring G7 to his own resort would violate conflict-of-interest law, if he weren't President.
Mujib Mashal/Thomas Gibbons-Neff: Civilian casualties reach highest level in Afghan War, UN says.
Aaron David Miller/Eugene Rumer/Richard Sokolsky: What Trump actually gets right about Syria: First paragraph back peddles a bit: "Trump's assessment of the situation [in Syria] is not entirely wrong." Still, their main points are spot on, even if they aren't flattering to the American ego: "The US-Kurdish relationship was never going to last"; "Russia is the key power broker in Syria"; "Assad is here to stay"; "There won't be a second caliphate"; and "Syria is not a vital US interest." Turns out that Miller wrote a book back in 2014 (ergo, pre-Trump): The End of Greatness: Why America Can't Have (and Doesn't Want) Another Great President. From a note on the book: "Americans are adrift in a kind of Presidential Bermuda Triangle suspended between the great presidents we want and the ones we can no longer have. . . . Indeed, greatness is too rare to be relevant in our current politics, and driven as it is by nation-encumbering crises, too dangerous to be desirable." Good thing he got this book written before Trump came around, else he would have had to incorporate a twist too deranged to anticipate: a "stable genius" with "unmatched wisdom" who blundered his way into crisis only to find himself totally lacking in whatever it takes for "greatness" to emerge.
Ally Mutnick: Why Republicans should be worried about their chances of retaking the House.
Adam K Raymond: World's least self aware person, Donald Trump Jr, attacks Bidens for nepotism.
Jody Rosen: Staring down Donald Trump, the same elephant in every room.
We are not "all Greta Thunberg," but all of us know what it's like to be ambushed by Donald Trump. He pops up on your social media feed with hateful words and impulsive policy announcements. He flickers on TV screens in bus terminals and airport departure lounges, forever looming over your shoulder. He barges unbidden into your dreams. It is a condition of being alive in America in 2019. No matter who you are or what you're trying to accomplish, whether you're a 16-year-old working to save the planet or an ordinary citizen trying to make it through the day with some peace of mind intact, you will inevitably confront the specter of Trump, drifting into the frame in a cloud of disorder and bad vibes. Even the president's most dedicated enablers scan the sky warily, awaiting today's cyclone, the next reckless, capricious twist of the plot. The door swings open, the president enters, all heads turn. The camera whips around, and suddenly, everything else -- better angels, higher ideals, common decency, common sense, beauty, truth -- blurs into the background.
Matthew Rosenberg/Kevin Roose: Trump campaign floods web with ads, raking in cash as Democrats struggle.
Aaron Rupar:
Trump's Dallas rally showed how untethered from reality his impeachment pushback is. Related here: Matt Stieb: 7 unhinged moments from Trump's Dallas rally.
Trump's move to host the G7 at his Doral resort takes self-dealing to new levels. [PS: I guess not. See Riley Beggin: Trump won't host the G7 at his Miami resort after all.]
Alexander Sammon: The miseducation of Mean Pete: "Once the Rhodes Scholar version of Mister Rogers, Buttigieg has become the snarling incarnation of anti-left rage." You know, I've long suspect that a big part of the pitch centrist Democrats make to their donors, even if only implicit, is that they will help business by, among other favors, keeping the left contained. That's part of why Clinton and Obama hardly ever lifted a finger to help labor, and it's part of why they felt few qualms about surrendering control of Congress, thereby giving up any chance of implementing the progressive platforms they successfully ran for president on. Buttigieg has done an impressive job of raising money from those same donors, only he's having to be much more explicit about carrying their water, and in 2019 those donors are much more worried by the left than they are by Trump and the Republicans. His eagerness to do that has made him a viable niche candidate, but when it comes to converting money to votes he may find himself pinned down way too narrowly. A related article from June 25: Do Pete Buttigieg's donors know him better than we do?: "The South Bend mayor has become a darling to Silicon Valley and Wall Street elite. That alone is a red flag."
Greg Sargent:
Jon Schwarz: What I learned from the debate: Democrats still can't level with voters about the American empire. Related: Alex Emmons: Trump's chaotic Syria exit puts anti-war 2020 Democrats in a delicate spot. Schwarz also wrote: The US is now betraying the Kurds for the eighth time.
Philip Shenon: 'A threat to democracy': William Barr's speech on religious freedom alarms liberal Catholics.
Gregory Shupak: Media alarmed by US pullout from Syria -- which didn't actually happen.
David Smith: US justice department resumes use of death penalty and schedules five executions.
Matt Stieb: As Trump fumes, GOP advances real party goal of making federal judiciary great again.
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor: When the dream of owning a home became a nightmare: "A federal program to encourage black homeownership in the 1970s ended in a flood of foreclosures."
Jeffrey Toobin: William Barr's wild misreading of the First Amendment.
Paul Waldman: A new report suggests Trump may have committed financial crimes.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells: The French economist who helped invent Elizabeth Warren's wealth tax: Gabriel Zucman.
Alex Ward:
Trump loves dictators. Erdogan is the latest to take advantage of that. I don't think it's right to call Erdogan a dictator. He holds his office due to winning a reasonably open election (although he has used surviving an attempted military coup as an excuse for consolidating power in ways that may undermine future democracy). Many of the other "dictdators" Trump seems to admire were also elected, including Putin (Russia), Modi (India), Bolsonaro (Brazil), and Duterte (Philippines), but so was the only one Trump has actually called a dictator: Maduro (Venezuela). Clearly, he has little appreciation of, or concern for, the democratic process -- no surprise, given that he was elected with the flimsiest popular mandate of any of the above, but also because right-wingers are always contemptous of democracy, perhaps because even they suspect that their rule is unwarranted.
The Syrian ceasefire the US brokered is already falling apart.
Top Trump official throws Giuliani under the bus in impeachment inquiry statement.
Matthew Yglesias: Impeachment is too important to leave to Congress -- it's going to take mass mobilization. I don't want to rain on anyone's desire to march, but I don't really buy this, even before discounting the inapplicability of various foreign examples. If impeachment happens, it's going to be done on narrow legalistic grounds, and it's not going to change power dynamics in any way. Mike Pence would replace Trump as president, he's pretty much hand-picked the cabinet anyway, and Congress would remain divided and ineffectual as at present. Sure, it's merited, and sure, it would be a chastising lesson for future presidents. Most of all, it presents an educational opportunity. But nothing significant can change until the 2020 elections, so that's where most of that pent-up energy should be directed. Well, that and keeping the frameworks for the rest of the political struggle viable, because even if the Democrats win big in 2020, we're still going to need a peace and social justice movement, union organizing, environmental awareness, and so forth.
Li Zhou:
Rick Perry, a key figure in Trump's dealings with Ukraine, will resign as energy secretary. Trump famously hired "only the best people" but over time, he's lost most of his first wave of political hacks, almost invariably replacing them with former lobbyists: in this case, Dan Brouilette. See Lisa Friedman: New Energy Secretary fits trend: Cabinet dominated by lobbyists.
The Senate fails to override Trump's veto on its national emergency resolution. Somehow a 53-36 majority isn't enough to stop Trump. This is democracy?