Recent reading.

library4

Does Alan Grayson Want War With Iran? Naiman, R., The Huffington Post (Apr. 2015). [Alan Grayson is trying to break up with ME?! WTF. –Ed.]

Scientists: Psychedelic drugs ‘safe as riding a bike or playing soccer’. Richardson, H., Newsweek via Raw Story (Apr. 2015). [Also, IIRC waaaay more fun. –Ed.]

Psychologists Have Uncovered a Troubling Feature of People Who Seem Nice All the Time. Shim, E., Mic (Jun. 2014). (“people holding left-wing political views were less willing to hurt others. One particular group held steady and refused destructive orders: women who had previously participated in rebellious political activism such as strikes or occupying a factory.”) [Don’t get any ideas, people. I WILL TOTALLY FUCK YOU UP!!!11!!! –Ed.]

Researchers Discover Fossils Of A New Species Of Terror Bird. Thompson, B., Daily Science Journal (Apr. 2015). [h/t Vanina]

terrorbirdIris can haz dis terra berd nao plz.

First Hologram Protest in History Held Against Spain’s Gag Law. Baker, J. Revolution News (Apr. 2015). [Wow, Spain. –Ed.]

Meet Walnut, the crane who fell in love with her zookeeper. Hillenbrand, S., The Verge (Apr. 2015). [Awesome weirdness, PLUS weird awesomeness. –Ed.]

Long-Awaited ‘Jump’ In Global Warming Now Appears ‘Imminent’. Romm, J., Think Progress (Apr. 2015) [Today in WE ARE SO FUCKED. –Ed.]

Boycott, Divest and Sanction Corporations That Feed on Prisons. Hedges, C., Truthdig Apr. 2015). [h/t SJ]

U.S. secretly tracked billions of calls for decades. Heath, B., USA TODAY (Apr. 2015). [GTFO. –Ed.]

Fracking Town’s Desperate Laid-off Workers: ‘They Don’t Tell You It’s All a Lie’. Nieves, E., AlterNet (Mar. 2015). (“The boom and bust in North Dakota has trapped people there, with little hope of work or escape.”) [But…but…JOBS! –Ed.]

28 Majestic Owls Caught On Camera. Earth Porm (Apr. 2015).

owl-photography-27__880Yes.

Racism at Core of Native Teen Suicides in Pine Ridge. Fenton, D.A., Colorlines (Apr. 2015). (“Let’s be clear. These events tell Native children one thing: “Your lives are not valued. You do not have a place in the world beyond the reservation.”) [Fucking hell. –Ed.]

6 Ways to Keep Terrorists From Ruining the World. Wong, D., Cracked (Jan. 2015). [Suggested re-title: “6 Ways to Keep EVERYONE From Ruining the World.” –Ed.]

Thousands dead, few prosecuted. Kelly, K. and Kindi, K., The Washington Post (Apr. 2015). (“Among the thousands of fatal shootings at the hands of police since 2005, only 54 officers have been charged, a Post analysis found. Most were cleared or acquitted in the cases that have been resolved.”) [TW: police violence.]

A letter from Mary Lucia. Lucia, M., The Current (Apr. 2015). [TW: stalking and harassment.]

VeinViewer Means No More Poking People Relentlessly to Locate Veins. Goyal, N., Industry Tap (Apr. 2015).

veinviewerIris can haz dis vane veewer nao plz.

Bystander Effect Also Found Among Five-Year-Olds. Jacobs, T., Pacific Standard (Mar. 2015). (“Little kids will help an adult, but if they’re in a group, they’ll wait to see if someone else volunteers first.”)

Hundreds of illicit oil wastewater pits found in Kern County. Cart, J., Los Angeles Times (Apr. 2015).

The dystopian lake filled by the world’s tech lust. Maughan, T., BBC (Apr. 2015).

13 Outrageous Acts By Drug War Cops Just This Week. Smith, P., AlterNet (Apr. 2015). [TW: police violence]

Guatemalans deliberately infected with STDs sue Johns Hopkins University for $1bn. Laughland, O., The Guardian (Apr. 2015). [TW: human rights abuses, hostility to autonomy and consent.]

Tales from the Trenches: I was SWATed. Harper, R., Randi-io (Apr. 2015). [TW: harassment and abuse.]

235 Anti-Choice Bills Proposed in State Legislatures Since January. Wilson, T., RH Reality Check (Mar. 2015). [*spit* –Ed.]

The “Special Snowflake” Syndrome of American Conservatives. Rachel191, Daily Kos (Apr. 2015).

How the U.S. spends more helping its citizens than other rich countries, but gets way less. Swanson, A., The Washington Post (Apr. 2015). (“Premature death for women in the U.S. is about on par with Mexico, which spends just $858 on health care per capita compared with nearly $8,000 per capita in the U.S.”) [VERY interesting. –Ed.]

__________

PLZ NOTE: Acquisition of links and/or bon mots for the Palace Library does not imply the Palace’s 100% agreement with or endorsement of any content, organization or individual.

Recent reads.

library4DOJ Ferguson Report: How Elected Officials Used Racism To Generate Millions In Revenue. Morrison, A., International Business Times (Mar. 2015).

Justice Department Finds Bias In Ferguson But Clears Darren Wilson. India, L., UPTOWN Magazine (Mar. 2015).

U.S. millennials post ‘abysmal’ scores in tech skills test, lag behind foreign peers. Frankel, T.C., The Washington Post (Mar. 2015).

Sh*tting on the Israeli Flag: The Art of Natali Cohen Vaxbergyoutube (Feb. 2015).  (“a short documentary film about provocative Israeli playwright, actress and internet celebrity.”)

Why Does the FBI Have to Manufacture its Own Plots if Terrorism and ISIS Are Such Grave Threats? Greenwald, G., The Intercept (Feb. 2015). [To ask the question is to answer it. –Ed.]

Benjamin Netanyahu’s Long History of Crying Wolf About Iran’s Nuclear Weapons. The Intercept (Mar. 2015). (“The Israeli Prime Minister is expected to warn the U.S. Congress an Iranian bomb is imminent — just as he warned in 1992, 1995, 2002, 2009, and 2012.”)

How a Mid-Sized Tennessee Town Took on Comcast, Revived Its Economy and Did it With Socialism. Gibson, C., Nation of Change (Mar. 2015). (“Since its launch, the EPB’s network has proven to be 50 times faster than the average American’s internet connection.”) [But…but…the Free Market™ is superior and more efficient! Also, BOOTSTRAPS!!! –Ed.]

10 Tricks To Appear Smarter In Meetings. Bradford, H., Huffington Post (Mar. 2015). [LOL. -Ed.]

Two headlines perfectly sum up everything wrong with American drug policy. Ingraham, C., The Washington Post (Mar. 2015). [SPOILER ALERT! the headlines are “Colorado sold 17 tons of retail marijuana in first legal year” and “Life in Prison for Selling $20 of Weed“, both of which are well worth reading. –Ed.]

Out of Trouble, but Criminal Records Keep Men Out of Work. Appelbaum, B., The New York Times (Feb. 2015).

Bayes’ Theorem with Lego. Count Bayesie (Feb. 2015).

Petraeus reaches deal to plead guilty to misdemeanor; likely won’t face prison. Goldman, A. and Horwitz, S., The Washington Post (Mar. 2015).

At New York Private Schools, Challenging White Privilege From the Inside. Spencer, K., The New York Times (Feb. 2015). [h/t Sunshine]

Native American Council Offers Amnesty to 240 Million Undocumented Whites. City World News (Jan. 2015). (“They all need to be deported back to Europe,” John Dakota from True Americans said. “They came here illegally and took a giant crap on our land. They brought disease and alcoholism, stole everything we have because they were too lazy to improve and develop their own countries.”) [Hahaha. Perfect. -Ed.]

Schizophrenic Brains Not Fooled by Optical Illusion. Buchen, L., Wired (Apr. 2009).

5 Women Cut from Pop Culture History for Being Too Important. Sargent, J.F., Cracked (Feb. 2015).

The Inside Story Of How A For-Profit College Hoodwinked Students And Got Away With It. Pyke, A., Think Progress (Feb. 2015).

Bush White House’s Repeated Torture Denials Led CIA Torturers to Seek Repeated Reassurances. Froomkin, D., The Intercept (Mar. 2015). [War criminals in the Bush administration lied?! GTFO. –Ed.]

War On Christianity? FBI Hate Crime Statistics Utterly Destroy Fox News Lies. Morris, R., Addicting Info (Feb. 2015). (“in far more cases than not, right wing Christians are the instigators or even the perpetrators of a very large majority of the hate crimes committed in the US… In 2013 there were 7,242 hate crimes committed in the US. In total, crimes against protestant Christians amounted to .0051 percent, a tiny fraction of a percentage point.”)

The cost of getting an abortion is higher if you’re poor. Dusenbery, M., Feministing (Feb. 2015). (“the process of obtaining an abortion could total up to $1,380 for a low-income single mother saddled with charges related to gas, a hotel stay, childcare, and taking time off work. For a middle-income woman living comfortably in a city with no children and public transit options to the clinic, meanwhile, those fees dropped to $593.”…”The idea that it is somehow not a serious burden for someone who is living paycheck to paycheck to be forced to — suddenly and entirely unexpectedly — come up with more than a month’s wages is absurd.”)

Drink In Style At Dear Irving, The Most Gorgeous Bar In Manhattan. Carlson, J., Gothamist (Mar. 2015). [h/t Vanina]

‘Is College Bad for Girls?’ cautionary pamphlet from 1905. Jardin, X., Boing Boing (Mar. 2015). [At least according to this pamphlet, college is absolutely fucking awesome for girls! –Ed.]

Nothing Is Wrong With Your Sex Drive. Nagoski, E., The New York Times (Feb. 2015). [The Palace’s favorite sex nerd and Your Humble Monarch™’s longtime correspondent not only has her first Op-Ed in the NYT, she also has a new book out: Come As You Are: The Surprising New Science that Will Transform Your Sex Life. YAY EMILY! –Ed.]

How to Be the Perfect Welfare RecipientFeminace (Mar. 2015). (“where the fuck do people get off trying to talk about welfare while knowing fuck all about it?…allow me to tackle some of those shit excuses for arguments here, where I can be an uncivil as I please.”) [FIVE STARS.Ed.]

The word-hoard: Robert Macfarlane on rewilding our language of landscape. Macfarlane, R. The Guardian (Feb. 2015). [h/t Chris Clarke] [Gorgeous essay! If you love words and good writing, stop whatever you are doing and read this right fucking now. –Ed.]

Pioneering Women of PhysicsPerimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (Feb. 2015).(“They discovered pulsars, found the first evidence of dark matter, pioneered mathematics, radioactivity, nuclear fission, elasticity, and computer programming, and have even stopped light.”)

Coalition of Police Officers Heads to D.C. to Demand the Broken and Brutal Police System Be Fixed. Syrmopoulos, J., The Free Thought Project (Feb. 2015).

__________

For the Palace Quote collection:

If your different-sex marriage isn’t special or “sacred” or whatthefuckever just because more people are allowed to do it, then that’s not a problem with the law; that’s a problem with your marriage. –Melissa McEwan

From Frida Kahlo:

FridaKahloFrida Kahlo
Mexican painter
(1907-1954)

I drank because I wanted to drown my sorrows, but now the damned things have learned to swim.

The most important thing for everyone in Gringolandia is to have ambition and become ‘somebody,’ and frankly, I don’t have the least ambition to become anybody.

I paint flowers so they will not die.

I used to think I was the strangest person in the world but then I thought there are so many people in the world, there must be someone just like me who feels bizarre and flawed in the same ways I do. I would imagine her, and imagine that she must be out there thinking of me, too. Well, I hope that if you are out there and read this and know that, yes, it’s true I’m here, and I’m just as strange as you.

Nothing is worth more than laughter. It is strength to laugh and to abandon oneself, to be light.

I hope the exit is joyful. And I hope never to return.

At the end of the day, we can endure much more than we think we can.

__________

PLZ NOTE: Acquisition of links and/or bon mots for the Palace Library does not imply the Palace’s 100% agreement with or endorsement of any content, organization or individual.

Uh-oh. SIWOMB.

Someone Is Wrong On My Blog!

PLEASE don’t say there isn’t much difference between the two candidates. That’s just nonsense.

There isn’t much difference between the two candidates.

I believe I have made my case, so that is exactly what I will say (even if you tell me very nicely not to).  Note that I have never asserted that there is no difference between Obama and Romney.  I have said — and this is thrice now — that our current president is “a Wall Street-serving corporatist, a radical and lawless executive, and an unrepentant, murderous warmonger very much like his predecessor.”

Maybe none of that bothers you very much.  Or maybe you are under the mistaken impression that my statement isn’t true.  You are of course under no obligation to agree with me.  But if your argument boils down to “Nuh-uh!” and you provide neither evidence nor argument that Barack Obama is not, in fact, “a Wall Street-serving corporatist, a radical and lawless executive, and an unrepentant, murderous warmonger very much like his predecessor” (that’s four!) then naturally I will remain unpersuaded.  I’m not being glib here;  this is important to me, because I would very much like to be wrong about him.  But I fear that I am not.

I’m sure you’re resting easy knowing Obama has already appointed two women to the SCOTUS and will appoint between 1 and 3 more SCOTUS justices who WON’T overturn Roe V. Wade.

I’m not resting easy for one second.  Roe v. Wade is and always will be under constant assault, especially at the state level.  However, if (when?) Roe falls, abortion law would immediately revert back to the domain of the states: they would be free to restrict it, or, at least theoretically, to enact expanded access.  This scenario is pretty much what we have right now.  For all practical purposes, TRAP laws, waiting periods and the defunding of women’s health care in Red states have made access to legal abortion impossible for many thousands of women.  This is happening with Roe still in place, rendering it all but symbolic at best.

I have acknowledged that Supreme Court appointments is an issue on which Obama is better than Romney.  And I am of course pleased to see three women on the high court.  But women are not magically immune from CPD.  Sotomayor in particular was an excellent choice:  an actual liberal with no apparent symptoms of Conservative Personality Disorder.  Kagan replacing Stevens has actually moved the court to the right, albeit only slightly.  Personally, I would rather see a liberal male appointed than a slightly conservative female.  YMMV.  Here’s my point:  if Romney had appointed a wingnut or three the appointment(s) would still have to get by the Senate, which in case you haven’t noticed is home to a lot of conservative Democrats including anti-choicer-in-chief Harry Reid.  The problem isn’t the wingnuts, who will always be clambering for power.  It’s the Democrats who enable them, especially the conservative Democrats who agree with them.  They are the targets of my scorn, and justifiably so.  If you can think of any way to stop them other than voting them out of office — even at the cost of a Republican winning the seat — I’m all ears.  If you cannot, and remain unwilling to support this course of action, you can expect to see both parties drift rightward.

Women’s reproductive rights just got a huge boost from the SCOTUS side with Obama’s re-election.

Reproductive rights is another issue on which Barack Obama is better than Mitt Romney.  However, let’s not overstate the case:  if Obama is such an unrelenting champion for reproductive rights, please explain this.

I am not only a life-long activist on this issue, I am also someone who would be at grave risk personally were I to get pregnant and find myself unable to terminate immediately.  However, I am convinced that misogyny and militarism march in lockstep, hand in hand:  where you find one, you will always find the other.  This is why rape is and has always been a weapon of war (endorsed by the god character in the bible, by the way); it is also why sexual assault is endemic in our own military.

Perhaps you misunderstood the point of my series:  I am looking at the bigger picture, and thinking about a term longer than the next four years.  Our culture and even our police forces have become more and more militarized under Barack Obama — and he wants to make the War on Terror permanent, with all of the tyrannical power and civil liberties erosion that entails.  The sanctions on Iran are pure evil, and as Iraq should have proven once and for all, they do not work and are in fact counterproductive.  It will take even more effort to limit U.S. militarism than it will to keep abortion safe and legal, but I remain convinced that these are two sides of the same coin.  This is why Democrats who are warmongers, who double down on Bush’s idiotic foreign policy, are flat-out unacceptable to me for reasons above and beyond innocent dead Muslims (including children).

Also, you can visit http://whatthefuckhasobamadonesofar.com to be reminded of some of the non-existent accomplishments of the last four years.

Don’t be an @$$hole.  Please point to where I said that the Nobel Peace Prize Winner has accomplished exactly nothing of value, or retract this statement.  And two can play at that game: you can visit this very blog to be reminded that in addition to being “a Wall Street-serving corporatist, a radical and lawless executive, and an unrepentant, murderous warmonger very much like his predecessor” (five!), Barack Obama is in favor of expanding offshore oil drilling, pro-death penalty, pro-SuperPACs, against raising the federal minimum wage, against legalizing marijuana, has no intention of exiting Afghanistan, wants no cuts to our insane defense budget, supports military tribunals and indefinite detention, unleashed an unprecedented war on whistleblowers, supports targeted killings of American citizens on his word alone, secretly cut a deal with Big Pharma and health insurers to enact his conservative health care “reform” law…

I can do this all day.

Speaking of Obamacare, I personally believe in the one sentence healthcare solution “Medicare For All”.

So do I.  For-profit healthcare is evil.  Please enjoy this custom Palace graphic, which I append to posts wherein “Medicare for All” is mentioned:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

That doesn’t mean Obamacare isn’t a huge step in the right direction.

It means exactly that.  Obamacare entrenches the for-profit system; if it’s a “huge step” in any direction — and I don’t agree that it is — it is in exactly the wrong direction.  Ferchrissakes, the blueprint came right out of a wingnut welfare operation, the odious Heritage Foundation.  It’s a private-market “solution” to what should by all rights be the government’s problem to solve.

Being a pragmatist, Obama’s ACA is an intermediary step toward single payer not the final solution.

This is just flat out false.  Please explain how the ACA is in any way a step toward single payer when it entrenches the existing for-profit system.  An option to buy into Medicare (“public option”) would have been an intermediary step toward single payer health care.  Unfortunately the conservative Barack Obama had already sold out exactly that (while pretending to support it) in his secret deal with pharma and insurance.  If that is “pragmatic” in your view, then the word clearly has a different definition for you than it does for me.  More to my point, the health care law that came out of Pelosi’s House had a robust public option.  It was DOA in the Senate, though.  Why?  Conservative Democrats.  You know:  like Barack Obama.

Single payer wasn’t going to happen in one fell swoop.

That is why the public option was so critical.

There are PLENTY of people who have already benefited greatly from Obamacare so at least it’s doing something positive, which is saying something for today’s Washingtonian legislative products.

Agreed.  However, there are still PLENTY of our fellow citizens suffering every day and dying unnecessarily, while we hand out billions in foreign aid to countries like Israel whose citizens enjoy universal health care.  And there are also PLENTY of people losing their homes and life’s savings, becoming impoverished literally overnight for seeking necessary medical care for themselves and their loved ones.  How exactly do you see the ACA putting an end to that?

Have I mentioned that for-profit healthcare is evil?  For-profit health care is evil.

See where I said in my post that if you want single payer healthcare you are necessarily going to have to stop voting for (conservative) Democrats who don’t?  Yeah, that.

Thanks for your comment.  It’s always a pleasure to hear from you — even when we disagree.

Mystery Series Part 6: Revealed.

The “Mystery Series” part 6 is my last post in reply to a comment by Loyal Subject™ SJ, whose question basically boils down to this:  is there any merit to the “lesser-of-two-evils” argument in favor of voting for Democrats in the upcoming elections?  The reason my answer to SJ’s question is in the form of a six part opus (and not, say, a tweet) is that the case I am making here must necessarily be a particularly well-supported and valid one, because the course of action that follows from my argument is one that very few lefties are willing to entertain, much less adopt.  Hell, I don’t even want to entertain it.  Thus this insufferable verbosity of my response can be chalked up to a careful check of my facts and reasoning to be sure that I am indeed persuaded myself.

I am.

So here it is, the official “Mystery Series” title revealed in all of its hideous grotesquery:

Why I am not voting for Barack Obama, and neither should you.

To those who are nodding your head in agreement, you can stop reading here. Fergawdsake, go do something more enjoyable than reading my (apparently endless) blathering.  To those who are angrily shaking their heads, I humbly beseech you:  take a deep breath, exhale, clear your mind, and just hear me out.  If after doing so I have still not convinced you, at least I hope to have persuaded you that my argument is sound, my intentions are honorable, and that I have not undertaken this exercise lightly or in bad faith.

It had been my intention to consider and rebut potential criticisms and objections.  Actually, many of these cannot accurately be called “potential” at all:  I have already encountered and engaged them.  One can find them splayed all across the Internet (and piling up in my inbox).  Many are variations on a theme that goes something like this:

“But the Republicans are worse!”

Yes I know that.  But the Democrats are almost exactly as bad and getting worse with every passing decade, precisely because we keep voting for them no matter what they do.

“But Republicans are worse!  Less evil is still, you know, less evil!

Yes I know that.  But you’re still voting for evil, and evil accumulates.  Also: the Democrats are almost exactly as bad and getting worse with every passing decade, precisely because we keep voting for them no matter what they do. 

But Republicans are worse!  And if Romney wins we will soon live in a fascist theocratic state and then we will NEVER EVER get the right wing out of power!”

[Citation needed.Also: the Democrats are almost exactly as bad and getting worse with every passing decade, precisely because we keep voting for them no matter what they do. 

Repeat loop, ad infinitum.

Another “argument” I’ve seen when the specter of voting for someone other than Obama is raised is this one:  “You are [CHOOSE ONE:  an ideological zealot/irrational purist/egotistical @$$hole who just wants to feel smugly superior/unrealistic idiot] with no understanding of How Things Work in the Real World.”  To which I say:  even if it were true that I am an ideological zealot/irrational purist/egotistical @$$hole who just wants to feel smugly superior and/or an unrealistic idiot, that would not negate the relevant facts or the validity of my argument; in fact that is nothing more than an ad hominem fallacy and can be dismissed as such.  As for misunderstanding How Things Work in the Real World, I would very much welcome being enlightened.  With evidence.

Then there are the “criticisms” that no one can take seriously, like “you can’t trust Mitt Romney on Social Security.”  Oh no!  I can’t?  Let’s see:

October 3, 2012 presidential debate:

MR. LEHRER: Mr. President, do you see a major difference between the two of you on Social Security?

PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, I suspect that on Social Security, we’ve got a somewhat similar position.

Or how about the very odd argument that a President Romney will take us to war with Iran, as if Obama’s position on Iran isn’t nearly identical, or we are all living in some alternate reality where none of this ever happened:

Obama has expanded drone attacks in Yemen, Somalia, and Pakistan. He has involved the US in aggressive cyber warfare and possibly other forms of military aggression against Iran. He has established and is now looking to expand what AP calls a “covert war in North Africa”. None of this has been debated, let alone voted on, in Congress. The one time Congress voted on a significant Obama foreign policy – the war in Libya – it voted against its authorization, and Obama blithely ignored that vote and proceeded with the war as though Congressional rejection never happened.

In sum, Obama uses military force whenever he wants, wherever he wants, and without anyone’s permission.

Another tack that critics take is to helpfully inform me that even though all of this awful and profoundly evil stuff is true about Barack Obama, there are still myriad ways that he is (marginally) better than Romney.  I do appreciate the effort, but I am actually well aware of those differences.  Some of them are important and meaningful.  But I am not making the argument that Obama is as bad as Romney on every issue.  Clearly, that is not the case.

I am making this argument:

Lesser-of-two-evilism and its corollary “voting for Democrats no matter what they do” is precisely the mechanism that guarantees the Democrats rightward trend continues on its trajectory, that we will only ever have two evil choices, and that exactly as they have done in the past, both of those choices will continue to become more evil over time.

It’s a tactical argument.  It’s about breaking this toxic cycle and getting ourselves a government that is not just a little less evil, but a lot less evil.  Maybe even good.

I have supported my argument as follows:

Over the past half century both parties have drifted very far rightward. (Part 1.)

Democrats cannot be pressured to change in any meaningful way if they are in no real danger of losing elections. (Part 2.)

A specific liberal constituency recently got Congress and the president to take immediate, meaningful action on its behalf — by defecting in significant numbers to the Republican Party.  The Democrats lost the House in 2010, but in the lame duck session, Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats suddenly discovered their ability to serve the interests of voters.  Not the voters whose support never wavered, mind you.  The voters who abandoned them.  Right-wing conservatives routinely use the same tactic successfully.  (Part 3.)

President Obama and many other conservative Democrats — especially in the party’s leadership — are not just dithering on liberal policies and reforms, they are actively working against them.  (Part 4.)

Objectively, Barack Obama is just not very liberal.  He is a True Believer in economic conservatism, a Wall Street-serving corporatist, a radical and lawless executive, and an unrepentant, murderous warmonger very much like his predecessor. (Part 5.)

As fortune would have it, I very recently came across a wonderful writer, Michael J. Smith.  He has posted online many chapters of his 2005 book, Stop Me Before I Vote Again, which I cannot recommend to you highly enough.  (He is also an excellent and prolific blogger.)  In chapter 2 of his book, Smith describes the forces that ensure the rightward trajectory of our political parties as analogous to a ratchet:  it only ever works in one direction.

The American political system, since at least 1968, has been operating like a ratchet, and both parties — Republicans and Democrats — play crucial, mutually reinforcing roles in its operation.

The electoral ratchet permits movement only in the rightward direction. The Republican role is fairly clear; the Republicans apply the torque that rotates the thing rightward.

The Democrats’ role is a little less obvious. The Democrats are the pawl. They don’t resist the rightward movement — they let it happen — but whenever the rightward force slackens momentarily, for whatever reason, the Democrats click into place and keep the machine from rotating back to the left.

Here’s how it works. In every election year, the Democrats come and tell us that the country has moved to the right, and so the Democratic Party has to move right too in the name of realism and electability. Gotta keep these right-wing madmen out of the White House, no matter what it takes.

I’ll just quote Mr. Smith liberally (with his kind permission) and let him do the rest of my work for me here:

The system operates in one direction only; and it is crucial for Democratic voters to understand that their “lesser evil” votes are actively promoting this process, not retarding it.

Absent some countervailing pressure from what we’ll call, for short, the Left, it’s a foregone conclusion that the political system will evolve in a way that responds to the desires of the wealthy and powerful. Over time, the Democratic Party has assumed the role of ensuring that the countervailing pressure from the Left doesn’t happen. The party contains and neutralizes the Left, or what there is of it. Left voters are supposed to support the Democrat, come what may — and it’s amazing how many of us have internalized this supposed obligation — but they are not allowed to have any influence on the party’s policies.

[T]hat’s what Democrats do. They may run to the left, or even govern to the left, if they have to; but they govern to the right whenever they can, because they want to.  If you don’t hold their feet to the fire every minute, they’ll sell you down the river every time.

[A] big part of the problem is the way the Democratic Party soaks up the energies of people who might otherwise be part of the environmental movement, or the anti-war movement, or the anti-globalization movement, or a band of hardy urban guerrillas spray-painting the lenses of surveillance cameras. (I strongly approve of this kind of thing but I’m a little old for it myself.)

The Democratic Party is not only a necropolis where activists decay into bureaucrats; it’s also a toxic growth poisoning the soil where activism grows — the crabgrass or milfoil that crowds out all the other species and devours all the nutrients. It is not merely an alternative to activism; it is the enemy of activism, and thus the enemy of any politics worthy of the name — by which I mean politics that goes beyond an empty, meaningless rivalry between two white-collar street gangs for the spoils of office.

[V]ote for the Green anytime the Democrat isn’t up to snuff, even if the Republican is a wild-eyed berserker who wants to pave the world. It’ll take a few more losses like Gore’s in Florida in 2000 before the Democrats will get the message – if then — and you have to be willing to stay the course until they do get it.  Just remember that the only difference between a pave-the-world Republican and an “environmentalist” Democrat is – well, none, really; the Republican means what he says, but the Democrat means what the Republican says, too.

[T]he only thing that will make the Democrats change is the prospect of annihilation if they don’t. And the only way to raise that specter before their eyes is for their captive constituencies to desert them in droves. As long as they think you have nowhere else to go, they will take you for granted. And the only way to convince them you have somewhere else to go is… to go there.

Don’t worry so much about the next four years; they’re going to be a disaster no matter who gets into the White House. Face that fact squarely, keep a bag packed and your passport handy by way of preparation for the next President, and when you vote, think ahead a little more.

A few final thoughts:

Evil is cumulative.  Once seized, tyrannical powers are never willingly relinquished by governments.  And Barack Obama has put a bipartisan imprimatur on so many government evils:  targeting American citizens for assassination on the president’s word alone without due process or oversight, entrenching for-profit healthcare, engaging in counterproductive wars not sanctioned by Congress (as required by the Constitution), expanding warrantless spying on innocent citizens, militarizing the country’s largest police force in conjunction with the CIA, expanding the Bush abomination known as the Office of Faith-Based Initiatives, eviscerating the rule of law by refusing to prosecute elite lawbreakers in the prior administration or on Wall Street, and, coming soon to a senior citizen near you, cutting Social Security benefits.  This president has done more to legitimize neoconservative policies and make them permanent features of our government than the neocons themselves ever could have.

There are — or ought to be — clear lines drawn, on both principle and practical grounds, that Democratic candidates cannot cross and expect the support of liberals.  We can of course differ on precisely where those lines should be drawn.  (illegal and counterproductive wars? presidential kill lists? for-profit health care? Social Security “reform”?)  But if there really are no lines that cannot be crossed, then it means exactly nothing to be a liberal.

Or, you know, fuck it.  We can all just keep voting for “less evil,” and continue to scratch our heads in bewilderment as to why our government is evil and corrupted.

I’m heading back to New York so that I can vote tomorrow.  For Jill Stein.

Mystery Series Part 5: The World’s Richest Banana Republic.

The “Mystery Series” Part 5 is the (long overdue) next post in my (long winded) response to a comment by Loyal Subject™ SJ, whose question basically boils down to this:  is there any merit to the “lesser-of-two-evils” argument in favor of voting for Democrats in the upcoming elections?  I promised I would let Loyal Readers guess the title for this interminable rant.  But screw you guys.  I’m just going to tell you what it is at the end of my next post.

A brief recap:

in Part 1: The RNC Platform, we looked at the Republican platform of 1956, and noted that it was more liberal—by far—than anything mainstream Democrats are proposing today.  In the intervening decades, both parties have drifted ever rightward.

In Part 2: Strategic Voting – Softball Edition, we discussed an argument made by Ted Glick that in states such as New York or Utah, where the outcome of the presidential election is all but certain, it would be a very good strategic development if Green Party candidates garnered a significant portion of the Democratic party vote.  Like a BB gun shot across the bow of a huge naval warship, Glick’s assumption is that such an outcome could pressure the Democratic Party leadership to seriously address liberal issues out of fear of losing elections.  I argued that while I like the idea, it would ultimately prove ineffective…if nobody actually loses an election.

In Part 3: Strategic Voting – Hardball Edition, I documented exactly how one specific liberal constituency — lesbian and gay Americans — got the Congress and the president to rescind “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and to stop defending the “Defense Of Marriage Act” in federal court.  Here is how they did it:  after helping to elect Democrats to majorities in both houses of Congress and the presidency in 2008, in the 2010 midterm elections the gay and lesbian vote going to Republicans doubled, to an astonishing 30%, and the Democrats lost the House.  But they sure sat up and took notice:  in the lame duck session before the Teabagger Brigades were sworn in, Congress repealed DADT and the Obama administration stopped pressing its appeals in support of DOMA.  Right-wing conservative voters use this tactic to great effect:  when Republican candidates are not up to snuff, they are perfectly willing to let them lose elections to the hated Democrats, with the result that the Republican party moves rightward.  Movement conservatives are in the business of playing a long game, looking at the bigger picture beyond the next two or four years.  Whatever you may think of their much-vaunted values, at least the wingnuts have principles on which they flat-out refuse to compromise.  Do Democrats?  (I’m joking, of course.  No, apparently they do not.)  At the end of Part 3, I said:

I will grant that the hardball option is fraught with significant risks: a Romney presidency and a Republican congress is obviously no laughing matter, and could prove especially deadly for Vagina-Americans, such as Your Humble Monarch here.

But you know what else is fraught with risk?  Enabling Democrats to keep doing exactly what they’ve been doing.  This includes, among other evils, shoring up the total corporate takeover of our democracy, and entrenching some of the very worst policies of the Bush administration with a bipartisan stamp of approval.  Actually, that the Democrats will continue to do so cannot even be accurately characterized as a “risk.”  It’s a certainty.

If you think it’s too late to deploy this tactic out of the (perfectly rational) fear that a Republican president and Congress will cause horrific damage to the country more quickly than Democrats will, ask yourself whether the timing is likely to be better four years from now.  Or eight.

Until the left plays hardball, the conservatives in both parties will continue to push the country right — off a cliff.

In Part 4: Make Him Do What?, I bored regaled readers with the well-worn parable about FDR as president in a meeting with labor leaders and Socialists that ends with him telling them, “I agree with you.  I want to do it.  Now make me do it.”  I provided a lengthy list of liberal fare that President Obama (or any Democrat) could have undertaken to earn my support, and noted that instead we have a Democratic president (and his party’s top leadership) acting against almost all of it.  I concluded Part 4 with a question:  How do we make him do it?

Which brings us to Part 5 of the series, and the answer to that question:

WE CAN’T.

The End.

__________

I kid.  But not about the answer to the question, only about shutting up.

There are many reasons we cannot make President Obama do much if anything on our lefty wish list, not the least of which is because he is just not very liberal.  That is, he genuinely buys into right-wing dogma like:  it is necessary and perfectly acceptable to cut Social Security and Medicare; that our imperial wars are awesome; that the Executive branch should be vested with radical and unaccountable power; that a “justice” system which does not subject political and financial elites to the rule of law while mercilessly locking up vast numbers of ordinary citizens for years or even decades is a splendid idea; and that private market solutions to problems like our disastrous health care system are preferable when they indisputably belong under the domain of the government morally, fiscally, or any other way one wishes to look at it.  (Well, unless one is a health insurance executive, of course).  To the many, many pundits and bloggers who insisted that the brilliant liberal, Barack Obama, was playing a long game of “11-dimensional chess,” or that the most powerful person in the world was somehow completely impotent to garner support for his liberal initiatives in Congress, I have one thing to say:  [Citation needed].  The jury has long been back with that verdict:  the president has proven himself quite capable of wrangling Congressional support when he wants it, and of acting alone when he decides he doesn’t need it.  And in nearly all of these cases, he has pursued an objectively conservative agenda.

Unfortunately, the FDR “Make me do it” parable is entirely inapplicable to our present situation because FDR already agreed with the labor leaders and Socialists with whom he had been working before his election to the presidency.  FDR was an extremely astute politician, and knew he would need their help in generating the political pressure necessary to accomplish the already agreed-upon initiatives.  This is manifestly not the case here, because Barack Obama does not want to do it.

He did not even want to end the Iraq War — the very pinnacle of lawlessness, lies, greed and evil at the rotted core of his predecessor’s foreign policy.

So.  Does anyone doubt that Democratic voters have completely absorbed the narrative that they must vote for Democrats — regardless of what they do once in power — because Republicans are allegedly so much worse?  Exhibit A:  consider this endorsement of Obama’s reelection by The Nation (The Nation!) and see if you can gag your way through the putrid stench of offal and point me to the many profound and meaningful differences between the presidential candidates, or indeed any reason to vote for Barack Obama other than “Republicans are marginally worse.”

Yes, my beloved Loyal Readers, we certainly find ourselves in quite the pickle.

And not to bum everybody out on a Monday, but it’s probably much worse than we think.  I have been frequently haunted by the former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson’s excellent 2009 piece in The Atlantic ever since I read it.  He likens the financial crisis, and the U.S. government’s response thereto, to those typical of emerging markets (Ukraine, Russia, Thailand, Indonesia, Argentina and elsewhere) — and only emerging markets:

Every crisis is different, of course…But I must tell you, to IMF officials, all of these crises looked depressingly similar…the economic solution is seldom very hard to work out.

Typically, these countries are in a desperate economic situation for one simple reason—the powerful elites within them overreached in good times and took too many risks. Emerging-market governments and their private-sector allies commonly form a tight-knit—and, most of the time, genteel—oligarchy, running the country rather like a profit-seeking company in which they are the controlling shareholders.

But inevitably, emerging-market oligarchs get carried away; they waste money and build massive business empires on a mountain of debt…The downward spiral that follows is remarkably steep…and conditions just get worse and worse…The government, in its race to stop the bleeding, will typically need to wipe out some of the national champions—now hemorrhaging cash—and usually restructure a banking system that’s gone badly out of balance. It will, in other words, need to squeeze at least some of its oligarchs.

Squeezing the oligarchs, though, is seldom the strategy of choice among emerging-market governments. Quite the contrary: at the outset of the crisis, the oligarchs are usually among the first to get extra help from the government, such as preferential access to foreign currency, or maybe a nice tax break, or—here’s a classic Kremlin bailout technique—the assumption of private debt obligations by the government. Under duress, generosity toward old friends takes many innovative forms. Meanwhile, needing to squeeze someone, most emerging-market governments look first to ordinary working folk—at least until the riots grow too large.

Does any of that sound familiar?  Ringy-dingy.  Any little bells?  Well, except for the large riots, of course.

From long years of experience, the IMF staff knows its program will succeed—stabilizing the economy and enabling growth—only if at least some of the powerful oligarchs who did so much to create the underlying problems take a hit. This is the problem of all emerging markets.

And it is an unprecedented problem for a mature economy of the size and scale of the United States.  We are, by far, the richest banana republic the world has ever seen.

Simon Johnson points to many interrelated factors that ultimately led to the crisis, and high on that list is ideology:  blind faith in free markets.  As with all rotted conservative tripe, evidence is entirely ignored in favor of counterfactual dogma that serves the status quo.  Thus we have a very serious problem when economic conservatism is the fundamentalist religion of both political parties.  Consider that conservative chestnut, deregulation:

[I]n just the past decade, a river of deregulatory policies that is, in hindsight, astonishing:

• insistence on free movement of capital across borders;

• the repeal of Depression-era regulations separating commercial and investment banking;

• a congressional ban on the regulation of credit-default swaps;

• major increases in the amount of leverage allowed to investment banks;

• a light (dare I say invisible?) hand at the Securities and Exchange Commission in its regulatory enforcement;

• an international agreement to allow banks to measure their own riskiness;

• and an intentional failure to update regulations so as to keep up with the tremendous pace of financial innovation.

But never mind all that.  The most important policy priorities in Washington are: (a) that financial and political elites never face any untoward consequences for massive corruption, collusion and crime; (b) that proposed financial “reforms” be watered down to the very weakest of tea; and (c) that ordinary citizens are further squeezed to make these pillars of society whole.  Multi-billion dollar raids on the U.S. Treasury are just not enough, people.  Nope.  What’s clearly in order are harsh austerity measures imposed upon working people by America’s Owners.  Things like…oh, I don’t know, cuts to Social Security?

October 3, 2012 presidential debate:

MR. LEHRER: Mr. President, do you see a major difference between the two of you on Social Security?

PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, I suspect that on Social Security, we’ve got a somewhat similar position.

July 6, 2011 Washington Post, “In debt talks, Obama offers Social Security cuts”:

President Obama is pressing congressional leaders to consider a far-reaching debt-reduction plan that would force Democrats to accept major changes to Social Security and Medicare in exchange for Republican support for fresh tax revenue.
[h/t Glenn Greenwald]

2009, Senator Richard Durbin (Democrat of Illinois):

[The banks] “are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they, frankly, own the place.”

2005, the late, great George Carlin:

And now they’re comin’ for your SOCIAL SECURITY MONEY.  They want your fuckin’ retirement money. They want it BACK.  So they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street.  And you know something?  They’ll get it.  They’ll get it ALL from you sooner or later — ‘cuz they OWN this fuckin’ place.

Yawn.  I’m bored.  I wonder which candidate is the most game for an exciting war with Iran?

__________

RELATED:
Mystery Series Part 1: The RNC platform.
Mystery Series Part 2: Strategic Voting, Softball Edition.
Mystery Series Part 3: Strategic Voting, Hardball Edition.

Mystery Series Part 4: Make Him Do What?

I cannot wait to see this movie!

This article in The Washington Post really has to be read to be believed.  Two days after Glenn Greenwald mercilessly skewered the insidiousness of “Officials say” journalism — in a piece titled, oddly enough, “Officials say” journalism — we are treated to this headline:

U.S., Israel developed Flame computer virus to slow Iranian nuclear efforts, officials say

What follows is a comic accounting of exciting statements from completely anonymous “officials,” “former intelligence officials” and “experts” detailing U.S.-Israeli complicity in creating a computer virus, one designed to spy on and ultimately sabotage the Iranian government and its industries.  When I say “comic,” I mean it in the sense that the narrative that emerges sounds like the pitch session for a movie about comic book Superheros and Supervillians in an epic cyber-war thriller.  Picture the United States playing the part of Batman, Israel in the role of Robin, and Iran as the Joker:

The United States and Israel jointly developed a sophisticated computer virus nicknamed Flame that collected critical intelligence in preparation for cyber-sabotage attacks aimed at slowing Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear weapon, according to Western officials with knowledge of the effort.

The massive piece of malware was designed to secretly map Iran’s computer networks and monitor the computers of Iranian officials, sending back a steady stream of intelligence used to enable an ongoing cyberwarfare campaign, according to the officials.

The effort, involving the National Security Agency, the CIA and Israel’s military, has included the use of destructive software such as the so-called Stuxnet virus to cause malfunctions in Iran’s nuclear enrichment equipment.

The emerging details about Flame provide new clues about what is believed to be the first sustained campaign of cyber-sabotage against an adversary of the United States.

“This is about preparing the battlefield for another type of covert action,” said one former high-ranking U.S. intelligence official, who added that Flame and Stuxnet were elements of a broader assault that continues today. “Cyber collection against the Iranian program is way further down the road than this.”

The virus is among the most sophisticated and subversive pieces of malware exposed to date. [IT IS SUPER AWESOME! UNLIKE ANYTHING EVER SEEN!  EVER! -Ed.] Experts said the program was designed to replicate across even highly secure networks, then control everyday computer functions to send a flow of secrets back to its creators. The code could activate computer microphones and cameras, log keyboard strokes, take computer screen shots, extract geolocation data from images and send and receive commands and data through Bluetooth wireless technology.

Flame was designed to do all this while masquerading as a routine Microsoft software update, evading detection for several years by using a sophisticated program to crack an encryption algorithm. 

OOOOOOOH! OMFG! I cannot wait to see this movie! 

Of course we are provided no alternative views or analysis, much less even the slightest whiff of speculation as to why these mysterious and anonymous officials are leaking this information, apparently in concert, at this particular time.  Because who cares, amirite?  Government officials say it, WaPo prints it, that settles it.

On another note, does anyone seriously believe the the U.S. government would not deploy the Flame virus on U.S. networks — without warrants?