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Friday, December 24, 2021

Editorial: ‘GOP’ Turns to Stalinism

 Republicans are fond of accusing Democrats of trying to promote communism in the United States, but in fact, Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress have passed two major bills that have stimulated the economy, brought nearly six million Americans back to work and spurred the capitalist stock markets to rise more than 30% after Biden’s election, through October, while the supposed Grand Old Party has adopted tactics of Russian dictators in their effort to regain power regardless of the facts.

One of the tools Republicans have used to great effect in the Trump era is disinformation, which Josef Stalin developed as a means to undermine rivals. In 1923, after he became General Secretary of the Russian Communist Party, Stalin created a “special disinformation office.” The KGB continued it through the Soviet regime. The dark arts have been refined under the leadership of Vladimir Putin.

Donald Trump used disinformation and, apparently, Putin’s assistance, in his 2016 campaign, as he appealed to blue-collar, working-class voters with a populist campaign that promised a new health care system with universal coverage for everyone at a mere fraction of the cost of the existing system. As Cody Cain noted at Salon.com Aug. 15, Trump “promised he would stop US corporations from shipping jobs overseas, and would bring jobs back to America. He promised he would never cut Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid. He promised to get tough on Big Pharma and cut the high cost of drug prices. He promised a massive investment in America’s infrastructure, like roads and bridges. He promised to tax the rich, including himself, and to provide a massive tax cut for the middle class.

“But once Trump was elected, of course, he abandoned all these promises of policies that would benefit the working class, instead implementing right-wing policies that benefited large corporations and the rich at the top, including granting a massive tax cut to himself and the rich, slashing regulations for big business, seeking to repeal the Affordable Care Act and seeking to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.”

Trump told more than 30,000 lies in his four years as president, but he parlayed the biggest one after Biden beat him in 2020: He claimed Democrats had stolen the election. Trump’s campaign sued to contest vote counts in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona, Nevada and Georgia, but courts threw out all the lawsuits as unfounded, despite Republicans and Trump supporters harassing and threatening election officials who refused to change the results. 

When Arizona Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, did what she could to combat lies told about Arizona’s voting system, Republicans in the Legislature refused to allow her to use state money to combat those lies. After she continued to defend the vote count with private funding, the Republican Legislature passed House Bill 2569, which banned election officials from using private or public funds to combat disinformation about elections.

During the discussion in the House Committee on Government and Elections, Chairman John Kavanagh, doing his best Uncle Joe Stalin imitation, actually said, “One person’s disinformation is another person’s truth,” E.J. Montini noted in the Arizona Republic Feb. 21, 2021.

Republicans have gone so far as to pass laws that authorize legislatures they control, to ignore or reject votes they don’t like, in anticipation of the 2022 and 2024 elections.

To protect the right to vote and have that vote count, the Senate needs to pass Freedom To Vote Act, which would protect the integrity of elections, but the bill is blocked by a filibuster supported by all 50 Senate Republicans, who want to preserve the right to rig.

Among other things, the Freedom to Vote Act would criminalize intimidating, threatening or coercing any election official or election worker. It would make it a federal crime to publish or distribute false information about elections. It would increase federal penalties for voter intimidation or otherwise interfering with the right to vote. And it would keep partisan “poll watchers” at least eight feet from voters in all circumstances, including while voting. It also would end partisan gerrymandering and require same-day voter registration, to neutralize the impact of partisan officials purging voters before election day. 

It would require at least 14 consecutive days for early voting, require easy access to polling places, and a wait of no more than 30 minutes to vote.

It would guarantee all voters, nationwide, the right to vote by mail with no excuses required, and forbid states from forcing mail-in voters to have their ballots witnessed, notarized or jump through other onerous hoops. It would allow people waiting in line to vote to receive food or water from others.

Republicans apparently have adopted Stalin’s reputed maxim that goes something like, “The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything.” 

This quote has been around for years, but PolitiFact decided in March 2019 to debunk it. After failing to find any “credible” original sources, PolitiFact concluded the quote was apocryphal, even though Boris Bazhanov, Stalin’s former personal secretary, wrote in his memoirs that Stalin said, “I regard it as completely unimportant who in the party will vote and how, but it is extremely important who will count the votes and how.” But PolitiFact noted that Bazhanov fled the Soviet Union in 1928 and then published his “rather unreliable muckraking memoir in 1930.”

At this point, it hardly matters if Stalin said it. The important thing is that Republicans think it worked for Stalin, and in at least 15 states, Republicans think it can work for them.

Joe Manchin’s announcement on Dec. 19 that he couldn’t support the Build Back Better Act was a blow to people who were counting on the social and climate control programs. Working families will lose the child tax credit of up to $300 a month per child, which expires at the end of 2021, and the bill also provided child care and pre-kindergarten programs that would allow parents to return to work. But working-class voters and progressives who decide not to vote in the midterm election next November, because they’re disappointed Biden couldn’t keep Manchin in line in a 50-50 Senate, will only cut off their noses to spite their faces. 

They should focus on keeping a House majority and picking up enough Democrats in the Senate so they won’t have to depend on Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) to put Vice President Kamala Harris’ vote in play on legislation to help working people. 

Terms of 20 Republicans expire in 2020, with the main Democratic pickup opportunities in Florida (Marco Rubio), Missouri (open), North Carolina (open), Ohio (open), Pennsylvania (open), and Wisconsin (Ron Johnson). Meanwhile Democrats are protecting 14 seats, including Mark Kelly in Arizona, Raphael Warnock in Georgia, Catherine Cortez Masto in Nevada and Maggie Hassan in New Hampshire.

If you’re mad about Manchin and/or Sinema, take it out on Republicans, not Biden, Chuck Schumer or Nancy Pelosi. And remember, democracy isn’t over until we say it’s over. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, January 1-15, 2022


Populist.com

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Copyright © 2021 The Progressive Populist


Selections from the January 1-15, 2022 issue

 COVER/Bonny Gardner 

Wake up, Democrats! Address Blue-Collar grievances

EDITORIAL 
‘GOP’ turns to Stalinism


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Blazing trails, breaching walls

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Don’t let the anti-vaxxers bring you down

DISPATCHES
Scared Trump sues to end New York Attorney General’s investigation.
David Cay Johnston says Trump will be indicted in New York.
Kinzinger: House Jan. 6 Committee is conducting a criminal investigation of Trump.
House Committee: Trump deliberately suppressed COVID data.
Five Republican governors demand COVID vax exemptions for their National Guards.
Socialist handily beats Right-Winger in Chile ...


BEN LONG 
Responsible gun owners need to be heard


JILL RICHARDSON 
What a debate over grizzly bears shows about politics

JOHN YOUNG 
The flag of the whiny anti-masker

ART CULLEN
Anger, despair are appropriate responses to the demise of rural America

ROGER BYBEE
Republicans are arrayed against democracy

GENE NICHOL 
North Carolina attempts to re-take the lead


SETH SANDRONSKY 
College and university labor militancy grows


DEAN BAKER
Will we see deflation in the next 12 months?

JOEL D. JOSEPH
A tale of two industries

SONALI KOLHATKAR 
Don’t blame benefits for inflation — blame the global economy

KRISTEN OLSEN 
Which side is Manchin on? 


THOM HARTMANN
Are we standing on the edge of a grand new progressive era?

DR. CINTLI 
Apartheid and the great American experiment

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas 
Television hits: Red State/FD, MED, PD

SAM URETSKY 
All donors matter (but recurring donors matter more)

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Democratic devolution

ERIC BOEHLERT 
Slow-walking the coup PowerPoint: Blueprint for sabotage

JASON SIBERT 
Time to bring nuclear arms under control


ROBERT KUTTNER 
The narrow path to averting war over Ukraine


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Dave Chappelle, James Carville, and the persons in the sauna


BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel 
Holding change

ROB PATTERSON 
Getting back to what happened to the Beatles

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
Dancing with the Stars, killer style

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
New ‘West Side Story’ film applies the iconic musical to modern-day issues


FRANK LINGO 
Hopeful green inventions

and more ...

Saturday, December 4, 2021

Editorial: Inflation Blame Game

Americans, it seems, just can’t stand prosperity. Or maybe it’s just the corporate news media that can’t stand to give Joe Biden credit for the recovering economy.

The COVID pandemic caused an economic collapse under Donald Trump that cost nearly 25 million jobs in March and April 2020 and sent the unemployment rate to 14.8%. By the end of 2020, many Americans had returned to work, but there were still approximately 10.7 million people out of work, for a 6.7% unemployment rate when Biden took over in January 2021. He promptly set up a system to distribute COVID vaccines and encouraged the use of public health precautions, such as the use of masks, to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, over the opposition of Republican governors.

Biden promoted the American Rescue Plan, which Democrats in Congress passed in March, without any support from Republicans. The $1.9 trillion bill sent $1,400 checks to nearly all American families, extended a $300 weekly supplement to unemployment assistance through Sept. 6 and expanded child tax credits to $3,600 per child under age 6 and $3,000 per child up to age 17, which is expected to cut the nation’s child poverty rate in half. The bill also increased subsidies for insurance through the Affordable Care Act, provided $25 billion for rental assistance; provided $25 billion to support restaurants; $4.5 billion to help low-income families with energy and water bills; and $7.6 billion to expand internet connectivity for students and teachers during the pandemic. 

During the first nine months of Biden’s administration, 5.6 million new jobs were created, and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.6%, the strongest recovery since World War II. Jobless claims in November were at a 20-month low and workers’ wages are up, as the reluctance of some workers to re-enter the workplace has given leverage to the workers who are coming back. Leisure and hospitality workers have gained an average 11.2% average increase in wages. 

A recent Washington Post-ABC News poll, conducted Nov. 7-10, found that majorities of Americans support elements of Biden’s $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package and a pending bill that would spend nearly $2 trillion on social programs and climate initiatives, but it is hung up in the Senate over one senator’s concerns it will drive up inflation. However, Biden’s approval rating has dropped to a new low, driven largely by more negative views among Democrats and independents.

Biden is 16 points underwater on his handling of the economy, as 39% approve while 55% disapprove. Just 29% of Americans described the nation’s economy in positive terms (excellent/good) while 70% viewed it negatively (not so good/poor). And only 35% of Americans think Biden has accomplished a great deal or a good amount since he took office, while 63% said the president had achieved either not very much or little to nothing. Benefits from the American Rescue Plan are largely forgotten.

Biden may be down in the polls because the corporate media is reluctant to give him too much credit for the economic recovery (and he might not be good at taking credit). But when Americans were eager to get back to shopping as vaccines caused the COVID threat to subside, and merchants were eager to recoup the sales lost during the year of lockdown, customers found prices higher, by an average of more than 6%, and they wondered what Biden was going to do about it. 

Robert Reich notes on page 13 that if markets were competitive, companies would seek to keep their prices down in order to maintain customer loyalty and demand. When prices of their supplies rose, they’d cut their profits before they raised prices to their customers. But that isn’t happening. Corporations are raking in record profits and more than 80% of major corporations have topped analysts’ forecasts, driving stocks higher.

People also are frustrated by gasoline prices, which have increased from an average of $1.938 per gallon in April 2020, when the COVID lockdown started, to $3.348 in October, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports. Many Americans expect Biden to do something about it. But the current price is not a record high, and it is simply another indicator of how much the economy has recovered. As more people are on the road, getting back to work, the price of gas goes up. The law of supply and demand rules.

Gasoline prices in the US peaked at $4.06 per gallon in July 2008, when the price of crude oil was $3.07 per gallon, due to worldwide oil demand, according to EIA, but gas prices dropped precipitously in the next six months, as the collapse of subprime mortgage-backed securities sparked the Great Recession. When Barack Obama took over as president in January 2009, gas had bottomed out at $1.79 per gallon. As the economy improved, the cost of gas increased to $3.91 per gallon in May 2011 and it fluctuated throughout the Obama administration. Under Trump, gas prices got up to $2.86 in October 2018, dropped to $2.25 in January 2019, climbed back up to $2.86 in May 2019, then slipped to $2.44 in February 2020, before plummeting to $1.84 in April 2020, when the COVID lockdown started. 

The average price of gasoline in the US was $3.758 on Nov. 22, according to GlobalPetrolPrices.com. That might hurt, but it’s still a better deal than $6.933 in Germany, $7.018 in France, $7.477 in Britain, $8.372 in Israel, and $9.908 in Hong Kong. And, honestly, we’ve had 48 years, since the OPEC Oil Embargo of 1973-75, to switch to more fuel-efficient vehicles, such as the Toyota Prius hybrid, which gets more than 50 miles per gallon, or the plug-in Ford Focus Electric, which claims 105 mpg equivalent.

Joe Biden can’t admonish people who still drive gas guzzlers, because he would be accused of being insensitive to the needs of working people who still drive vehicles that get less than 20 miles per gallon. Instead, he is planning to release 50 million gallons from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in the hopes of appeasing oil executives, to give us a break on gas prices. These same corporate executives are exporting an average of 5.5 million barrels of petroleum products a day, including 3.5 million barrels of crude oil. So the US is still a net exporter of petroleum. Courts haven’t let Biden stop federal oil leases, and the Keystone XL pipeline, which he has blocked, merely stops Canadian tar sands oil from reaching Gulf ports for export overseas.

If Biden wants to cut gas prices in the US, a more effective way would be to remove barriers to oil exports by Iran and Venezuela. If we can deal with Saudi Arabia, we can deal with Iran and Venezuela, which at least have elements of democracy that we should encourage, even if it ends up putting more carbon in the air.

And if Biden wants to control inflation brought on by profiteers, he should sic the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice on monopolistic corporations. A little trust-busting might go a long way toward bringing profiteers in line.

Democrats might even want to put a bill on the congressional calendar to punish inflation profiteers — and let Senate Republicans filibuster it. Would that be wrong? — JMC



From The Progressive Populist, December 15, 2021


Populist.com

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Copyright © 2021 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the December 15, 2021 issue

 COVER/Thom Hartmann 

Bring back the ‘wealth of the nation’

EDITORIAL 
Inflation blame game


FRANK LINGO 
Re-considering the wolf

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

COREY FRIEDMAN
Democracy dies in news deserts

DON ROLLINS 
No little victories

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen  
Climate change: The more it changes ...

DISPATCHES 
New COVID variant leads to new Republican conspiracy theory.
House gerrymandering proceeds. 
Republicans want another Trump run, but he’s toxic to everybody else. 
Biden oil and gas reforms prioritize money over climate. 
Labor Department announces $15 minimum wage for fed contractors. 
John Buell R.I.P. 
Biden Postal Service appointees target DeJoy;
Rep. Cawthorn seems to call for violent government overthrow on Twitter, humiliates himself instead.
Contender for greatest mess in Congress seeks to becomegreatest mess in Texas.
John Kennedy went full Joe McCarthy ...


ART CULLEN 
Farmers will change if politicians let them


JILL RICHARDSON 
Sociology can help the climate crisis

JOHN YOUNG 
When culture war is all you’re about

SAMANTHA GARCIA 
To tackle climate change, hold fossil fuel conglomerates accountable

ROBERT KUTTNER
Green steel deal connects climate goals to industrial goals

DICK POLMAN 
The cult cancels Liz Cheney

TOM CONWAY
Everyone benefits from infrastructure investments

DOMENICA GHANEM 
Inflation is complicated, but making it better doesn’t have to be

SARAH ANDERSON 
Wealthy Americans get paid leave. Shouldn’t the rest? 


CHRIS SATULLO
Cult leader broke most of his promises, so why do the cultists still love him? (Take a guess.)


DR. CINTLI 
A rabbit on the face of moon

MARK ANDERSON 
CFR at 100: Still making world safer for super-rich

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
A new year plea for optimism

SAM URETSKY
Biden jobs bill shows bipartisanship still possible

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
It’s a grand ol’ flag

WAYNE O’LEARY 
How corporate America won reconciliation

ERIC BOEHLERT 
The media’s inflation hysteria — more theatrics? “Crisis” mania. 


NORMAN SOLOMON and JEFF COHEN
Found in television: New York Times says Democrats shouldn’t challenge oligarchy

TOM H. HASTINGS 
Vote back better


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Executing executions, Oklahoma style


SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
Frontier justice, Missouri style

BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel  
We (still) won’t go back

ROB PATTERSON 
‘Law & Order’ family continues to fill the airwaves

SETH SANDRONSKY
Pass this

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell
L.A.’s biggest film festival returns live and in person with great anti-racist films

SCOTT KLINGER 
How to make the holidays happier for the Postal Service

and more ...

Friday, November 12, 2021

Editorial: Racism Still Swings Votes

 Democrats had a rough election Nov. 2, as Republicans using the Trump playbook while playing down Trump’s name narrowly turned Virginia pink and nearly upset the Democratic majority in New Jersey. But Dems can turn it around next year if they get the word out about what they already have done for working people and what they could do if they get a few more progressive Democrats in the House and Senate.

Commentators largely blamed the Democratic losses on congressional Democrats who delayed passage of a bipartisan infrastructure bill before the election. Less attention was paid to the poor campaign run by moderate Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe. The former governor tried to tie Republican Glenn Youngkin to Trump, but Youngkin deftly avoided appearing with Trump while appealing to his cultists, while McAuliffe failed to offer Virginians a reason to vote for him and other Virginia Democrats. Youngkin, a former executive of the Carlyle Group hedge fund, showed deft use of racism hidden behind code phrases still has potent appeal.

In Virginia, Republicans won the top three statewide elected positions with less than 51% of the vote. Republicans narrowly won a 51-48 majority of the House of Delegates, with one seat undecided at press time as a Republican led by 147 votes pending a recount. Democrats still have a working 21-19 majority in the state Senate, where members are not up until 2023, so that should minimize the damage Republicans can do for the next year. 

In New Jersey, Gov. Phil Murphy was the first Democratic governor to win re-election since 1977, but he had a close call with Republican rival Jack Ciattarelli. Murphy’s re-election victory wasn’t declared until the day after the election, with Murphy up by about 65,000 votes, or 2.6 percentage points over Ciattarelli. And Democrats also will still control both the New Jersey General Assembly (46-34, losing six seats) and the State Senate (24-16, losing one seat).

In Virginia, when Youngkin retired as an executive at the Carlyle Group in September 2020, he said Virginia’s economy was “in the ditch,” when the unemployment rate was 6.6%, and he marketed himself as a jobs creator, touting his history in business as a reason voters should trust him to rehabilitate the Virginia economy, though critics at Carlyle Group told Bloomberg News Youngkin had a mixed record, shepherding several bets and strategies that chalked up losses, and some of them are still being unwound.

Youngkin quickly became a star in conservative politics, railing against abortion, whipping up a backlash to mask and/or vaccine mandates in public schools, as well as the supposed teaching of “critical race theory” that explores how racism is embedded in the legal structure, which is, in actuality, a course usually limited to law schools. 

As of September 2021, Virginia’s economy had improved from the Trump recession, with a 3.8% unemployment rate. But you’d never know that from the right-wing propaganda channels, such as Fox “News,” Sinclair, NewsMax, OAN and Breitbart, as well as the “mainstream” corporate channels that have minimized the accomplishments of Joe Biden and the Democratic Congress in the past year. Then there’s the 53% of Americans who get their “news” from social media …

Former Republican strategist Stuart Stevens, who quit the party in disgust with its turn to Trumpism, tweeted Nov. 5, “Dow is over 36,000, unemployment has dropped from 6.3% in Jan. to 4.8% [in September]. Over 5 million jobs added, a record. 220m vaccines in 10 months. And only 30% of country think US is on right track. The Democratic Party has a huge messaging problem.”

Indeed. And these economic gains have occurred despite Republican governors trying to block businesses, local governments and school districts from requiring public safety measures, such as masks or requiring proof of vaccinations, and all 26 Republican state attorneys general have said they would fight an OSHA mandate announced Nov. 4 that businesses with over 100 employees require either vaccination or regular testing to maintain safe workplaces. The Fifth Circuit US Court of Appeals put a temporary stop to that. 

By sabotaging COVID control efforts, Trumpublicans hope the economy will falter again and allow the Grand Oligarch Party to regain control of the federal government. And they have put measures in place to prevent the popular vote from rejecting them next time.

With Youngkin’s win, and the close call in New Jersey, expect anti-mask, anti-vaccine and anti-CRT rhetoric to dominate the mid-term congressional races, with every Democratic achievement slurred as “communism,” because Republicans don’t have much else to run on.

Three days after the election, the US House finally passed the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure jobs bill, 228-206, with 13 Republicans voting for the bill to provide the margin of victory, while six progressive Democrats (“The Squad”) voted against. 

The bill provides $550 billion for new federal investments, including $110 million for roads and bridges; $39 billion for public transit; $66 billion for rail service, mainly in the Northeast Corridor; $25 billion for airports; $55 billion for water and wastewater systems, and $65 billion to expand broadband Internet, particularly in underserved rural areas and low-income neighborhoods; $6.5 billion to modernize the nation’s electric grid; $21 billion for environmental remediation; $7.5 billion to expand charging stations for electric vehicles; $5 billion for electric and hybrid school buses; and $1 billion to “reconnect” communities of color that were separated during past roadbuilding projects. The money is sorely needed to catch up after years of neglect of public infrastructure and should help in resolving supply chain problems. The rest continues projects.

The five-year spending package would be paid for with $210 billion in unspent COVID-19 relief aid and $53 billion in unemployment aid Republican states halted in an attempt to force workers back into minimum-wage jobs, along with an array of smaller pots of money, like petroleum reserve sales and spectrum auctions for 5G services.

The infrastructure bill is good, but it still needs the $1.75 trillion Build Back Better budget bill as a followup.

Progressives hoped to delay passage until the Senate passed the Build Back Better bill. Biden is confident Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema will end up joining the 48 other Senate Democrats to pass the bill, which is now set at $1.75 trillion, but progressives don’t think Manchin and Sinema have earned that trust. 

The Build Back Better bill would, among other things, extend the Child Care Tax Credit that pays families up to $300 a month for each child under 18 years of age, which was originally appropriated as part of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan that was passed in March to facilitate the US recovery from the devastating economic and health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The American Rescue Plan in March included direct stimulus payments of $1,400 to couples making less than $150,000; extended unemployment compensation, continued eviction and foreclosure moratoriums, and increased the Child Tax Credit through 2021. It provided funds for state and local governments to help compensate for lost tax revenues, money for schools from kindergarten through eighth grade to safely reopen amid the pandemic, and subsidized COVID-19 testing and vaccination programs that have gotten at least one dose of vaccine into 220 million American arms. But most voters forgot that by Nov. 2. Democrats must do a better job of claiming credit for what they’ve done for working people, because the corporate media won’t volunteer the information. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2021


Populist.com

Blog | Current Issue | Back Issues | Essays | Links

About the Progressive Populist | How to Subscribe | How to Contact Us


Selections from the December 1, 2021 issue

 COVER/Hal Crowther 

A confederacy of dunces? Once again, Dixie wants out

EDITORIAL 
Racism still swings votes


FRANK LINGO 
Shatter the Glasgow facade

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
Substandard housing: Suffering in the abstract

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Time for detox

DISPATCHES 
Virginia lesson for Democrats: The media aren’t your friend. 
Nov. 2 was a good day for diversity. 
Voters of the Mequon-Thiensville school district can see what’s going on. Can national media? 
October jobs growth exceeds expectations. 
Progressive groups warn of GOP attack on 2024 elections. 
Trump sank trust in US election. 
Small town in N. California declares itself a republic ...


ART CULLEN
We could make a statement against fear

ALAN GUEBERT 
Cresting the wave, looking into next year’s trough


JILL RICHARDSON 
Do any Republicans still support democracy?

JOHN YOUNG
GOP cheers on race to bottom


THOM HARTMANN 
Virginia election proves America stands on the edge of a new populism

TOM CONWAY
Rebuilding the Middle Class


BOB LORD 
Behold and beware! The age of trillionaires is coming

DR. CINTLI 
Dreaming and living nuclear dreams


HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Curb cuts for all

SAM URETSKY 
Fighting COVID disinformation

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Promises are not enough

WAYNE O’LEARY 
The Manchin-Sinema act

JOHN BUELL 
Capitalism makes for weaker links


JASON SIBERT 
Biden should fight for nuclear arms control

REBEKAH ENTRALGO 
Rediscovering the power of unions


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
He counted


SETH SANDRONSKY 
OSHA advances COVID-19 standard to protect workplaces

BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel
Riot, don’t diet

ROB PATTERSON 
Hail the King from Wales

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
Beware the consequences

MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
From adventurer to activist: Jacques Cousteau


MARK ANDERSON 
Solve debt crises by replacing federal reserve


GENE NICHOL 
Who is worse? 

and more ...

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Editorial: ‘GOP’ Sticks with Whitewash

 Republicans clearly are determined to block the exposure of their partisans’ participation in the Jan. 6 insurrection, rather than cooperate with the investigation of the failed coup. 

The House on Oct. 21 voted 229-202 to find Steve Bannon in criminal contempt of Congress for his refusal to comply with a subpoena in the House investigation of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. Only nine Republicans voted to enforce the subpoena after House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy urged his caucus to vote against it. 

McCarthy argued that Bannon’s subpoena was “invalid,” because the minority was not permitted to participate in the select committee. Of course, that was a lie. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi asked McCarthy to nominate members for the committee, and he nominated five Republicans, but pulled all of them when Pelosi rejected Reps. Jim Banks of Indiana and Jim Jordan of Ohio because of concerns they supported the insurrection. McCarthy decreed that Republicans should not serve on the panel, but Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinziger of Illinois ultimately accepted Pelosi’s invitations to serve.

Cheney is vice chair of the select committee, and before the Jan. 6 panel voted to hold Bannon in contempt Oct. 19, Cheney suggested that Trump and Bannon may have been “personally involved” in organizing the Capitol attack and urged her Republican colleagues to do their “duty to prevent the dismantling of the rule of law.”

“As you think about how you will answer when history asks, ‘What did you do when Congress was attacked, when a mob, provoked by a president, tried to use violence to stop us from carrying out our constitutional duty to count electoral votes—when a mob, provoked by a president, tried to overturn the results of an election?” Cheney said, ”will you be able to say you did everything possible to ensure Americans got the truth about those events? Or did you look away? Did you make partisan excuses and accept the unacceptable?”

Cheney also revealed McCarthy has been putting the squeeze on House Republicans to cover up details about the Capitol siege.

Her colleagues, Cheney noted, “don’t want to anger Kevin McCarthy, the minority leader, who has been especially active in attempting to block the investigation of the events of Jan. 6, despite the fact that he called for such a commission the week after the attack.”

Shortly after that moment of clarity by McCarthy, he was summoned to Mar-a-Lago, where he apparently repented for his criticism of the Great Misleader and pledged fealty to the dark lord. McCarthy has been in lockstep with the Trumpers ever since.

Cheney went to the House floor to reiterate that Bannon predicted the mayhem of Jan. 6 even before it happened.

“I urge all Americans to watch what Mr. Bannon said on his podcast on Jan. 5 and 6. It is shocking and indefensible,” Cheney said, during debate before the House vote on Bannon’s contempt charge. “He said, ‘All hell is going to break loose.’ He said, ‘We are coming in right over the target. This is the point of attack we have always wanted.’”

McCarthy countered with a message privately delivered to Republican consultants who have worked with Cheney, that they had to choose between working for Cheney and working for McCarthy, the New York Times reported. At least one firm working for Cheney has severed their relationship. McCarthy also has threatened private companies that cooperate with the Jan. 6 probe.

For his part, Trump, before the House vote, said the the election was the crime, and he praised the riot — which injured 140 police officers and claimed several lives — as a legitimate response.

“The insurrection took place on Nov. 3, Election Day,” Trump wrote. “Jan. 6 was the protest!” 

There is growing evidence that Republican members of Congress and White House officials participated in planning the “Stop the Steal” rally. The only question is whether those plans explicitly included an attack on the Capitol, and how Trump was involved.

Republicans pay a price for standing up against Trump. Only nine House Republicans were prepared to pay that price. The House established its own select committee because Senate Republicans filibustered a proposed independent commission. Only six Republican senators were willing to support a probe and risk Trump’s wrath.

The Justice Department now must decide whether to prosecute Bannon, who claims executive privilege, even though he was not a government employee when the events occurred, and President Joe Biden has waived executive privilege in the investigation. 

If the Justice Department declines to prosecute Bannon, the House should order Bannon arrested under its own authority, under the principle of “inherent contempt,” and hold Bannon until he agrees to turn over relevant documents and to testify before the committee.

Whichever way it goes, Bannon and other Trump conspirators hope to delay the work of the Jan. 6 committee into next year’s mid-term election, so they can dismiss conclusions as political persecution.

Belief that the presidential election was stolen by Democrats is a matter of faith for the Republicans. They rationalize it allows them to enforce new laws in red states to limit access to voting. 

Polls show voter approval of President Biden has sagged to 43.6% on Oct. 25, down from the height at 55.1% in March, after passage of the American Recovery Act, which pumped $1.2 trillion into the economy, helping the nation recover from Trump’s recession. 

Those polls will rebound again if Biden gets the Senate to pass his “Build Back Better” bill, which would provide, among other things, universal preschool for children; child care to help parents get back to work; up to 12 weeks of paid family leave for new parents and caregivers; two years of free community college; and extension of the child tax credit, which has paid up to $300 per month per child since July, but expires at the end of this year under the current law. 

Build Back Better also would expand Medicare to cover vision, hearing and dental care; expand Medicaid to cover working poor people in Republican states that refused to cover the poor under the Affordable Care Act; and allow Medicare to negotiate the price of prescription drugs, over the dead bodies of pharmaceutical lobbyists. 

There’s also money for affordable housing, tax credits for electric vehicles and other climate incentives to switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy, which will have a hard time surviving the objections of coal magnate Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), whose vote is critical to the passage in a 50-50 Senate, .

Those are pretty popular features, so Republicans are stuck with complaining about the overall cost of the bill, which started at $6 trillion over 10 years in the original draft proposed by Senate Budget Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), and was pared to $3.5 trillion in Biden’s first compromise, but Manchin says $1.5 trillion is about as much as he can support.

Progressives should continue to insist on as many of their priorities as they can get past Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who mainly has objected to raising taxes on wealthy people and corporations to pay for the bill, even though she voted against those tax cuts when Trump got them through Congress in 2017. 

Once Build Back Better is signed into law, Dems can run for re-election in 2022 on the recovery that already has added 4.5 milion jobs since Biden took office, and give voters the choice of keeping those benefits under a Democratic Congress, and extending them if they can add a few more Democratic senators. Or voters can let Republicans repeal those benefits, as they surely would, if they get back in control. R’s have little else to run on, except fascism and mask resentment. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2021


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Friday, October 29, 2021

Selections from the November 15, 2021 issue

COVER/Elliott Negin

To find out if ExxonMobil really supports a carbon tax, just follow the money

EDITORIAL
‘GOP’ sticks with Jan. 6 whitewash


FRANK LINGO 
Democrats failing planet again

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Undoing racism perfected: A diversified approach

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Redistricting crosses the line into gerrymandering

DISPATCHES 
States where mosts people are quitting their jobs seem to have two things in common. 
Lawmakers probing Jan. 6 are following the money and putting pieces together. 
Jan. 6 rally organizers are talking, and congressional Republican should be nervous. 
Trump had ‘command center’ to plot coup.
Investors bail from Trump social media startup.
Why Medicare Advantage plans are bad.
Getting rid of Super Spreaders.
Geohmert asks why Rep. John Lewis wasn't treated the same as Jan. 6 insurrectionists ...


ART CULLEN
Friends are tough to come by, easy to lose


FRANCINE TOWNSEND 
When Wall Street came to my mobile home park

JOHN YOUNG 
Call it the ‘Green Real Deal’

ROBERT KUTTNER 
The supply chain story everyone is missing

SAM PIZZIGATI 
The US has become a tax haven for the vile and the vicious

DICK POLMAN
Country first: Let’s remember Colin Powell at his best 

TOM CONWAY
Health care at risk of collapse

SISTER KAREN M. DONAHUE 
The hypocrisy of the federal spending debate

REBEKAH ENTRALGO 
Don’t cut care


BOB BURNETT 
View from the barricades: The labor market

THOM HARTMANN 
There’s nothing ‘normal’ about have a middle class: It has to be chosen


SONALI KOLHATKAR 
Why record numbers of workers are quitting and striking

DR. CINTLI 
The song of the Quetzal

EBONY SLAUGHTER-JOHNSON 
Here comes the abortion bounty hunters

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
The annals of greed

SAM URETSKY 
Killed by COVID by way of Myeloma

GENE NICHOL 
Judge issues powerful, legally precise ruling in UNC admissions case — it can’t be read in Johnston County, N.C., public schools

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Corporate America builds back worse
JOHN BUELL p. 16
Medicinal advances may depend on preserving biodiversity


DAVID NEIWERT 
Oath keepers’ insurrectionist extremism spreads among elected officials, hacked data reveals


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Wingnuts and caramel apples at the Tulsa State Fair

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson
Dear Mr. NSA

BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel 
Will we survive what’s coming? 

ROB PATTERSON 
Do you have a podcast yet?


MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
Nonfiction creature feature: He’s alive!

SETH SANDRONSKY 
She’s on a roll


JOEL D. JOSEPH 
Arrest Steve Bannon

and more ...

Saturday, October 16, 2021

Editorial: Don’t Let the Big Liars Win

 Joe Biden was elected president last November in the highest voter turnout in the US in more than a century, as 66.7% of eligible voters cast ballots despite the COVID-19 pandemic, and despite efforts to obstruct and harass likely Democratic voters. But Republicans have been conditioned by years of Donald Trump warning the only way Democrats could beat him was by stealing the election, even though Trump narrowly won the 2016 election with a minority of the vote and he never had majority approval as president. 

Republicans tried to curtail voting by mail and closing easy absentee ballot drops, and Trump supporters tried to intimidate voters by brandishing guns and using trucks to block entrances at voting places, and screaming violent, racist threats at voters. 

When vote counts showed Biden winning in Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin, threats were made against election workers and officials. Threats were even made against election officials in Vermont, where Trump’s loss couldn’t have been a surprise. The harassment and threats of violence moved Georgia voting system official Gabriel Sterling to warn that if the baseless accusations of fraud continue, “someone’s going to get killed,” and he called on President Trump and Georgia’s two Republican senators to denounce threats. They declined.

The Republican-dominated state Senate in Arizona in March ordered a pro-Trump firm, the Cyber Ninjas, to examine votes cast in Maricopa County. On Sept. 24, the Cyber Ninjas-led team finally reported to the Arizona Senate that Biden not only won the state’s most populous county, but he gained 99 votes, while Trump lost 261 votes. 

That wasn’t enough to knock Trump off his Big Lie, as he told cultists at a Georgia rally, “We won on the Arizona forensic audit yesterday at a level that you wouldn’t believe!”

Charlie Sykes, the anti-Trump Republican editor of the Bulwark newsletter, wrote on Sept. 27, “If you have been living in a bubble of naivete or denial, you might have imagined that the results of the Cyber Ninja[s] audit in Arizona would usher in a New Era of Sobriety in our politics. Fat chance.”

Many Republicans apparently have rationalized that, if Democrats can “steal” elections (by turning out voters), Republicans can steal back better.

Republicans appear determined to stop “excessive” voting by Democrats from happening again. Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 27, 19 Republican-dominated states have enacted 33 laws that will make it harder for Americans to vote and easier for partisan officials to set aside votes they don’t like, the Brennan Center for Justice reports. 

Trumpist Republican congressmen continue to cast doubt on Biden’s presidential election. In a hearing of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform Oct. 7, Rep. Andrew Biggs (R-Ariz.) replied. “I don’t know [who won the presidential election in Arizona]. We’ve not resolved the issues that took place.”

Trump at a rally in Des Moines Oct. 9 repeated the lie that his loss was the result of “election fraud,” which prompted the crowd to chant “Trump won! Trump won!”

Appearing alongside Trump were top members of the Republican establishment in Iowa, including Sen. Chuck Grassley, Gov. Kim Reynolds and Iowa Republican Chair Jeff Kaufmann.

Trump has held rallies since leaving the White House. But never have elected Republicans of such stature appeared with him, Meridith McGraw of Politico noted. And the presence of Grassley in particular, who offered a stinging condemnation of Trump’s behavior after the 2020 election, signified that whatever qualms the former GOP may have had with Trump are now faded memories; whatever questions they had about the direction of the party have been resolved.

Trump made a point of endorsing Grassley, who at 88 is seeking an eighth term, and any of Grassley’s past criticisms of the Great Misleader are no longer operative. “If I didn’t accept the endorsement of a person that’s got 91 percent of the Republican voters in Iowa, I wouldn’t be too smart,” Grassley told the crowd.

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), the second-ranked House Republican, stood by the “stolen election” hoax Oct. 10 on Fox News, where he said the states did not follow their own “rules” in conducting the election, despite each state certifying the validity of the election.

Senate Democrats, including Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) have drafted the Freedom to Vote Act (S. 2784), which would set national standards to protect access to the vote, end partisan gerrymandering of congressional districts, begin to overhaul the broken campaign finance system, and create new safeguards against subversion of the electoral process. But Senate Democrats need to change the filibuster rule, which requires “controversial” bills to have 60 votes to pass, and unfortunately Republicans are unanimously opposed to making it easier to vote. 

Some Democrats, frustrated by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s inability to pass the Freedom to Vote Act or the Build Back Better Bill in the Senate, are demanding that Biden get involved in changing the filibuster rule to allow the voting bill to pass on a 51-50 vote, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the deciding vote. They think Biden should force Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) to get in line, like President Lyndon Johnson is reputed to have done in the 1960s when he steered the passage of his landmark legislation, such as the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts and bills establishing Medicare and Medicaid. But Johnson was working with sizable Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, and he was able to make threats stick. If Biden or Schumer tried to threaten Manchin or Sinema, either one of them could make Mitch McConnell majority leader overnight by quitting the Democratic caucus, thereby killing Biden’s agenda until the next election. 

Republican obstruction, lies and misdirection have taken a toll on Biden’s approval ratings, which have dropped from a high of 55% the week after his inauguration to 44.6% on Oct. 11, in the FiveThirtyEight average of polls. Republicans have obstructed Biden’s progressive initiatives and blamed the military under Biden’s command for “only” getting 122,000 evacuees out of Kabul after Trump surrendered Afghanistan to the Taliban. But a majority of voters still plan to support Democrats in next year’s elections. Asked whether they would vote for a Democrat or Republican for Congress in the midterms, as of Oct. 10, 44.4% would vote Democratic while 41.6% would vote Republican in the FiveThirtyEight average. 

Republicans hope to gerrymander their way into a House majority in 2022, even if a majority of Americans actually vote for Democrats, but the Big Lie Party’s neo-fascist tactics might finally prove too much for longtime Republicans whose fathers and grandfathers actually fought and defeated fascists in World War II.

In Senate races next year, Democrats will need to protect vulnerable Democratic Senate incumbents in Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire and Virginia, but they also have a shot at vulnerable Republicans in Florida and Wisconsin, as well as open seats in Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Pennsylvania, if the elections are free and fair. Iowa may be too far gone, but there’s always hope.

If Democrats can hold onto the House and add a couple seats in the Senate, Democrats will be able to pass bills in the Senate without letting Manchin and Sinema dictate terms. It would immeasurably help beat the Big Lie Republicans if Democrats can pass the Freedom to Vote Act, to stop the Jim Crow Jr. laws at the state level. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 1, 2021


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Copyright © 2021 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the November 1, 2021 issue

 COVER/Stephen Engelberg

Why do the wealthy pay a lower tax rate than everybody else? 

EDITORIAL
Don’t let Big Liars win


FRANK LINGO
Stop Republicans’ attacks on voting

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS
John Shelby Spong: Passer of torches

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Hard to find good help for cheap

DISPATCHES 
Trump’s failed attempt to overturn the election is clear.
Trump hid payments from foreign governments, $70 million in losses on D.C. hotel.
AT&T wanted another Fox News, and OAN is what it got.
Economy adds 194,000 jobs in September, unemployment rate drops, but Wall Street is disappointed.
Amid calls to ‘fire DeJoy,’ 20 states sue over plans to sabotage Postal Service ...


ART CULLEN 
Build back what? Sounds pretty expensive.


SONDRA YOUDELMAN
Big money’s war on the build back better plan

JOHN YOUNG
Fox News: Dialing up lies for dollars

BRIAN WAKAMO 
To save jobs and fund infrastructure, close this loophole


SETH SANDRONSKY
Shakiness, Inc.: Tech and temp workers


BOB BURNETT
Extreme measures


GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet 
The ugly Face(book) of corporate capitalism


DR. CINTLI
Of juvenile pranks and insurrections

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas 
Immigrants: Keeping them healthy

SAM URETSKY 
Twenty years of Republican obstruction on climate change

TAMMY ROJAS
With health care at stake, our voices should count

WAYNE O’LEARY
More southern discomfort

JOHN BUELL 
Between the lines on Manchin


DAVID SCHMIDT 
‘The United States of Latin America’: Mexico breathes new life into Simon Bolivar’s dream

BARRY FRIEDMAN
Cold as ice


BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel 
Bread is not enough

ROB PATTERSON 
‘The Many Saints of Newark’ blesses ‘The Sopranos’ with a fine prequel

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
Crispy critter

MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
Lights! Cameras! Action!: Academy Museum features Hollywood hoopla & inclusivity


GENE NICHOL 
Democratic blindness and timidity assist Republican sedition

and more ...

Friday, October 1, 2021

Editorial: Dems Are On Their Own

 Republicans are united in holding the federal government hostage by refusing to support an increase in the debt ceiling to let the government pay for spending Republicans approved last year.

Republican leaders don’t care that most of the national debt accumulated during the past 40 years occurred during Republican administrations, including Trump. 

The debt has increased from $997.8 billion when Ronald Reagan took office to $26.9 trillion at the end of Trump’s term in 2020, the Office of Management and Budget reports. Republican presidents were responsible for $15.95 trillion of that debt increase, while Democrats were responsible for $9.97 trillion. So which party is more fiscally responsible?

After Trump took over a recovering economy from Barack Obama, Republicans passed another tax cut for the wealthy in 2017 that, once again, failed to pay for itself with promised growth. That, along with increased costs associated with the pandemic, ballooned Trump’s deficit to $4.2 trillion in 2020. Trump added $6.7 trillion to the national debt during his four years.

But last year Republicans suspended the debt ceiling for one year, passing Trump’s $6.7 trillion debt to Trump’s successor.

The debt ceiling “debate” is just another distraction from the real controversy: the Republican Party’s efforts to deny Democratic voters the right to have their votes counted in future elections. Since the election, Republican-controlled legislatures in 18 states have passed laws to make it harder to vote and easier for courts or the legislatures to set aside those votes if they don’t like the looks of them.

Republicans have shown a willingness to deny reality by obfuscation and outright falsehood. They tell lies quicker than Democrats and mainstream media can correct the record, and members of the “GOP” cult accept those lies as a matter of faith. 

The Washington Post counted a record 30,573 “false or misleading claims” by Trump during his four years in the White House. He certainly hasn’t stopped lying since he left office, as he has consistently maintained the Big Lie that Democrats stole the 2020 election for Joe Biden, and a majority of Republicans still believe the Great Misleader, despite the lack of any evidence to prove his claims. Even after the “audit” of Maricopa County election results ordered by the Republican Arizona Senate, which was finally released Sept. 24, showed Joe Biden won the county by a larger margin than originally reported, Trump claimed the results showed tens of thousands of “phantom” ballots were cast in the election.

Republicans are ginning up election audits in other states, including Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and even Texas, where Trump won, though his 52% share was a slimmer margin than he expected, so he demanded a “forensic audit.” Gov. Greg Abbott obliged, ordering the secretary of state to audit Dallas, Harris (Houston) and Tarrant (Fort Worth) counties, which Trump lost, as well as Collin County, a Dallas suburban county. which Trump won.

It might be a coincidence that the Arizona fraudit report was competing for public attention with videos of mounted Border Patrol agents trying to herd fleeing Haitian migrants who had been camping near Del Rio, Texas, hoping to gain admission to the US.

The Haitians may have been lured to Texas after the Biden administration in May extended protections for more than 100,000 Haitians who already were in the US, because of security concerns and social unrest in Haiti, but Trump associates may have been involved in getting Haitians to gather at Del Rio, a small city of 35,000 on the Texas border across the Rio Grande from Ciudad Acuña. 

Many of the nearly 30,000 Haitians who arrived at Del Rio in mid-September came from Brazil, shortly after Trump adviser Jason Miller met with Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, an ally of Trump. 

Many of the Haitians had fled their homeland after the devastating 2010 earthquake; they were drawn to Brazil’s and Chile’s once-booming economies, as well as Central American countries.

Why they suddenly ended up in Del Rio, which is out of the way for someone traveling from South America to Texas, is a good question. It may have been a coincidence, but, as intel expert Malcolm Nance says, “Coincidence takes a lot of planning.”

Right-wing Republicans showed up to accuse the Biden administration of failing to head off another crisis on the border, and video of the Border Patrol mounties (whose union supported Trump) generated public outrage and criticism of Biden’s immigration policies by advocates, including the Congressional Black Caucus. It looked like more propaganda by Republicans who were concerned that the crossing of Latinos at the border was not alarming enough. 

The Haitians swarming Del Rio also coincided with Republican promotion of the neo-Nazi “Replacement Theory” on right-wing media, as commentators such as Tucker Carlson charged that Democrats plan to replace the White majority with people of color.

Early reports indicated most Haitians would be deported, but it turned out 13,000 were allowed to remain in the US to apply for asylum, while 8,000 voluntarily returned to Mexico and 4,000 were returned to Haiti, the Department of Homeland Security reported. 

The makeshift camp under the bridge in Del Rio has been cleared and the bridge has been reopened to traffic. In the meantime, Republicans are determined to force a shutdown of the government, in the hopes of disrupting the stock markets and starting a recession, which they will then blame on the Democrats. 

Democrats can and should avert the economic damage by including the debt ceiling increase as part of the $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation bill, which cannot be stopped by Republican filibuster. That Build Back Better bill includes more investments in dealing with climate change, expanding child care, pre-kindergarten, elder care, affordable housing, two years of free community college, expanding Medicare to cover dental and vision and other projects. It would be paid for through tax increases for the wealthiest households and increased tax enforcement of those wealthy households.

We hope the threat of the Republicans forcing default on the national debt will motivate Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Kyrsten Synema (D-Ariz.), who profess concerns over the economic impact of the Build Back Better spending, to get back in line with the Democratic caucus to pass the budget reconciliation bill. 

While they’re at it, Democrats should suspend the filibuster on voting rights bills and pass the Freedom to Vote Act (S. 2784), the compromise bill Manchin drafted with Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) in negotiations with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and other Democratic senators.

The bill would set national standards to protect access to the vote, end partisan gerrymandering of congressional districts, begin to overhaul the broken campaign finance system, and create new safeguards against subversion of the electoral process.

Suspension of the filibuster, at least for voting rights bills, probably is necessary to get it through the Senate, since Republicans unanimously opposed the more sweeping For the People Act in June, and no Republican senator has agreed to support the Manchin compromise. Ten Republicans would be needed to overcome the filibuster, and Chuck Schumer is lucky to keep his 50 Democrats together.

God help us if the Senate Dems fail to get their act together. Because Republicans will be no help at all. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 15, 2021


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Selections from the October 15, 2021 issue

 COVER/Hal Crowther 

‘The Gates of Hell’ — swinging wide?

EDITORIAL 
Democrats are on their own


FRANK LINGO 
Plastic is poisoning the planet

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Best defunding model we’ve never heard of

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen  
Finding the consequences in pesticides

DISPATCHES 
Trump campaign knew Big Lie was baseless, memo reveals.
Coup plan called for Pence to declare Trump winner by leaving out 7 states.
Violence from far right anti-vax/anti-maskers keeps ratcheting higher.
Supreme Court brief gives away the right’s aborion game.
COVID cases, deaths rising among children across the US.
Media still plays down Afghanistan evacuation.
Hacker group 'Anonymous' spills secrets of extreme right. ...


ART CULLEN 
Conservation agriculture buoys an Iowa farmer through drought

JOHN YOUNG 
Requiem for an anti-vax evangelist


JILL RICHARDSON 
Spreading vaccine misinformation is dangerous and wrong


DICK POLMAN 
For at least one day, MAGA was reduced to MehGA


GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Crisis? What crisis?


REBEKAH ENTRALGO  
Unemployment insurance isn’t holding back the economy. Inequality is. 

THOM HARTMANN 
Why threats of violence are epidemic in America


DR. CINTLI 
A Denny’s experience

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
The nose knows

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
Vaccines: Beyond mandates

SAM URETSKY
Wonder drugs for COVID leave scientists wondering

GABE BANKMAN-FRIED 
Prepare for the next pandemic today

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Southern discomfort

JOHN BUELL 
Secrecy’s deadly toll

JASON SIBERT 
We need to prioritize security needs


N. GUNASEKARAN 
‘Inequality virus’ strikes Asian poor

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Trump on Tulsa time


BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel
Not both, but all

ROB PATTERSON 
Ali, soul of the sweet science

BOB BURNETT 
What did we learn from the California recall? 

MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
New Muhammad Ali docuseries chronicles the life of ‘The Greatest’ athlete and activist

MARK ANDERSON 
Can you count on your digits in a cashless society? 

SETH SANDRONSKY
Protecting workers and communities


GENE NICHOL
Reminding Texas that it is part of the United States

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Editorial: Republicans Own Delta Surge

 Republicans have been clearing the way for the coronavirus since early April 2020, when they found that COVID-19 seemed to be hitting Democratic cities and states hardest, with Black and Latino frontline workers particularly vulnerable in the early days of the pandemic.

Donald Trump and his minions apparently calculated the virus would kill more Democrats than Republicans in the election year, so the White House canceled plans to send cloth masks to every US household, which would have protected against transmission of the virus, in April 2020. By January, 400,000 Americans had perished, the economy had fallen off the cliff and Trump was out of a job.

After Joe Biden became president, he found the Trump administration had not developed a system to deliver to the American people the vaccines that were becoming available. Biden’s first priority was to organize the distribution of the vaccines, free of charge, across the country.

The pandemic had peaked in January 2021, when an average of more than 3,100 people died from COVID-19 every day. More than 246,000 new cases were reported daily in the week before Jan. 8. As the Biden administration rolled out the vaccines, the pace of shots grew to more than four million on some days in April. By July more than half the US population had received at least one dose of vaccine and new daily cases had dropped below 12,000 in June and early July, raising hopes that a return to normalcy was possible. 

Meanwhile, right-wing media, led by Fox “News,” amplified concerns that the vaccines were rushed into production and masking requirements violated civil rights. Vaccines were welcomed in the “blue” Democratic cities but treated with relative indifference in “red” Republican areas. As numbers of COVID cases and deaths declined in the summer, Republican governors, with a few exceptions, continued to follow Trump’s lead in playing down the usefulness of getting the shots and wearing masks to prevent the infection of others, and the vaccination rates trailed those of states governed by Democrats. 

When the Delta variant emerged in July and caused a surge of COVID infections the month before schools reopened, Republicans doubled down on resistance to anti-COVID measures, denying schools and businesses the authority to require employees or customers to be vaccinated, or to require teachers, staff and students to be vaccinated or wear masks to prevent transmission of COVID.

In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott, who faces Republican primary challengers from the right next year, asked hospitals to halt non-emergency medical procedures as COVID-19 patients strained wards already struggling with a shortage of nurses. But he still banned local governments from implementing mask and vaccine mandates.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis threatened to defund school districts that defied his executive order prohibiting mask mandates for students — while the state saw its rates of hospitalization from COVID surge past the worst levels of 2020.

And in South Dakota, Gov. Kristi Noem welcomed an estimated 525,000 mainly unmasked revelers to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally again Aug. 6-15. Last year the rally was credited with helping spread the virus throughout the Midwest. In the weeks after this year’s rally, COVID cases rose dramatically, from an average of 54 new cases per day in early August to 440 new cases per day in early September.

Republicans tripled down after President Biden, in response to the Delta surge filling hospital ICUs with COVID patients, issued an executive order on Sept. 9 to force businesses with more than 100 employees to provide a safe workplace by requiring employee to be vaccinated (or be tested weekly for COVID). He also threatened to withhold federal funding from hospitals and nursing homes; as well as federal contractors. More than 100 million workers would be affected by Biden’s order. 

Republicans complained that Biden’s initiative was unacceptable. They continue to oppose government efforts to control the coronavirus pandemic, which by that time had killed more than 650,000 Americans. Republican governors vowed to sue the administration to block the requirements. 

Biden replied, “Have at it.” He added, “I am so disappointed, particularly that some of the Republican governors have been so cavalier with the health of these kids, so cavalier with the health of their communities.”

The authority of governments to impose vaccines has been established since at least 1905, when the Supreme Court issued a 7-to-2 ruling, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, that Cambridge, Mass., could require all adults to be vaccinated against smallpox.

It is questionable whether the president could require all Americans to get shots. But the president can use the authority of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 to require that companies maintain safe workplaces with vaccination, under the federal government’s well-established constitutional power to regulate commerce.

Republicans argue that Biden’s plan is a big-government attack on states’ rights, private business and personal choice, reflecting their appeal to neo-Confederate and neo-fascist voters that Trump brought into the party, and who now hold the balance of power in Republican primaries.

Texas Gov. Abbott, for whom 60,000 COVID deaths was no cause for alarm, called Biden’s actions an “assault on private businesses.” Abbott issued an order protecting Texans’ “right to choose” whether or not they would be vaccinated, an ironic turn of phrase given the controversial new Texas law to remove women’s right to choose abortion. “Texas is already working to halt this power grab,” Abbott wrote, referring to the federal public health requirements.

Gov. Doug Ducey of Arizona, whose state has 19,187 COVID deaths so far, wrote, “The Biden-Harris administration is hammering down on private businesses and individual freedoms in an unprecedented and dangerous way.” He questioned how many workers would be displaced, businesses fined, and children kept out of the classroom because of the mandates, and he vowed to push back.

In a fund-raising email, Florida Gov. DeSantis, with 48,772 deaths, wrote, “Joe Biden has declared war on constitutional government, the rule of law, and the jobs and livelihoods of millions of Americans.”

The Republican Governors Association hopes to use the anti-COVID policies as a wedge issue against vulnerable Democratic governors up for re-election in 2022. “Let’s see who Democrat governors side with: Joe Biden or the families and businesses they were elected to represent,” the group said in a Sept. 9 statement.

If Republicans want to be known as the pro-COVID party, so be it. Recent polls suggest that a solid majority of Americans support vaccinations and, at least in schools, they support mask mandates for staff and children to protect those who can’t get vaccinations. 

Republicans are completing their rebrand from the Party of Lincoln into the Party of Trump, and from the Grand Old Party (GOP) to the Grand Sociopathic Party (GSP) and the Big Lie Party (BLP). They scorn masks as a sign of their resistance to public health requirements. They appear willing to die on that hill (or, to be more accurate, let their supporters die, as most Republican “leaders,” and all the Fox “News” hosts, have been vaccinated). 

The rest of us can thank science that we can take the vaccine to protect ourselves and wear a mask in public to protect our neighbors from what has become the Republican Flu. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 1, 2021


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Copyright © 2021 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the October 1, 2021 issue

 COVER/Abrahm Lustgarden

40 Million people rely on the Colorado River. It’s drying up fast. 

EDITORIAL 
Republicans own Delta surge

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

FRANK LINGO 
Privileged block climate progress

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen  
Sustainability needed now more than ever

DISPATCHES 
Majority of Republicans say belief in Trump election ‘steal’ hoax is important part of Republicanism.
Trump led a fascist purge of the Republican Party; now his base is finishing what he started. 
Alabama heart attack victim, turned down at 43 hospitals, ends up dead 200 miles away in Mississippi. 
‘Oath Keepers’ under investigation for Jan. 6 ‘seditionist conspiracy,’ 
FBI search warrant reveals. Proud Boys show up at local school protests, following a larger far-right blueprint.
Child COVID hospitalizations reach a new high schools reopen.
House Dems would fund $3.5T budget with tax hikes.
Repubs' trust in national news drops by half in just 5 years ...


ART CULLEN 
Clipped wings, tiny pretzels

ALAN GUEBERT 
Hold the sickle, CRP needs a new, bigger hammer

JILL RICHARDSON 
Preventing an American Pinochet

JOHN YOUNG 
Road to Kabul via Saigon

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Fertile soil

ROBERT KUTTNER 
Infrastructure summer: Chuck Schumer, China, and Build Back Better

DICK POLMAN
Kudos to the guy who foresaw the ravages of climate change. Too bad he was mocked.

TOM CONWAY
Investing in American families


BOB BURNETT 
Afghanistan: 10 takeaways


DAVID SCHMIDT  
Critical race theory is the new communism: Lessons from an older conservative bogeyman


DR. CINTLI 
Leaving, seeking, finding home


HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
The telenovela that is COVID: Waiting for the last episode


SAM URETSKY 
Democracy, if you can keep it


WAYNE O’LEARY 
End of the American empire


JOHN BUELL 
In Afghanistan and Iraq, guerillas’ improvised explosive devices defeated the mighty US military machine


BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Markwayne Mullin and Donald Trump: A love story

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
The revenge of Roe

BOOK REVIEW/Heather Seggel  
Follow the money and the smell of gas

ROB PATTERSON 
Dylan & McCartney deliver goods like the finest vintage wine

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Families and Big Pharma


MOVIE REVIEW/Ed Rampell  
Ed Asner was a proud socialist in Hollywood


GENE NICHOL 
Surrendering without a fight

and more ...