Saturday, November 16, 2024

Editorial: What to Expect from Trump 2.0

 Joe Biden actually did a great job steering the economic recovery after Donald Trump mismanaged the COVID pandemic. Biden got the vaccines out, resolved supply chain disruptions, got manufacturing back on track and the economy grew 16 million new jobs. Gross domestic product grew 15.5% while unemployment dropped to a 50-year low. But grocery bills were still too high. 

So, rather than elect Biden’s protégé, Vice President Kamala Harris, voters turned to the disgraced former president, who botched the pandemic response, as 450,000 Americans died from COVID-19 in his final year in office. The U.S. death toll was 40% higher than the average of other wealthy nations in the Group of Seven.. He presided over the loss of 2.7 million jobs and, after he lost the 2020 election to Biden, Trump claimed Democrats stole the election. He inspired a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to stop certification of the results. Trump was later indicted by federal prosecutor Jack Smith for his role in the Capitol attack and by Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis for his attempt to subvert Georgia election results. 

During his four years off the job, Trump was found liable for rape and fraud and he was convicted in New York of 34 felonies in connection with his misuse of business records to cover up a 2016 payment to stop Stormy Daniels from discussing her sexual relationship with Trump while Melania was nursing their infant son. But voters were willing to give the adulterous con man another chance, and he carried 31 states, including all seven swing states, to win a second term with 50.4% of the popular vote and a 312-226 margin in the Electoral College. Once again, as H.L. Mencken predicted in 1920, “The White House will be adorned by a downright moron.”

But the moron can do a lot of damage. Trump plans to replace the Affordable Care Act with a yet-to-be-determined concept. He’ll put inflationary tariffs on imported goods and seek to repeal the CHIPS Act, which Democrats passed in 2022 to provide $52.7 billion to promote computer chips research and manufacturing and strengthen US supply chain resilience. Also targeted is the Inflation Reduction Act, which Democrats passed in 2022 to let Medicare negotiate reduced prescription drug prices, and promoted domestic energy production, including clean energy resources to address climate change.

Trump has promised he won’t mess with Social Security and Medicare and other sacrosanct institutions, but writers of the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 to reshape the federal government seem to have other ideas, and Trump tried to undermine Social Security in his first term. He certainly won’t promote clean energy.

Trump has demanded that Republicans let him make recess appointments of Cabinet members and federal judges, who would serve without Senate approval because he apparently believes even Republicans won’t be able to stomach some of his choices. He also has proposed to pull the U.S. back from overseas alliances, reverse longstanding health rules, prosecute his political adversaries and round up millions of immigrants living in the country illegally.

Trump also will try to replace as many as 50,000 career civil servants with political loyalists. At the end of his first term, he issued an executive order to replace senior civil servants, but Biden rescinded the order, so it has never been tested in court.

Brett Meiselas, co-founder of the MeidasTouch Network, noted Nov. 10 that Trump voters already were experiencing “buyer’s remorse” in the days after the election, as they considered how Trump’s proposed tariffs and other proposed policy changes would affect them directly.

In the hours after the election, data from Google Trends showed, searches for terms like “change my vote” and “are tariffs bad” surged, particularly in key battleground states, such as Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and North Carolina. Meiselas pointed to these searches as an indicator of the swift realization among voters about the potential consequences of Trump’s trade policies. Many Trump supporters mistakenly believed that tariffs would financially impact foreign producers rather than U.S. businesses and consumers—a misconception now being addressed as businesses adjust to expected cost increases.

The economic realities of tariffs are quickly setting in for small business owners, many of whom are directly affected. Meiselas noted an anonymous statement on social media that reported employees of a small manufacturing company in Pennsylvania were told they would not get holiday bonuses as the company hoped to buy a year’s worth of products before Jan. 21, when prices are expected to increase due to tariffs. The company’s president reportedly had to explain to workers what tariffs are and how they function, revealing a widespread misunderstanding of the economic policy.

For larger companies, the impact of tariffs is no less stark. Automotive companies like Nissan and Stellantis are already bracing for cost increases and have announced impending layoffs to mitigate anticipated losses. CNN recently highlighted that prices of common goods are expected to rise as companies pass along the cost of tariffs to consumers. Leaders from major U.S. corporations, including AutoZone, have confirmed that price increases are on the way, with some anticipating hikes as early as next year, MeidasTouch noted.

Trump’s plans to order immediate deportation of immigrants, including many who are awaiting review of their applications for asylum, are causing distress for immigrants who supported Trump. Meiselas told of a Trump supporter from Guatemala who underestimated the likelihood that Trump’s policies would jeopardize his status, a realization echoed by business leaders who rely on immigrant labor and are now bracing for challenges in finding workers to replace those who are taken from jobsites. 

Inflation in groceries was noted in 2020 through 2022 as the nation struggled with the pandemic. Big bacon producers like Smithfield Foods and Tyson Foods closed plants in spring 2020 after thousands of workers got sick and some died, Fast Company noted. 

Plant closures led to shortages as home-bound Americans were shopping for more breakfast bacon. Bacon prices peaked in October 2022 at $7.60 a pound, up 30% from October 2019. By September 2024, bacon averaged $6.95 a pound, a reduction of 8.5%. 

Eggs were impacted by avian flu in 2022-23, as the average price of a dozen large eggs rose from $1.46 in January 2021 to a peak of $4.82 in January 2023, but dropped 20% to $3.82 in September 2024. 

Immigrant sweeps are likely to have a big impact on agriculture and food processing. Mass deportations won’t make bacon or eggs any cheaper and are more likely to reverse the relatively modest reductions that were achieved under Biden. 

Employers of undocumented immigrants who think Trump was just kidding about the mass deportations will find out soon enough. 

Trump wants to scare us, but in two years we’ll get a chance to hold Trump-enabling Republicans in Congress accountable. In addition to all House members, 21 Republican senators and 13 Democrats will be up for election, including a special election for the seat Vice President-elect J.D. Vance is giving up. The 2026 election will be our opportunity to make Trump a lame duck. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2024


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Copyright © 2024 The Progressive Populist

Selections from the December 1, 2024 issue

 COVER/Molly ReddenAndy Kroll and Nick Surgey

‘Put them in trauma’: Inside a key MAGA leader’s plans for a new Trump agenda

EDITORIAL
What to expect from Trump 2.0

JIM HIGHTOWER
Can our elections be made even more vapid? Some are banking on it | Bezos bombs in his role as newspaper owner | The shame of TD Bank’s jolly bankers | CEOs show us how to raise everyone’s pay | Lilly Ledbetter fought the bastards — and won for all of us | Yes, the system is rigged against the working class

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS
Remember the poor

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Lessons from the election

DISPATCHES
Biden and Democrats are already fighting Trump’s second administration.
Unions say building worker power is only way to defeat Trump’s fascist right.
Progressive forces vow ‘unprecedented resistance’ to Trump 2.0.
Crypto’s $40 million defeat of pro-worker Sen. Sherrod Brown called ‘obscene.’
After $16 billion election, nonprofit tracking money in politics lays off 1/3 of staff.
Wall Street giddy over merger boom as Trump expected to fire Lina Khan.
US postal workers fight massive service cuts.
GOP prepares to shed rules to give Trump his radical cabinet.
Trump spokesperson affirms Day 1 plans for mass deportaton.

ART CULLEN 
Waiting and wondering

ALAN GUEBERT 
Buy more deck chairs or chart a different course

SARAH ANDERSON
State victories against inequality to celebrate despite bleak election day

JOHN YOUNG 
The horse is right where I left it

SABRINA HAAKE 
Trump didn’t win. Disinformation did. First Amendment law needs to catch up with weaponized social media

ELWOOD WATSON 
What about Trump’s mental fitness? 

GENE NICHOL
Getting back in the fight

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet
Mourn first, then organize

FRANK LINGO 
80 Great songs from 80 years of rock ‘n’ roll


ROBERT KUTTNER 
Tales from the crypt

THOM HARTMANN  
The great dismatling: Trump’s coming attack on America’s economic backbone


SONALI KOLHATKAR 
Trump and Musk are a match leading us to hell

THE BIG PICTURE/Glynn Wilson 
Trump rocks the free world, stunning the American establishment again in apparent Electoral College win

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
A mini fine for an airline; a major victory for the disabled

SAM URETSKY 
Getting Jeff Bezos’ attention

JOE CONASON 
Meet Jack D. Ripper, the new health czar

WAYNE O’LEARY 
The donors

LES LEOPOLD
Why did the Democrats lose? Because they gave up on the working class 40 years ago

JUAN COLE
Trump would be an ‘extinction-level event’ for the planet, turbocharging climate change

EGBERTO WILLIES
It isn’t Kamala Harris who failed. It is America that showed the world who we are.

JAMIE STIEHM 
A long time comin’: On history’s clock

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Election night in America

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
The battle of the billionaire bros

RALPH NADER 
Electing an American Fuhrer as Wall Street cheers and soars

WENDY KEEFOVER and KRISTIN COMBS 
Grizzly 399 was a bear for the ages

ROB PATTERSON
Don’t fall for music snobbery

BOOK REVIEW/Seth Sandronsky
Reformation and liberation

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
“Unstoppable” is an unbelievable, upbeat biopic


AMY GOODMAN 
Hatred and racism: Trump’s ominous closing argument

From The Progressive Populist, December 1, 2024


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Thursday, October 31, 2024

Hitler's Halloween by Kevin Kreneck

 


Hitler's Halloween:

Trump's recent hate filled rhetoric and threats to use military force against those who disagree with him have reminded all of us just how much he and his campaign have borrowed from the Nazi Party of old.

Trump's not just a Fascist. Trump is a Nazi.

For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to: https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


Friday, October 25, 2024

Editorial: Time to Crush Trumpism

The election is too close for comfort, but there’s no turning back. It’s time to vote, not only to save democracy, but also to crush Big Lie Trumpism, which has transformed the Republican Party into a personality cult operating as a subsidiary of the convicted felon’s Trump Organization. 

In the closing weeks of the campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris has been indefatigably traveling across the country seeking to display her qualifications for office and her plans to put the middle class and small businesses at the heart of the US “opportunity economy.” Her proposals include a $6,000 tax credit for families during the first year of a child’s life; a $3,600 tax credit per child for working families; and holding off from increasing taxes on households with less than $400,000 of annual income.

Her economic proposals also include a $25,000 tax credit and other incentives for first-time home buyers, expanding a small business creation tax break, while taxing long-term capital gains for wealthy individuals at 28%, universal childcare and paid family leave, and enacting a federal ban on corporate price gouging. She also proposes to include home health care as part of Medicare, which would help seniors, as well as their children who otherwise would face the financial burden of caring for their elderly parents. In contrast Trump plans to renew tax cuts for billionaires, cut corporate tax rates and impose tariffs to protect US companies from foreign competition and raise the costs of imported goods in the U.S.

The right-leaning Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) analyzed Trump’s economic proposals and found that, if enacted, Trump’s agenda would worsen Social Security finances by $2.3 trillion over 10 years, requiring a 35% benefit cut in 2035.

Trump has threatened to strip TV networks of their right to broadcast news because of coverage he doesn’t like, regardless of First Amendment protections of the press and news media. 

“CBS should lose its license,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform. “60 Minutes should be immediately taken off the air.” He has repeated his demands in speeches and in interviews, echoing his earlier calls for ABC’s license to be “terminated” because of his displeasure with how the network handled his debate against Kamala Harris.

On Oct. 20, Trump ratcheted up his threats against CBS. “We’re going to subpoena their records,” he told Fox News in an interview, repeating his claim that the network’s edit of Harris’s recent appearance on “60 Minutes” was misleading. Asked if revoking a broadcast license was a “drastic punishment,” Trump did not answer directly, instead lobbing a string of insults at Harris, whom he called “incompetent” and “a Marxist,” The New York Times reported.

Broadcast networks like ABC, CBS and NBC do not actually need licenses to produce or publish news content. But local affiliate stations that carry network broadcasts do need licenses, which are overseen by the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC is independent from the White House, but a commissioner appointed by Trump, Nathan Simington, wrote on X, “Interesting. Big if true.” Trump later shared a screenshot of Simington’s post on Truth Social.

Since 2022, Trump has issued more than 100 threats to investigate, prosecute, imprison or otherwise punish his perceived opponents, including President Joe Biden, NPR reported.

Trump has repeatedly indicated he would use federal law enforcement as part of a campaign to exact “retribution.”

Trump also has suggested he would use military tribunals to try his political opponents, including former U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, and use the military to round up immigrants, regardless of the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the use of military for law enforccement.

Meanwhile, Trump has been increasingly erratic as he has cut back his rallies and interviews, showed signs of mental lapses, such as when he shut down audience questions at a “town hall” and instead shuffled aimlessly to music for 39 minutes. He also baselessly slurs Harris’s intellectual capabilities and continues to lie shamelessly about activities of the Federal Emergency Management Agency in response to Hurricane Helene, which resulted in threats against FEMA workers in North Carolina. 

A 12-minute ramble on the late golfer Arnold Palmer, at an Oct. 19 rally in Palmer’s hometown of Latrobe, Pa., concluded with a tribute to the golfer’s penis. “Arnold Palmer was all man, and I say that in all due respect to women, and I love women,” Trump said. “But this guy, this guy—this is a guy that was all man. This man was strong and tough, and I refuse to say it, but when he took showers with the other pros, they came out of there, they said, ‘Oh my God. That’s unbelievable.’ I had to say it. I had to say it.”

Trump sought to burnish his credentials with White supremacists Oct. 18 when he said on Fox News Abraham Lincoln was “probably a great president,” but he could have been better if he had “settled” the Civil War by cutting a deal with the South.

He was returning to a theme he brought up during the primary campaign, when he said history could have been different, if only Lincoln had read “The Art of the Deal.” “The Civil War was so fascinating, so horrible,” Trump said at a January event in Newton, Iowa. “So many mistakes were made. See, there was something I think could have been negotiated, to be honest with you. I think you could have negotiated that. All the people died, so many people died. You know, that was the disaster.”

Civil War historian Charles B. Dew noted in the Tampa Bay Times Jan. 13 that Trump was talking nonsense. When Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated on March 4, 1861, seven states of the Deep South already had left the Union. Beginning with South Carolina on Dec. 20, 1860, and ending with Texas on Feb. 1, 1861, these states (which also included Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana) had sent delegates to a constitutional convention in Montgomery, Alabama, and formed the Confederate States of America, with a provisional president, Jefferson Davis of Mississippi, and Vice president Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia and a Confederate army had been rapidly assembled from state militia units. Confederate forces amassed heavy ordnance that threatened Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor before Lincoln’s inauguration.

On April 12, 1861, Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter and two days later, with supplies nearly exhausted and his troops outnumbered, Union Major Robert Anderson surrendered Fort Sumter to Brig. Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard’s Confederate forces. Anderson and his men were allowed to sail to New York. Six more Southern states joined the Confederacy. Both the North and South mobilized for war, which lasted four years, cost the lives of more than 620,000 Americans, and freed 3.9 million enslaved people from bondage. Many in the South still can’t deal with it. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2024


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Selections from the November 15, 2024 issue

 COVER/Wren Opperman

and Molly Egan/The Daily Yonder
Alternative voices/alternative reality: How does talk radio affect Pennsylvania rural voters? 

EDITORIAL
Time to crush Trumpism

JIM HIGHTOWER
Sordid story: Corporate executives get self-gratification from M&As | Holy Donald Trump! An Oklahoma Bibles story | To fight right-wing book bans, read banned books! | Isn’t it odd that public officials support corporate price gouging?  

FRANK LINGO 
Trump’s willing executioners 

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
Cussing comes to CNN

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Keep your eyes on the prize, voters

DISPATCHES 
Conservative think tank finds Trump plans would wreck Social Security.
Trump and his allies try to rally early vote, while crying fraud.
Trump also wants to destroy American education system.
Central Park 5 Sue Trump for defamation.
Boeing union wins contract with 35% hike.
Harris edges Trump on economic positions.
Trump used D.C. hotel to enrich himself, fleeced taxpayers while president: probe ...


ART CULLEN
What do pork, quartz and saline solution have in common? 

ALAN GUEBERT 
Big mac bites big meat over alleged ‘artificially higher prices’


SONALI KOLHATKAR
Scapegoating immigrants hurts all of us — except elites

JOHN YOUNG 
Down the stretch in a cloud of lies

CLAIRE CARLSON and LANE WENDELL FISCHER
Walz assails ag monopolies and touts healthcare policy in speech on rural plan 

DICK POLMAN 
The sultan of stupid strikes again! This time, he flunked the most basic mathematics

JOE CONASON 
Trump, Musk and the hideous campaign of hate


A.J. SCHUMANN 
Who’s reallyl a populist? Henry Wallace set the standard

LES LEOPOLD 
135.9 million reasons why the working class is so angry

ELWOOD WATSON 
Obama’s condescending message to Black men


ROBERT KUTTNER 
How hurricanes are a profit center for insurers

THOM HARTMANN  
No one has ever been as dangerous to America as Trump — it can happen here


SABRINA HAAKE 
Oil billionaires, not taxpayers, should pay for climate destruction


THE BIG PICTURE/Glynn Wilson 
Lilly Ledbetter of Alabama, champion of pay equality, dies at 86

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Cruelty cloaked in morality

SAM URETSKY 
Be wary of covid ‘cures’

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson
True grift

WAYNE O’LEARY
Crumbling wall of ivy

JOEL D. JOSEPH 
Ten simple things you can do to reduce plastic pollution

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Reviewing ‘Rez Ball’

JUAN COLE 
Blinken and Austin scold Netanyahu over Gaza atrocities, playing cynical presidential politics

N. GUNASEKARAN 
Taxing corporations for social, economic justice

LEW KINGSBURY 
Lawsuit challenges restrictions on church political activities

JAMIE STIEHM 
Waves and walls higher for Harris’ catwalk

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
The Trump biopsy


RALPH NADER
Last clear chances for November


JONATHAN THOMPSON 
Wyoming shoots itself in the foot

ROB PATTERSON 
The family helps Willie Nelson keep going

RED SCHOMBURG
The tipped wage system is failing us. Removing taxes on tips won’t save it. 

ED RAMPELL 
When John and Yoko seized TV


AMY GOODMAN 
Medical workers demand a ceasefire in Gaza

GENE NICHOL 
A finale

From The Progressive Populist, November 15, 2024


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The Trump-Witch:

 

The Trump-Witch:

The Trump campaign is attempting to conger up the impression of a failed socioeconomic, dystopian world. According to Trump, it was created by the Biden administration and can only be remedied by the Nazi police state described in the Project 2025 manifesto. 


Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to: https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite

The Hollow Party

Trump has essentially hollowed out the Republican Party. It stands for nothing. 

Instead, Trump has replaced its values with those expressed in the Project 2025 Manifesto. Project 2025 would replace our republic with an authoritarian regime - a police state.


Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to: https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite

Friday, October 11, 2024

Editorial: Climate Changes; Trump Still Lies

 The vast damage Hurricane Helene did to the southeastern United States from Sept. 26 to 29 was another demonstration that climate change is real. Republicans whose political careers have been financed by Big Oil and other polluters have been in denial about climate change for decades. But farmers know climate change is real, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz noted at the Vice Presidential Debate Oct. 1. “They’ve seen 500 year droughts, 500 year floods, back to back.”

Hurricane Helene made landfall with Category 4 intensity on the evening of Sept. 26 in the Big Bend region of western Florida, near the city of Perry, with maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. Helene weakened as it veered north inland but it still had plenty of rain to dump before it dissipated on Sept. 29, leaving many in its path without working roads, power food, and water. Catastrophic rain triggered flooding in western North Carolina, eastern Tennessee and southwestern Virginia, and spawned numerous tornadoes. The death toll attributed to the storm was at least 231 across six states.

Scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory estimate that “climate change may have caused as much as 50% more rainfall during Hurricane Helene in some parts of Georgia and the Carolinas” in its 500-mile path inland.

Helene’s huge size and speed are linked to increasingly hotter water in the Gulf of Mexico. Steve Curwood noted at InsideClimateNews.org. hurricanes have usually weakened when they make landfall, but Helene’s impact was just as devastating in the inland mountains of western North Carolina as on the Gulf Coast of Florida.

During the storm, President Joe Biden put the Federal Emergency Management Agency at the service of the stricken states.

In reaction, Donald Trump told outrageous and reckless lies, as he tried to take political advantage over the catastrophe. He even blamed immigrants as well as the administration for hampering the response.

Trump wrote on Truth Social Monday, Sept. 30, that he planned to go to North Carolina, “but don’t like the reports that I’m getting about the Federal Government, and the Democrat Governor of the State, going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas.” But there is no evidence that the Biden administration was ignoring Republican areas. In fact, Republican governors in Virginia, South Carolina and Tennessee praised the Biden administration for its fast response, and FEMA designated counties in several states — including dozens won by Trump in the 2020 presidential election — as eligible to apply for federal assistance.

At a news conference Sept. 30, Trump said of Republican Georgia Gov. Kemp, “He’s been calling the president, hasn’t been able to get him.” But earlier in the day Kemp said he had talked with Biden the previous day. Kemp said he missed the president’s initial call Sept. 29. “He just said, ‘Hey, what do you need?’ And I told him: ‘You know, we got what we need. We’ll work through the federal process.’ He offered that if there’s other things we need, just to call him directly, which I appreciate that. But we’ve had FEMA embedded with us since a day or two before the storm hit in our state operations center in Atlanta; we’ve got a great relationship with them.”

Republican South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster said at an Oct. 1 press conference that federal assistance had “been superb,” noting Biden and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg had both called and told him to let them know whatever the state needed. McMaster also said FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell had called.

Still, in a social media post Oct. 3, Trump wrote that Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris “are universally being given POOR GRADES for the way that they are handling the Hurricane, especially in North Carolina.”

CNN’s fact checker, Daniel Dale, wrote, “That wasn’t even close to accurate. Though the Biden administration’s response had certainly received criticism, it had also been praised by various state and local leaders — including the Republican governors of some of the affected states and the Democratic governor of North Carolina, plus local leaders including the Democratic mayor of the hard-hit North Carolina city of Asheville,” which saw historic water level rises after it received 13.98 inches of rain Sept. 25-27.

In a Michigan rally Oct. 3, Trump placed Kamala Harris at the helm, lying that “Kamala spent all her FEMA money, billions of dollars, on housing for illegal migrants, many of whom should not be in our country.” He added a related conspiracy theory: “They stole the FEMA money, just like they stole it from a bank, so they could give it to their illegal immigrants that they want to have vote for them this season.”

First, there is no scheme to get undocumented immigrants to vote illegally in November. Voting by noncitizens is a felony.

Second, there is no basis for claiming FEMA disaster assistance money was stolen — by anyone, let alone Harris personally — for housing migrants. No disaster funding has been spent on those shelters.

In late September, President Biden signed into law short-term funding that extended 2024 fiscal year funding levels through Dec. 20. It specifically gave FEMA access to a full year’s worth of disaster relief funding.

“FEMA absolutely has enough money for Helene response right now,” Keith Turi, acting director of FEMA’s Office of Response and Recovery said. He noted that Congress recently replenished the agency with $20 billion, and about $8 billion of that is set aside for recovery from previous storms and mitigation projects.

Trump repeated his debunked claim about migrants getting FEMA money to reporters at least twice on Friday, Oct. 4 — and then said it again at a Friday night town hall in North Carolina.

Saturday, Oct. 5, Trump falsely claimed at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania the federal government was only giving $750 to people who lost their homes. “Think of it: We give foreign countries hundreds of billions of dollars and we’re handing North Carolina $750,” he said.

As FEMA explained earlier in the week, trying to to combat misinformation, $750 is merely the immediate aid survivors can get to cover basic, pressing needs like food, water, baby formula and emergency supplies. Survivors may apply for additional forms of assistance, such as for temporary housing and home repairs, that can be worth thousands of dollars; the current maximum amount for home repair assistance, for example, is $42,500.

Trump also claimed at the Pennsylvania rally there were no helicopters doing rescues in North Carolina, which was nonsense as National Guard helicopters were delivering supplies, picking up stranded people, dropping off firefighters and search-and-rescue crews and radioing for assistance for others who could be ccessed from the ground..

Meanwhile, as another hurricane, Milton, heads toward Tampa, Fla, the lies of Trump and running mate J.D. Vance are magnified on social media and have an impact on low-information voters who respond to wild rumors. All Kamala Harris and Tim Walz have to offer in response is competent leadership. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, November 1, 2024


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Selections from the November 1, 2024 issue

 COVER/Hal Crowther p. 1

A state of shock in North Carolina

EDITORIAL p. 2
Climate changes; Trump still lies

JIM HIGHTOWER p. 3
To get good local news, try do-it-yourself journalism | Corporate bosses are working-class heroes! And other B.S. | School lunch, Christian nationalism and Jesus | What should politics do? Ask Woody Guthrie. 

FRANK LINGO p. 3
Will UN conferences finally get real? 

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR p. 4

DON ROLLINS p. 4
Kris Kristofferson: A sublime yearning

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen p. 5
New voices needed in political coverage

DISPATCHES p. 5
How bad was Trump at handling disasters?
Conservatives struggle to see the bad in good jobs report.
Dockworkers suspend strike after winning tentative deal with 62% wage boost. They’ll continue talking about other issues.
UAW slams Trump-Vance as “menace to the working class.”
Trump lied about Haitian immigrants. Now he wants to deport them. 
Analysis: Trump tax plan would make rich people richer, poor people poorer ...


ART CULLEN p. 6
How do we talk to each other anymore?

ALAN GUEBERT p. 6
Tough 2024 gets tougher


ANNABELLE ORTIZ p. 7
There just aren’t enough services to prevent homelessness

JOHN YOUNG p. 7
OMG! The Venezuelans took over!

SARAH MELOTTE p. 8
Neighbor helping neighbor takes many forms in hurricane-hit Western N.C. 

DICK POLMAN p. 9
The climactic moment when Walz pierced Vance’s slick veneer and exposed his totalitarianism

JOE CONASON p. 9
MAGA’s Nazi infestation just got worse

DAVID McCALL p. 10
Opportunity for all

LES LEOPOLD p. 10
Wake up Democrats! Trump is eating your working-class lunch


ROBERT KUTTNER p. 11
The Justice Department challenges Visa’s predatory power

SARAH ANDERSON p. 11
Lawmakers target corporations paying executives more than Uncle Sam

THOM HARTMANN p. 12
Radio silence: How progressives lost the airwaves

SABRINA HAAKE p. 12
The intelligent conversation we aren’t having on immigration

SONALI KOLHATKAR p. 13
What we can learn from Gen Z workers


THE BIG PICTURE/Glynn Wilson p. 14
Vice presidential debate — J.D. Vance is a smooth liar, but Tim Walz nailed him on who won the 2020 election and Jan. 6

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas p. 15
Health insurance: On the electoral brink

MARTHA BURK p. 15
Meet the newest abortion rights supporters: Men in red states


WAYNE O’LEARY p. 16
The great debate

ANNIE NORMAN and SHAWN SEBASTIAN p. 16
Postal Service plan writes off rural America to save a buck

JUAN COLE p. 17
The path to Nasrallah’s assassination

JASON SIBERT p. 17
The case for an Israeli-Palestinian confederation

JAMIE STIEHM p. 18
Election roundup: Painting the House blue, Harris in white

BARRY FRIEDMAN p. 18
Where did the fun go? 

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson p. 18
In this corner ...

RALPH NADER p. 19
Public radio, public media and local news deserts — our new report


ZAK PODMORE p. 20
Glen Canyon Dam faces deadpool 

ROB PATTERSON p. 20
Jon Voight’s thespian skills lift him above lunatic politics

SETH SANDRONSKY p. 20
Globalize this: Reviewing ‘Socialist Register 2024’

ED RAMPELL p. 21
Decolonizing Hispanic history onscreen


AMY GOODMAN p. 22
Israel cannot bomb its way to peace

GENE NICHOL p. 23
A simple reminder

From The Progressive Populist, November 1, 2024


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Shut Up J.D.

 

Shut Up J.D.

Yeah we'd all like JD Vance to stop with the conspiracy theories, false accusations and hate speech. 

It won't happen but we can dream.

Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


Trump the Big Chicken

 

Trump The Big Chicken

The first debate between Trump and Harris was a disaster for Trump. He was left looking like an addle brained old man. So, he doesn't dare agree to a second debate. Such a re-match would spell the end of his campaign and a possible post election prison stay.

Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


Saturday, September 28, 2024

Editorial: The Big Lie is GOP’s Brand

 There is no bottom to Donald Trump’s Republican Party. And his running mate is digging further. . 

Sen. J.D. Vance picked up a baseless rumor, which had been batted around social media for about a month, that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were abducting their neighbors’ pets and eating them. Vance wrote on X (formerly Twitter) Sept. 9, “Reports now show that people have had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn’t be in this country. Where is our border czar?”

Less than 30 minutes after Vance’s post, NPR noted, the Springfield News-Sun reported that local police said incidents of pets being stolen or eaten were “not something that’s on our radar right now” The newspaper said the unsubstantiated claim seems to have started with a post in a Springfield Facebook group that was widely shared across social media.

After Vance posted it on X, an advocate for the Haitian community in Springfield reported receiving a wave of harassment.

Then Trump supercharged the claim during his nationally televised debate on ABC with Vice President Kamala Harris the evening of Sept. 10, when he brought up the pet-eating hoax in an attack on the Biden-Harris administration’s immigration policy.

“In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs. The people that came in. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating—the pets of the people that live there and this is what’s happening in our country,” Trump said.

Debate moderator David Muir debunked Trump’s claim, noting that local officials said the story was untrue. Trump refused to accept the correction and insisted he had seen “people on television” verifying the story.

Immediately following the debate, Vance told CNN that he had “heard from a number of constituents” on the issue and had “both first-hand and second-hand reports saying this stuff is happening.”

After the story became national and international news, the city received bomb threats to Springfield schools, hospitals, city hall and threats were made against city officials.

But Trump refused to denounce the bomb threats at Springfield. “I don’t know what happened with the bomb threats,” he told reporters in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Sept. 14. When a reporter asked him if he denounced the bomb threats, Trump replied, “I know that it’s been taken over by illegal migrants and that’s a terrible thing that happened.”

Sept. 15 on CNN, Vance rejected claims that he was to blame for bomb threats, school cancellations and harassment of Haitians. He justified his statements about the rumors, saying he was just trying to bring attention to the problems in Springfield and other places impacted by immigrants. “If I have to create stories so that the American media actually pays attention to the sufferings of the American people, then that’s what I’m going to do,” he said.

It should be a no-brainer for Trump and Vance to denounce bomb threats, but here we are. Instead, Vance on Sept. 16 complained after a gunman was found set up on Trump’s golf course in Florida, “no one has tried to kill Kamala Harris in the last couple of months, and two people now have tried to kill Donald Trump in the last couple of months.”

This is merely one more episode demonstrating why neither Trump nor Vance belong anywhere near the White House. And a vote in a swing state for anybody but Kamala Harris empowers Trump.

Electing Kamala Harris and Tim Walz at the top of the ballot is merely the first step in keeping our democracy. Vote blue down the ballot. Democrats have a good chance of regaining the House majority, but they face a challenge in keeping a Senate majority, which will be crucial in restoring balance to federal courts. 

Democrats have a narrow 51-49 majority in the Senate, but that includes four independent senators who usually vote with the Democrats. Joe Manchin (W.Va), one of the indies, is not seeking re-election and is expected to be succeeded by Republican Gov. Jim Justice. 

Democrats need to win open seats in Arizona, Michigan and Maryland and protect targeted incumbent Democrats in Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. They can’t lose another seat.

Among targeted Democrats, Sen. Jon Tester is seeking his fourth term in Montana, but the state has gotten a lot redder in the past 20 years, as Trump won it by 16 points in 2020. Tester faces a tough challenge from newcomer Tim Sheehy (R), a former Navy SEAL and businessman with the wealth to finance his campaign, as well as Trump’s backing. The Cook Political Report rates it leaning Republican.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, a progressive supporter of working-class voters, is seeking a fourth term in Ohio against Bernie Moreno, a former car dealer and immigrant from Colombia who grew up in Florida and has amassed a fortune that can self-fund his campaign. He was not the Ohio GOP establishment’s choice but had Trump’s support (and agrees with Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric). CPR rates the race a tossup.

In Nevada, Sen. Jacky Rosen (D) faces a challenge from Sam Brown (R), a West Point graduate who was burned and left scarred by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan in 2008. Brown lost a Republican primary for the Texas House in 1914. He lost a Republican primary for the Senate in 2022. CPR rates the race as leaning Democratic. 

In Pennsylvania, David McCormick, former hedge fund CEO, is challenging Sen. Bob Casey. McCormick ran for the Senate in 2022 but lost the Republican primary to Dr. Ehmet Oz. McCormick is stressing that he grew up in Pennsylvania and has a house in Pittsburgh, and is trying to tie Casey to the Biden-Harris administration on the border and inflation, but Sen. Casey is an institution and will be hard to beat. Cook Political Report rates the race as leaning Democratic.

In Arizona, where Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is departing, Rep. Ruben Gallego, a progressive Democrat with Marine combat experience and a Harvard degree, faces Kari Lake, a former TV news anchor who now mocks the “fake news media” and is a favorite of Trump’s MAGA movement, who lost her race for governor in 2022 and claims the Democrat, now Gov. Katie Hobbs, stole the election. The race is rated leaning Democratic.

In Wisconsin, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D) faces a challenge from Eric Hovde, the chairman and chief executive of Sunwest Bank, a $2.8 billion commercial lender based in Utah. Hovde has a $7 million home in Laguna Beach, Calif. The race is rated leaning Democratic.

Maryland normally is reliably blue but Larry Hogan, a moderate Republican former governor, is running against Angela Alsobrooks, the Prince George’s County executive, in the race to succeed retiring Sen. Ben Cardin (D). The race is rated likely Democratic.

In Michigan, with retirement of Debbie Stabenow (D), Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D), faces former Rep. Mike Rogers (R). The race is rated a tossup.

Democrats also hope to upset incumbents in Florida, where former Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell (D) is taking on Sen. Rick Scott, and Texas, where Rep. Colin Allred (D) is challenging Ted Cruz. Polls show both races tightening. Keep hope alive. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 15, 2024


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Friday, September 27, 2024

Selections from the October 15, 2024 issue

 COVER/Sarah Melotte 

Healing amidst division: How a small town fights for its library

EDITORIAL 
The Big Lie is GOP’s brand

JIM HIGHTOWER
The battle of Baraboo — privatizer greed vs. seniors’ health care | How ‘wonderful’ is Pom, Fiji water and the wonderful company? | Why are we letting corporate profiteers write America’s farm and food policy? Why is it that big shot leaders never look around to see if anyone’s following?

FRANK LINGO
Trump’s voters deserve demeaning

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Of violence and betrayal in Ohio

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Getting rid of Trump is one thing. But don’t forget the downballot races

DISPATCHES 
Study: Debunking Trump lies makes his base believe him more.
Congressional leaders announce short-term spending deal, after Speaker Johnson drops key MAGA demand.
Under Republican state laws, US book bans nearly tripled last school year.
Egg on his face: Vance bungles attempt to bash Harris over grocery prices. ...


ART CULLEN 
No sir, we slaughter lots of hogs but no cats

ALAN GUEBERT 
‘Come now, let us reason together’


KAREN DOLAN 
Project 2025 is a blueprint to end the American Dream

JOHN YOUNG 
In debate mismatch, Trump couldn’t elude ‘F’ word

DREAMA CALDWELL
Commentary: What freedom means in rural North Carolina

DICK POLMAN 
Racist domestic terrorist J.D. Vance: “If I have to create stories ... then that’s what I’m going to do.” 

JOE CONASON 
‘Russia, Russia, Russia’ is not a hoax

KEARA SOSA 
Young people will save the world because we’re the last generation that can

DAVID McCALL 
Owning our security

LES LEOPOLD 
Why is Trump still clobbering Harris on the economy? 

PAUL ARMENTANO 
Both presidential candidates agree: We need to stop arresting people for marijuana


ROBERT KUTTNER 
It’s the guns, stupid

SONALI KOLHATKAR  
Harris can’t embrace billionaires if she wants to win

SABRINA HAAKE 
A post-debate con job in real time

THOM HARTMANN  
Big Pharma’s GOP cash grab: How Republicans are selling out America for drug money

THE BIG PICTURE/Glynn Wilson
Harris dispatches Trump in debate; now to retake the House

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
There is money in misery

PAUL SONN 
To secure worker rights, we must fix our democracy

PETER CERTO 
Why the far right lies about immigrants

WAYNE O’LEARY 
On not going back (or forward either)

SAM PIZZIGATI 
Here’s a good topic for candidates to debate: Taxing the filthy rich

JUAN COLE 
Trump-Vance are doing to Haitians what the Israeli right has done to Palestinians — demonize a whole people

MARK ANDERSON 
Neo-cons see ‘Pax Americana’ ending, as Americans look inward

ELWOOD WATSON 
Republicans are still making excuses for Trump’s disastrous debate

JAMIE STIEHM 
The fall of Donald Trump

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
The enemy of my enemy is at the door


RALPH NADER 
Let’s start the revolution — get this election time book and here’s why? 

DAVE MARSTON 
Volunteers power the Colorado trail

ROB PATTERSON 
Muslim women punk rockers show ‘Lady Parts’ 

SETH SANDRONSKY
David, Goliath and press freedom

ED RAMPELL 
Defending the indefensible


AMY GOODMAN
Climate activists in the crosshairs while the planet burns

GENE NICHOL 
Another political court delivers for Trump

From The Progressive Populist, October 15, 2024


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Copyright © 2024 The Progressive Populist

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Trump the Organ Grinder

Trump the Organ Grinder:

The tenets of Project 2025 pose a clear and present danger to our constitutional form of government.  Much of the Trump - Vance platform comes directly from Project 2025. Since Project 2025 would turn this nation into a police state, it's especially difficult for Republicans to run on the issues.

Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


The Little Rat

The Little Rat:

The Harris-Trump debate was a disaster. No wonder Trump doesn't want a second. Harris owned Trump the moment she walked on stage. She baited him and he obliged by repeating conspiracy theories laced with false accusations, racism and hatred. This is what Trump's campaign has been reduced to.

Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite



 

Caught in a Trap

Caught in a Trap:

When Biden dropped out, the trap — apparently quite a while in the making — dropped on the Republicans. Now, the Republicans have an old, addle brained presidential candidate as well as an immensely unpopular Vice Presidential running mate. They're still in chaos. As was seen in the recent debate, they've yet to figure out how to deal with Harris.

Art by Kevin Kreneck. For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite

Friday, September 13, 2024

Editorial: Dems Must Run Scared to Win

 In the seven weeks since Kamala Harris got the go-ahead from Joe Biden to run for president, by early September she has the Democratic nomination and she has energized Democrats up and down the ballot. But, heading into the debate Sept. 10, polls still showed Harris in a virtual deadlock with Donald Trump for the presidency.

The race likely will remain tight up to the Nov. 5 election, but Harris remains in a strong position. As of Sept. 10, before the first debate between Harris and Trump, the Washington Post’s average of polls showed Harris was ahead in swing states Pennsylvania (2 points), Michigan (1 point) and Wisconsin (3 points), while Trump led narrowly in Arizona (1 point), Georgia (2 points) and North Carolina (less than 1 point). And polls show Harris closing in on Trump in Florida.

If Harris wins Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, she appears in good shape to win the 270 Electoral College votes to win the election. But all seven of the swing states were within a normal-sized polling error of 3.5 points and could go either way. Those states will go to whomever gets out the vote, and Democrats think they are better prepared for that “ground game” than Republicans are.

The Republican National Committee (RNC) once envisioned an extensive field operation for the 2024 election, including having about 90 staffers in the must-win state of Pennsylvania, Hugo Lowell noted in The Guardian.

But the Trump campaign scrapped those plans when it took over the RNC in March, redirecting the focus on field operations to combating supposed voter fraud and relying on political action committees and ardent Trump volunteers to get out the vote.

The Harris operation is understood to have roughly 375 staffers in Pennsylvania alone, after Democrats spent years building up voter turnout efforts in the state, Lowell reported.

Harris has the money, having raised $361 million in August, with most of the donations less than $200, giving the campaign $404 million as she prepares for the final stretch. As of Sept. 9, ActBlue had received $943 million in donations for all Democratic candidates. Trump’s campaign announced Sept. 5 they had raised $130 million in August, which leaves the disgraced former president $295 million in the bank.

Trump is relying on public belief that, with his business experience (and the character he played on “The Apprentice”), he is better equipped to improve the economy and bring inflation in line. This ignores that Trump inherited a thriving economy from Barack Obama, but Trump rode the economy into recession in 2020 when he failed to get the COVID pandemic under control. Inflation occurred because of shortages relating to the pandemic (remember the empty grocery shelves?). Biden fixed the supply chain problems, restored the economy from the recession Trump left him, and Biden took steps to reduce inflation, even if bacon and eggs are still expensive.

Trump has no clue how to reduce inflation and he wouldn’t be inclined to take the steps if he knew what to do. His standard reply is “Drill, baby, drill,” but US oil production is already at an all-time high. Gas prices have declined, but that hasn’t had an impact on groceries or rent. Harris would go after price gougers who drive “greedflation.”

Harris would raise taxes on the richest Americans and the biggest corporations to pay for child care, expand earned income and child tax credits for working families and deliver a middle-class tax cut—with no tax increases on families making less than $400,000.

Trump proposes to make his 2017 tax cuts for the rich “permanent” and he would pay for it by imposing tariffs of 60% on imports from China and 20% on other goods, which would be paid by consumers. Tariffs would cost the typical American household over $2,600 a year, according to economist Amy Hanauer of Citizens for Tax Justice. It amounts to a tax on the middle and working class. 

In a rambling and largely incoherent response to a question at the Economic Club of New York Sept. 5 about how he would make child care policy more affordable, Trump appeared to endorse a 2018 plan by Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, to allow families to raid their Social Security accounts to pay for family leave, which would reduce or delay their retirement benefits, Michael Hiltzik noted in the Los Angeles Times Sept. 6. 

Hiltzik noted, “The Rubio-Trump plan fit perfectly into the Republican Party’s long-term project to undermine Social Security,” since the family leave program would run a deficit that would not be repaid for 30 years or more.

The alternative proposed by Trump’s running mate, J.D. Vance, at an appearance before the right-wing organization Turning Point USA, was that child care was the responsibility of a couple’s extended family. “Maybe Grandma and Grandpa wants to help out a little bit more,” he said. “Or maybe there’s an aunt or uncle that wants to help out a little bit more.”

For families without kin living nearby, Vance’s solution is to reduce educational or certification requirements so that more people can enter the day care business.

“Of course, this is part and parcel of the Republican drive to deregulate everything. In 2019, the Trump administration cut back on USDA inspections of meat plants, promoting a self-inspection regime for the industry,” Hiltzik noted.

“How has that worked out? At this moment, at least nine people have died from a listeria outbreak at a Boar’s Head deli meats plant in Virginia, where conditions were, to be charitable, disgusting. Apply the same principle to day care, and contemplate the ramifications.”

If Trump wasn’t a career criminal, he certainly displayed a contempt for laws and regulations in his business dealings before he ran for president. And if authorities refrained from pursuing criminal charges before he was president, his conduct since he was defeated in 2020, and his supporters failed in their efforts to set aside the results, has forced the hand of state and federal prosecutors.

In his second coming, Trump has gotten so noxious that even Dick Cheney can’t take him, announcing that he would be voting for Harris. (That does not rehabilitate Cheney; it just shows how much of a threat Trump is to the Republican Party and the United States.)

In contrast to Trump, Harris is an experienced public servant, having served honorably as a deputy district attorney in Oakland, elected district attorney in San Francisco, California attorney general and US senator before she was elected vice president of the U.S. in 2020. She is ready to take the helm.

Sustainability Fund Appeal

Please help us shore up our financial reserves so we can keep The Progressive Populist affordable for readers with limited funds.

Send a check to The Progressive Populist, PO Box 487, Storm Lake, IA 50588. Call 1-800-205-7067 to charge the gift to your credit card. Or send money to The Progressive Populist account at GoFundMe.com online. Thanks. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, October 1, 2024


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Selections from the October 1, 2024 issue

 COVER/Matt Vasilogambros 

In small towns, even GOP clerks are targets of election conspiracies

EDITORIAL
Dems must run scared to win

JIM HIGHTOWER
Can mass media promote democracy instead of Divisiveness? Here’s a guy who did.
Will Elon betray Donald first, or vice versa? | 
Establishment economists attack Kamala Harris — for being right | 
The right-wing attach on Social Security is un-American

FRANK LINGO
Judge keeps cancer alley polluting

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS
Fact check Trump, turn the tables

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen
Childless Americans help save the Earth

DISPATCHES
Harris’ newly released policies stand in stark contrast to Trump’s.
Trump ratchets up Arlington Cemetery denial as aides involved in assault are named.
Don’t send Afghanistan withdrawal down the memory hole.
Boeing union wins 25% raise in tentative contract, but possible strike still looms.
Trump gets head start on Big Lie 2.0 with focus on mail-in voting.
House Rs are back and holding gov’t hostage.


ART CULLEN 
Yearning to turn the page

ALAN GUEBERT 
Bird flu in cows and poultry continues to fly high


SARAH ANDERSON
The big rip: Low wage corporations spent half a billion inflating CEO pay

JOHN YOUNG 
Trump’s regard for military couldn’t be lower

ELWOOD WATSON
J.D. Vance couldn’t be more wrong about parenthood

DICK POLMAN 
On abortion, the flip-flopping blowhard still blows every which way whichever wind blows him

JOE CONASON 
Trump’s Arlington Cemetery visit: Unsavory and unsurprising

ALGERNON AUSTIN and DEDRICK ASANTE-MUHAMMAD
The paradox of progress for Black Americans

DAVID McCALL 
A worker for vice president

NANCY J. ALTMAN 
Working families’ earned Social Security benefits are at risk

ROBERT KUTTNER
How much money do the ultra rich need?

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
Capitalism’s intertwined ills

THOM HARTMANN  
America’s new epidemic: A nation overrun by bullies


LIZ CAREY 
Report: Rural women see drops in health and reproductive care


THE BIG PICTURE/Glynn Wilson 
Labor Day news and cemetery blues

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
“Be afraid, very afraid” of Trump

SONALI KOLHATKAR  
Harris’s failed opportunity? 

WAYNE O’LEARY 
The politics of joy

JOSEPH B. ATKINS 
Why don’t we have a major party peace candidate who supports workers? 

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
The worm has turned

JUAN COLE 
Massive demonstrations, national strike in Israel as crowds blame PM Netanyahu for deaths of hostages

N. GUNASEKARAN 
Political instability in Bangladesh: A brainchild of its neoliberal settings

JOEL D. JOSEPH 
Jack Smith’s brief lacks a sense of urgency

JAMIE STIEHM
Arlington: No place for traitors to feel at home

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
The state I’m in

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Reviewing Black capitalism


ZEKE LLOYD 
Hikers in a wilderness turn into firefighters

ROB PATTERSON 
Is Randy Rainbow worth another Trump presidency? 


FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
A critique of “The Critic”

AMY GOODMAN 
First step in stopping school shootings: Ban assault weapons


GENE NICHOL 
Abandoning democracy

From The Progressive Populist, October 1, 2024


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Thursday, August 29, 2024

Editorial: Harris Clears Launch Pad

 Kamala Harris told the people what they wanted to hear at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, and, with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate, they have two months to close the deal with the rest of the country.

Some of her top lines in accepting the nomination:

“I promise to be a president for all Americans. You can always trust me to put country above party and self, to hold sacred America’s fundamental principles, from the rule of law, to free and fair elections, to the peaceful transfer of power,” she said.

Harris called Trump an “unserious man,” but said “the consequences of putting [him] back in the White House are extremely serious.”

“Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails and how he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States — not to improve your life, not to strengthen our national security — but to serve the only client he has ever had: himself,” she said.

“We know what a second Trump term would look like. It’s all laid out in Project 2025, written by his closest advisers,” Harris, noted, referring to the Heritage Foundation-led plan for the second Trump administration that the Republican nominee has unconvincingly tried to disavow.

“Its sum total is to pull our country back to the past. But America, we are not going back … We are not going back to when Donald Trump tried to cut Social Security and Medicare. We are not going back to when he tried to get rid of the Affordable Care Act, when insurance companies could deny people with pre-existing conditions. We are not going to let him eliminate the Department of Education that funds our public schools.

“We are not going to let him end programs like Head Start that provide preschool and child care for our children. America, we are not going back.”

Fears of large-scale protests by supporters of Palestinians did not materialize at the convention. Uncommitted Palestinian-American delegates were upset that DNC organizers wouldn’t give a Palestinian-American delegate five minutes to address the convention. But in her speech, Harris acknowledged the “heartbreaking” scale of the suffering in Gaza and declared that the Biden administration is “working to end this war”—even as the U.S. continues to transfer weaponry to the Israeli military.

“What has happened in Gaza over the past 10 months is devastating. So many innocent lives lost. Desperate, hungry people fleeing for safety, over and over again,” said Harris, who received sustained applause from the convention audience after calling for “dignity, security, freedom, and self-determination” for the Palestinian people.

Harris also pledged to “always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself” amid mounting global calls for an arms embargo.

Wrapping up, Harris called on Americans to “write the next great chapter in the most extraordinary story ever told.” 

“It is now our turn to do what generations before us have done,” she said. “Guided by optimism and faith, to fight for this country we love, to fight for the ideals we cherish and to uphold the awesome responsibility that comes with the greatest privilege on Earth — the privilege and pride of being an American.” 

“So let’s get out there,” she said. “Let’s fight for it.” 

Harris also has consolidated her position in polls, gaining narrow leads in national polls as well as swing states, such as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and she is within the polling margin of error in Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina and Georgia. But she clearly has momentum; since she entered the race on July 21, her support has increased from the base Biden left her, up 2.8 percentage points in Wisconsin, where she leads by 3 points in the Washington Post’s average of polls, to 3.9% in Arizona, where she is 1 point behind Trump. She leads Trump by an average of 2 points in national polls, as of Aug. 26. 

Harris also beat Trump in the ratings, as her acceptance address was watched by 28.9 million viewers, according to Nielsen data, outdrawing Trump’s speech in Milwaukee, which drew 28.4 million viewers across 15 television networks. That likely will stick in the old man’s craw, as Trump is famously obsessed with TV ratings and the size of his crowds.

Of course, the election should not be close. Harris has served honorably as a California prosecutor, state attorney general, U.S. senator and vice president. She faces a twice-impeached former president who has been convicted of 34 felonies and is awaiting sentencing. Trump also has been found liable for sexual assault and numerous cases of fraud in New York. He faces scores of other felony charges in federal courts in D.C. and Florida and Georgia state court, which he managed to delay past the election.

Trump’s criminal record and his lack of moral character has not shamed the Republican Party. They’ll need a thorough beatdown, up and down the ballot in November, to accomplish that.

Harris and Walz are on the trail.

Sustainability Fund Appeal

We have published The Progressive Populist for nearly 30 years, starting out as a monthly and expanding to twice monthly 25 years ago, covering politics, economics and the arts for working people. The past few years have been a challenging time for publishers, as much of the “content” has moved from newspapers and magazines onto websites. 

I edit The Progressive Populist from Manchaca, Texas, with my brothers, who run a community newspaper in Storm Lake, Iowa. We are working to update our website, Populist.com, to attract younger readers, but we still intend to publish our newspaper for those of our subscribers who prefer to read our columns from the comfort of your easy chairs. 

In the past couple years our production costs have risen while our circulation has dropped, as many readers have let their print subscriptions lapse, and printing and postal rates have increased substantially.

Unfortunately, we’re not independently wealthy. We might have to increase subscription rates, but we’re hoping your contribution will help us shore up our financial reserves to keep the newspaper subscription affordable for readers with limited funds.

Any amount you can give will help. Send a check to The Progressive Populist, PO Box 487, Storm Lake, IA 50588. Call 1-800-205-7067 to charge the gift to your credit card. Or send money to The Progressive Populist account at GoFundMe.com online. And if you know anybody who is looking for a good, progressive newspaper, let them know about The Progressive Populist. Thanks. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, September 15, 2024


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