Jan 132021
 

Really American

The Lincoln Project – Well, this should leave a mark.

She is from New York (suburbs west of NYC). No CC, but here’s a transcript:
“I also intend to see that those members of Congress who abetted him; those members of Congress who had groups coming through the Capitol that I saw on Jan. 5—a reconnaissance for the next day; those members of Congress that incited this violent crowd; those members of Congress that attempted to help our president undermine our democracy; I’m going to see they are held accountable, and if necessary, ensure that they don’t serve in Congress.”

Sound and Fury Messaging

Heather Gardner for Meidas Touch (CC built in, but so tiny I enabled it larger)

Rocky Mountain Mike – great parody of a great song

Beau on Mike Pence – It would be funny if it weren’t so tragic and dangerous.

Keith from Yesterday

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Jan 122021
 

Hard to believe this is for real – but apparently even she has a breaking point. (And her perspective is still demented.)

Yup. (You may have to turn on the sound.)

Corey is one of the three people, along with Trae Crowder and Drew Morgan, who make up WellRED Comedy. Corey has HAD IT. (NSFW)

Just what we didn’t need – but we need to know.

Puppet Regime

Beau on the First Amendment – clearing away the nonsense.

Beau on Trump**’s “Alamo Tour” (This and the previous one go together)

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Jan 112021
 

Really American – Be sure you are sitting down

Now This News – Maybe don’t watch this right away, but bookmark it so you have fast access to an accurate record.

Don Winslow – another timeline, more emotional

Hopefully this may allay some nervousness …

A commercial for seditionists.

Meidas Touch (excerpt from a podcast)

Beau on genuine healing

Keith from Sunday night

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Jan 102021
 

VoteVets – Impeach

**A new Randy Rainbow!** “Sedition”

Beau – on Senator Hawley (I love how CC spells the Senator’s name)

Rocky Mountain Mike

Beau – Trump – Twitter (recorded Friday, not sure what time – we now know articles of impeachment go to the House Monday. Also, Speaker peliso has been in contact with senior military [not civilian stooges] about nuclear safeguards.)

Dixie (Union Version)

Keith from Friday night

White Rabbit (Hampton String Quartet

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Jan 102021
 

It was a gruesome Republicosis Day, here in the CatBox.  I made six rush trips to the throne between 5:00 PM and 2:00 AM.  WWWendy is here and I’m about to lay down.  Tomorrow Dr. Deborah is coming for a routine home care visit.  What I do tomorrow  depends on that.  Have a fine day.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 3:24 (average 4:13).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Short Takes:

From Crooks and Liars: “Patriots?” Don’t make me laugh. These people are traitors, cowards, white supremacists, and dumbf*cks. Consider this your dose of “You’re about to f*ck around and find out” satisfaction for the day. (Big props to The Hoarse Whisperer on Twitter for starting the hashtag, #TraitorsGettingFired!)

Click through for a pants load of Republicans getting fared because of theit participation in treason. As a former employer, I’d fire any of these insurrectionists in a hot minute for fear of the harm their violence could do my business.  RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube (a blast from the past): Jefferson Airplane -White Rabbit-

 

Ah… the memories!  RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!!

9 Days Until the Big FLUSH!!

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Jan 092021
 

It’s another tired painful day here in the CatBox.  I slept poorly again due to a midnight throne run.  Tomorrow please expect no more than a Personal Update, as it’s a WWWendy Day.  Pardon my pit-stop, have a fine weekend, and pray Trump’s next crime isn’t more violent than this last.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 4:26 (average 6:57).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Short Takes:

From Crooks and LiarsPresidential Medal of Honor recipient Rush Limbaugh (just wanted to start you off with vomit in your mouth) isn’t satisfied with yesterday’s violence on Capitol Hill – he wants MORE! Indeed, he mocked the notion that we might be horrified by the MAGA crowd’s insurrection, and tried to compare these vile seditionists to colonists Thomas Paine and Samuel Adams, saying how happy he was that THOSE dudes didn’t hold back.

 

I named this Republican Limbarf and identified him as a leader in the Republican Reich long before the Republicans had ever heard of Trump*. The Republican Reich has not changed. RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!  RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!!

From NY Times: In Washington, Republicans were dealing with a burgeoning crisis in their ranks, with high-profile resignations and bitter infighting over how to deal with an erratic and isolated president. But at the Republican National Committee’s winter meeting on Friday, most party members were operating in a parallel universe.

In a chandelier-adorned ballroom at the seaside Ritz-Carlton here, there was no mention of President Trump’s disruption of the coronavirus relief package or his phone call to the Georgia secretary of state demanding that he help steal the election, both of which contributed to Republicans’ losing control of the Senate.

And while the R.N.C. chair, Ronna McDaniel, condemned the attack on the Capitol, neither she nor any other speaker so much as publicly hinted at Mr. Trump’s role in inciting a mob assault on America’s seat of government.

Even as the president faces a possible second impeachment proceeding, this collective exercise in gaze aversion was not the most striking part of the meeting. More revealing was the reason for the silence from the stage: Party members, one after another, said in interviews that the president did not bear any blame for the violence at the Capitol and indicated that they wanted him to continue to play a leading role in the party.

“I surely embrace President Trump,” said Michele Fiore, the committeewoman from Nevada, where Republicans have lost two Senate races and the governorship since 2016. Ms. Fiore, who was sporting a Trump-emblazoned vest, said the president was “absolutely” a positive force in the party.

The RNC could not have made it more clear that they chose Trump* as Fuhrer, because he represents the values and policies of the Republican Party.  This was true before and during Trump’s* Residency and will continue indefinitely.  RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!!

From YouTube ( blast from the past): Jefferson Airplane – Volunteers (with Lyric)

 

Ah… the memories!  RESIST and REMOVE the Republican Reich!!

10 Days Until the Big FLUSH!!

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Everyday Erinyes #248

 Posted by at 10:24 am  Politics
Jan 092021
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

I’ve been doing these for a long time – closing in on five years – and, at least for me, it has not been difficult to hang on to outrage. In fact, I’ve often found it a challenge to hang on to anything else. But, as this article points out, the events of this week have created an environment in which, going forward, it will be at least equally necessary to hold on to our vigilance – to our vision, to or “nose,” to our gut feelings, or however you perceive danger. We are not out of the woods yet.
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‘Once you engage in political violence, it becomes easier to do it again’ – an expert on political violence reflects on events at the Capitol

Protesters forcing their way into the Capitol.
Win McNamee/Getty Images News via Getty Images

Naomi Schalit, The Conversation

Editor’s note: Ore Koren is a scholar of civil conflict and political violence. Before the November 2020 election, he wrote a story for The Conversation about the likelihood of election-related violence in the U.S. So we went back to him on Wednesday, while what some are calling an insurrection unfolded at the U.S. Capitol, to ask him for some perspective on the event. This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: You’re a scholar of political violence. What were you thinking as you watched what’s happened at the U.S. Capitol?

Koren: First of all, I felt pretty stunned. I think that’s a natural response to this. This is a new situation; it shows the power of misinformation and stuff that we’re not really good at dealing with.

My research focuses on organized political violence, which often happens in places where the state does not have much power to prevent violence, where the economy is underdeveloped, where democratic institutions are weak, and where there is a history of organized violence. And usually when we see events at this magnitude, they are accompanied by many casualties, which thankfully was not the case today.

What happened at the Capitol, from what I can tell, was a messy riot where people lashed out at the heart of American democracy, but it remains unclear how organized an effort this was.

Still, it is kind of shocking. We have the biggest economy in the world. Based on what we see in the research, weak economic performance is a strong predictor of organized political violence. The people marching on the Capitol have much more to lose than to gain from this, and to me that’s puzzling.

With an incumbent who has been advocating for a strong law-and-order agenda, many people did not expect this. In a country with a strong domestic security apparatus, militias and vigilantes hurt rather than help in promoting the rule of law.

What separates the U.S. and other advanced and militarily capable democracies from other countries where deadly election violence happens is the ability to wage an effective state response and very quickly implement the rule of law, cracking down on both the perpetrators and any groups they might be affiliated with.

One example of a very effective state response was in Michigan, where the militias plotting to kidnap the state’s governor were quickly apprehended by federal authorities.

Capitol police officers point their guns at a vandalized door, barricaded to prevent entry.
U.S. Capitol police officers point their guns at a door that was vandalized in the House chamber during a joint session of Congress on Wednesday in Washington, D.C.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images News via Getty Images

Q: How does this compare with political violence in countries you’ve studied?

Koren: Compared to other countries, I’m hoping it won’t get to that threshold of being more extreme. A lot of violence actually happens when a party refuses to give away power or a party blames the other for cheating. Well, that’s kind of what we saw happening here, right, one party was blaming the other for cheating. Only here, we had lots of evidence to the contrary, and we had legal and institutional ways of verifying any cheating or lack thereof.

In the U.S., most of the election challenges happened through formal legal channels. The main problem in places where we see violence happen is because they don’t have these kinds of institutions to deal with this, courts, all those things that our legal system can handle. But in countries where such institutions are weak, the state can’t handle that, and can’t address election challenges through a peaceful process. In this case, we see many political leaders, and not only angry citizens, saying those political institutions are not valid.

Also, in other countries, those engaging in such violence are often pro-government militias, but these are not pro-government militias we’re seeing here; as we saw today, they are actively opposing the police.

Q: But what you’ve got in the U.S. is a group of people who actually don’t believe that those institutions handled this, that it’s all corrupt, that it’s all fake and not real and cheating and plots happened. And we’ve had a president saying that.

Koren: Well, you have the president saying he was cheated, but going through the legal channels. The president didn’t just go and say, “OK, let’s go charge the Capitol,” although Wednesday morning’s speech could definitely be interpreted as instigating something like this. Until now, his rhetoric could be considered more about mobilizing support, and trying to create enough reasonable doubt that could then be used to pressure the results through formal channels.

But we do have a very unpredictable incumbent pushing the legal envelope during the worst pandemic in a century. What we’re seeing today, I think, has a lot more to do with his unpredictability and things we can’t account for in models we use to study political violence events. It’s been more than two months since the election and we didn’t see any serious violence until now, but as the legal options closed, the situation became more problematic. We don’t often see election-related violence months after an election.

Protesters enter the Capitol building.
Protesters enter the Capitol building.
Win McNamee/Getty Images News via Getty Images

Q: What do you think this means for the stability of the U.S. government or U.S. elections?

Koren: I’m not an election expert, but it’s a bad precedent. We don’t have a recent history of election violence and, now we can say we do have it, and that’s not a good thing.

What hugely contributed to all of this is misinformation. People mobilized based on a conspiracy with no evidence. I think this is a major problem that has to be addressed – I don’t know how. But it is really crucial to address the underlying problem – that people believe in what they feel is real, not what is real.

Once you engage in political violence, it becomes easier to do it again. But if there’s an effective state response to these events, then it can help strengthen those institutions.

So, I think a lot of people will be saying, look, this is all going to have long-term negative implications. But there’s also a possibility that this can actually help in the long run by showing the grave consequences of manipulating democratic institutions for political gain. Again, it depends on how the state and politicians and security and everybody responds to this. But having a history of political violence is a pretty strong predictor of future violence.

I think it’s really important for federal authorities to show their ability to tackle this. When it comes down to it, the government must show that it can protect American democracy, through force if necessary.

[The Conversation’s most important election and politics headlines, in our Politics Weekly newsletter.]The Conversation

Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, Professor Koren says, “In a country with a strong domestic security apparatus, militias and vigilantes hurt rather than help in promoting the rule of law.” this article does not back that up with evidence, but if someone who has studied this subject as he has says this, you can bet he’s able to back it up. And, if that’s the case, what does that say about the Second Amendment? I do not believe that even the dumbest of out Founders was dumb enough not to realize that as true once there was sufficient evidence.

Interestingly, as you may already have heard from “The Petition Site” (formerly Care2), my old college is doing study on guns and people’s opinions about them. Anyone can participate. Here’s the link.

The Furies and I will be back.

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Jan 082021
 

It’s a very tired day here in the CatBox.  Unpacking and putting away groceries took over 90 minutes yesterday.  Also, I slept poorly last night, as I wondered how our nation can survive another week and a half.  I expect to be in the saddle tomorrow.  Tomorrow and Sunday are High Holy Days in the Church of the Ellipsoid Orb, but my Portland gave a bye in the Wild Card Week of the playoffs!  TGIF!

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 3:45 (average 5:05).  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Short Takes:

From Crooks and Liars: Rep. Mary Miller (R-IL) has been a Congresswoman for approximately 9 minutes, and saw fit to make herself famous by quoting Adolf Hitler in her speech supporting Trump’s attempted coup to overturn Biden’s win in the 2020 election.

 

It America survives, Trump* will be out office on or before the 20th, but He would never have become Fuhrer, if he did not represent the beliefs of the Republican Party, the Nazi Party of America.  RESIST!!

From YouTube (MSNBC Channel): Two Days After Riots, Trump Reverses His Stance On Election Loss

 

The Republican Reich will parrot Trump’s* teleprompter speech and act like everything else never happened. It’s time for Trump* to become Trump** and for him and the rest of the crew to inmates.  RESIST!!

From YouTube (a blast from the past): Barry McGuire – Eve Of Destruction

 

Ah… the memories! Again?  RESIST!!

11 Days Until the Big FLUSH!!

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