Friday, April 26, 2024

Editorial: Ukraine Survives GOP Chaos

 House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) defied the chaos agents in his own party as he allowed the House to approve $95 billion in US aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan in a special Saturday session April 20 that was a rare victory for bipartisanship. 

The most controversial portion was $61 billion earmarked for embattled Ukraine. The MAGA Chaos Caucus, which protects the interests of Donald Trump and his mentor, Russian President Vladimir Putin, had stopped Johnson from allowing the House to approve the aid to rearm Ukraine, which has held Russian invaders at bay for more than two years, but had been running low on ammunition and interceptor missiles for Ukraine’s air-defense systems since the last major infusion from the US in December 2022. 

President Joe Biden requested funding for Ukraine in October 2023, but the Chaos Caucus blocked the bill, demanding that any assistance for Ukraine be tied to policy changes at the US-Mexico border. Then MAGA rejected a bipartisan Senate deal on immigration reforms, on Trump’s instructions, reportedly because Trump wanted to keep stirring the “border crisis” through the election. 

The Pentagon warned that, without an infusion of aid from the United States, Ukraine would continue losing territory to Russian military, which is preparing to start a spring offensive. The aid to Ukraine finally was approved on a 311-112 vote, with opposition from the right-wing members of the Chaos Caucus, who did not want to give President Biden a “win.” Trump has sakd he would settle the war by letting Russia keep the land it has seized.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) filed a “motion to vacate” March 22, which could remove Johnson from his post, after Johnson allowed the House to pass a spending package to avert a partial government shutdown just hours before the deadline. The funding had support from both sides of the aisle, but the Chaos Caucus really wanted to force a government shutdown. 

Then, after Johnson agreed to allow the aid for Ukraine, Reps. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) joined Greene in the motion to vacate and urged Johnson to voluntarily step aside. Democrats might need to vote with moderate Republicans to keep Johnson in office, unless they can find three moderate Republicans to switch parties to elect Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries. If Dems can’t find three R’s who’ll switch, they should vote to keep Johnson in office, because Trump and the Chaos Caucus aren’t going to allow any more reasonable Republican to take his place.

MAGA Congress members who complain that money is being spent on defending Ukraine when there are needs in the US that go unmet are displaying the usual hypocrisy. The Center for American Progress in 2022 reported that the tax cuts enacted during the George W. Bush and Trump administrations slashed taxes disproportionately for the wealthy and profitable corporations, severely reducing federal revenues. Instead of paying for themselves by spurring economic growth, the tax cuts added $10 trillion to the nation’s debt.

And if Republicans extend the Trump tax cuts, which were enacted on a party-line vote in 2017 and expire in 2015, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office reported, the extended tax cuts would add $3.5 trillion to the deficit through 2033. 

“MAGA Republicans don’t give a damn about the deficit, and today’s estimate of the cost of kickbacks for their friends and donors is further proof,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.). “Republicans racked up the national debt by giving tax breaks to their billionaire buddies, and now they want everyone else to pay for them. It is one of life’s great enigmas that Republicans can keep a straight face while they simultaneously cite the deficit to extort massive spending cuts to critical programs and support a bill that would blow up deficits to extend trillions in tax cuts for the people who need them the least.”

The Kremlin reacted angrily to news that Congress was on track to approve an aid package for Ukraine, warning that it will lead to the “deaths of even more Ukrainians.”

The decision “will make the United States of America richer, further ruin Ukraine and result in the deaths of even more Ukrainians, the fault of the Kyiv regime,” Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said, in remarks reported by Russia’s state news agencies.

Activists on the far right and the far left in the US joined the MAGAts in urging the US to force Ukraine to settle a fight they cannot hope to win. War critics have been saying that ever since Putin sent in the invaders in February 2022, expecting Kyiv to fall in 72 hours. Then they said the “special military action” might take two months.

Two years later, Russia’s military death toll in Ukraine has passed 50,000, the BBC reported, relying on research by BBC’s Russian language service, independent media group Mediazona and volunteers who have been counting deaths since the invasion, monitoring new graves in cemeteries, open-source information from official reports, newspapers and social media.

More than 27,300 Russian soldiers died in the second year of combat — nearly 25% higher than the first year, the BBC reported — a reflection of how territorial gains have come at a huge human cost as Russian officers have used the “meat grinder” strategy to send waves of soldiers forward in frontal assaults to try to wear down Ukrainian forces and expose their locations to Russian artillery.

The overall Russian death toll of more than 50,000 is eight times higher than the only official public acknowledgement of fatality numbers ever given by Moscow in September 2022. Russia considers casualty figures a state secret.

Ukraine rarely comments on the scale of its battlefield fatalities. In February, President Volodymyr Zelensky said 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed — but US intelligence estimates suggest greater losses, the BBC reported.

Russia has made advances in Ukraine as the aid from the West has waned, and the Ukrainian defenders have had to count their remaining bullets. But the Pentagon says a massive military aid package is “ready to go” as soon as Congress acts and Biden signs off.

Russia, which has a population of 144 million, has around 1.1 million active troops across all branches. Ukraine, with a population of 37.9 million, claims one million in the military and has proposed mobilizing another 500,000 to step up the war with Russia.

Ukraine has shown they are up to the challenge of pushing the Russians back as long as the Ukraine defense forces have access the advanced weapons the US and other NATO members can furnish. 

Ukraine doesn’t need American soldiers to join the fight, but if Ukraine defeats the Russians, that might end Putin’s further imperial ambitions. If Russia moves against NATO member states, such as Poland or the Baltic States, that could put American troops on the firing line. It’s still better to arm Ukrainian troops now. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, May 15, 2024


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Selections from the May 15, 2024 issue

 COVER/Lisa Song, ProPublica

The EPA has done nearly everything it can to clean up this small town. It hasn’t worked. 

EDITORIAL 
Ukraine survives GOP chaos

JIM HIGHTOWER
Where’s George Orwell Today? Texas! 
Can’t oil barons ever be honest? (Hint: No). 
What nation besides Israel is killing Gaza’s innocent Palestininans? 
Why are we letting greedheads and ideologues kill our post office? 

FRANK LINGO 
Earth Day update: Optimism and pessimism

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
Ohio was wrong last time: Let’s do it again!

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Diversions from political mainstream

DISPATCHES
Trump eyes Social Security cuts by slashing payroll tax.
Tennessee VW workers vote to join UAW in a landslide..
Green groups call RFK Jr. ‘Dangerous conspiracy theorist and science denier.’
Biden rent-increase cap shows tenant union win.
Emergency rooms refused to treat pregnant patients after ‘Dobbs’ decision.
Green groups cheer $7 billion in “Solar for All’ grants.


ART CULLEN 
A rushed farm bill is a bad one

ALAN GUEBERT 
How to win the SAF game: Part 1


TIFFANY TAGBO
Lawmakers should spend a night in a homeless shelter

JOHN YOUNG 
For its stakes, trial eclipses the solar eclipse

DICK POLMAN 
Criminal court: day one: The grifting grievances of Don Snoreleone

JOE CONASON 
Bully Bobby Jr. is no friend of free speech

FRAN QUIGLEY 
Biden rent increase cap shows the tenant union movement can win nationally 

DAVID McCALL 
A new manufacturing frontier

SAM PIZZIGATI 
To trim our richest down to Democratic size, we need to think big


ROBERT KUTTNER 
The US-Japan Summit and the Nippon Steel Deal


SONALI KOLHATKAR  
Here’s why you can’t afford an electric car


THOM HARTMANN  
We need a Democratic revolution to overcome the rightwing media machine!

FARRAH HASSEN  
A bittersweet Arab American Heritage Month

SULMA ARIAS 
Why do my groceries cost so much? 

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Conscience: When mine conflicts with yours

SAM URETSKY 
Health care should be more than bitter pills

ROBERT DODGE  
Our budget priorities should reflect the people’s agenda, not hasten nuclear oblivion

WAYNE O’LEARY
Absurdity of American immigration policy

LES LEOPOLD 
Raging against ‘White Rural Rage’

OMAR OCAMPO  
Billionaires are bad for democracy. Taxing them is good for it. 

JUAN COLE 
Netanyahu, empowered by Biden’s grant of impunity, baits Iran into his genocidal Gaza war

ELWOOD WATSON
What you might have forgotten about OJ Simpson and his trial

JAMIE STIEHM 
Trump’s luck and mojo run low

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
Performative outrage

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Living life: Reviewing Helena Sheehan’s new autobiography

RALPH NADER 
New book: Choosing regular food to extend longevity 


PEPPER TRAIL 
An invitation to play the climate-change game

ROB PATTERSON 
Where’s the music ripped from the headlines? 

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
Deeply fakey

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell
It’s racism or solidarity for Syrian refugees and ex-miners at Northeast England in Ken Loach’s “The Old Oak”

From The Progressive Populist, May 15, 2024


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Saturday, April 13, 2024

The Ongoing Gaetz Investigation

 

Several Republican congressmen have left the US House.Then there's Matt Gaetz who is still under investigation for sexual misconduct and may be removed. In short, House Republicans - through self inflicted wounds - may very soon lose their majority and at least be at parity with Democrats.
For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


Kennedy in the Punchbowl

 

Robert F Kennedy Jr and his independent longshot 2024 campaign bid for the presidency has the potential for being a spoiler. However, no one is quite sure if he'll spoil the election for Biden or Trump. Ironically, Republicans have been largely responsible for bankrolling RFK Jr's campaign.
For more Graphics and Greeting Cards, go to https://kkreneck.wixsite.com/mysite


Friday, April 12, 2024

Editorial: Throttle Bibi to Beat Trump

 Joe Biden has seven months to beat Donald Trump, the known adulterer and compulsive liar who has been found liable for sexual assault and fraud and is accused of at least 88 felonies, including the misuse of business assets to cover up adulterous affairs before the 2016 election. 

Most of these character flaws — and more — were known before Trump’s election in 2016, but they were not enough to stop the grifter and “reality” TV celebrity from winning the election through the Electoral College, as enough disgruntled progressives in swing states either sat out the election or voted for Green candidate Jill Stein to deny Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton the election, with a vacant Supreme Court seat to be filled.

Trump filled that vacant Supreme Court seat with right-winger Neil Gorsuch in 2017. Then he named Brett Kavanaugh to replace moderate conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy in 2018. And conservative Amy Coney Barrett replaced liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died Sept. 18, 2020. The Republican-led Senate rushed Barrett’s confirmation, giving the Big Lie Party a 6-3 majority to overturn progressive achievements from the 20th century.

John Nichols, associate editor of the Madison, Wis., Capital Times, noted in The Nation April 4 that Trump has very real problems in the battleground state of Wisconsin, which he won in 2016 by roughly 22,000 votes, in what may have been a high-water mark for MAGA Republicans. Democrats won the governorship and every other statewide office in 2018, then Biden beat Trump in Wisconsin by almost 21,000 votes, which Trump never conceded, fighting the results in court and demanding a recount, and losing both ways, but he continues to insist he was robbed.

In the April 2 Wisconsin primary, Biden faced an organized challenge from activists who object to his policies regarding support of Israel in Gaza. The effort to get voters to cast ballots for an “uninstructed delegation” option, in order to send a message to Biden, was backed by a number of Democratic state legislators and local officials, as well as groups such as Our Revolution, Progressive Democrats of America, Democratic Socialists of America, Voces de la Frontera Action, and Jewish Voice for Peace Action.

On the Republican side, all of Trump’s challengers had suspended their campaigns. Hence the victory lap, with a Trump rally in Green Bay April 2 before the polls were closed.

Turnout for the primary was roughly equivalent, with both sides drawing close to 600,000 voters. By any reasonable measure, Trump should have gotten the higher popular vote and the higher percentage of the total, Nichols noted. But that didn’t happen.

Biden won 511,845 votes, with almost all the ballots counted, to 476,355 votes for Trump. Though their names appeared on different ballot lines for their respective primaries, that’s still a margin of more than 35,000-votes—far better than Trump’s in 2016, or Biden’s in 2020, Nichols noted.

Biden also is doing better in polls of seven key battleground states, Nichols noted. A Bloomberg/Morning Consult poll March 26 showed Biden leading by 1 point in Wisconsin and tied in Michigan and Pennsylvania in head-to-head matches, but Trump leads by 2 in Nevada, 5 in Arizona, 6 in North Carolina and 7 in Georgia. 

When Robert Kennedy Jr., Cornell West and Jill Stein are included in the poll, the results are complicated, showing Trump leading by 2 points in Wisconsin, and 4 points in Pennsylvania but still tied in Michigan. Trump leads by 6 in Arizona, 7 in Georgia, 6 in Nevada and 5 in North Carolina. But the Big Liar still faces at least 88 felony charges in four jurisdictions, including New York on April 15.

To overtake Trump, Biden should distance himself from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu, who has abused Biden’s trust in pursuing revenge against Hamas terrorists in Gaza, regardless of the casualties among civilian residents of Gaza. 

Biden was right to pledge support for Israel after Hamas and other Palestinian militant commandos broke the ceasefire between Israel and Gaza Oct. 7, 2023, by crossing a largely unguarded border to kill more than 1,000 people in Israel, most of them civilians, including participants in a music festival. The Gazans took approximately 250 hostages, including women, children and elderly people, with the stated goal to force Israel to exchange them for imprisoned Palestinians. 

Biden assured Israelis that the US would continue to support Israel’s right to defend itself against a movement that aspires to wipe the Jewish state off the map “from the river to the sea,” but Biden warned Netanyahu not to give in to the demand for revenge. 

Biden cautioned Israel against getting bogged down in Gaza, as the US did in Iraq and Afghanistan following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

“Justice must be done,” Biden said Oct. 18 in Tel Aviv. “But I caution this: While you feel that rage, don’t be consumed by it … After 9/11, we were enraged in the United States. While we sought justice and got justice, we also made mistakes.”

Biden’s pleas fell on deaf ears. Netanyahu ordered bombing of population centers, with the stated intention of hitting Hamas personnel who were embedded with the civilian population. He also shut off electricity, water, fuel and food distribution in Gaza.

Over the past six months, the war has cost the lives of more than 33,000 Palestinians, including more than 13,000 children and 8,400 women, Al Jazeera reported. More than 75,000 have been injured, and more than 8,000 are reported missing. The casualties include more than 300 aid workers, including seven World Central Kitchen workers killed by Israeli missile strikes April 1.

In the US, Muslim and Arab populations have turned sharply against Biden. Despite being a part of Biden’s 2020 winning coalition, particularly in Michigan, they have been vial to the success of the ‘uncommitted campaign’ during the 2024 presidential primaries, which has sent strong signals that Biden has a realistic chance of losing the election in several battleground states in November 2024 if his administration does not shift its unwavering support for Israel.

Ironically, if Arabs sit out the election, it could put Trump back in the White House, who has been an ally of Netanyahu and has urged Israel to finish off the war to avoid bad “optics.” Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, praised the potential value of waterfront property in Gaza if Israel could move the Gazans into the Negev desert.

Biden already has gotten Israeli officials to approve the reopening of the Erez crossing between Israel and northern Gaza to allow more aid to reach starving Palestinians. He reportedly threatened to condition the transfer of weapons to Israel on limiting civilian casualties. He should demand that Israel restore water, electricity, food and fuel supplies in Gaza. Israel must negotiate a ceasefire that returns hostages. And Israel must replace Netanyahu, who has shown he can’t be trusted as an ally. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, May 1, 2024


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Selections from the May 1, 2024 issue

 COVER/Hal Crowther 

Tar Heel trauma: Strange times, stranger candidates

EDITORIAL 
Throttle Bibi to beat Trump

JIM HIGHTOWER 
Why big corporations get special tax breaks and you don’t. 
How many dead firefighters does it take to ban asbestos? 
Should we be polite as the GOP stomps on our democratic rights? 
How oily is Big Oil’s latest PR campaign?

FRANK LINGO 
State of the planet 2024

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
Oxymorons and why the Dems need ‘em after all

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
CAFOs slim down, but that’s not good news is rural areas

DISPATCHES 
US is still at ‘full employment,’ ‘crisis at border’ appears to have little impact on natives.
Immigrants are pretty law-abiding people.
Supermajority of Mercedes-Benz workers in Alabama file for UAW vote.
Economy has done better under Democrats for 75 years, report finds.
RFK Jr. official admits goal is to elect Trump.
Campaigners cheer FCC plan to restore net neutrality rules.
New Biden plan for student debt relief ...


ART CULLEN 
Back from the spiritual desert

ALAN GUEBERT 
Another $1 billion to refinance status quo won’t stop ag pandemics


ASHLEY DINES 
Rents are unaffordable nationwide. A renter’s tax credit would help.

JOHN YOUNG 
If Donald Trump is a Christian

JAMES EGGERT 
We are all socialists (and capitalists too)

DICK POLMAN 
If you or I depicted the president kidnapped and hog-tied...

LES LEOPOLD 
Can you slam Wall Street and still win an election? Ask Sherrod Brown

DAVID McCALL 
A new shipbuilding era

SAM PIZZIGATI 
Meet the secretive rich funding efforts to keep others poor


ROBERT KUTTNER 
How Republicans screw workers

BRIAN CARSS 
Making ends meet is hard enought without a penalty for coming up short

SONALI KOLHATKAR 
Corporate profiteering destroyed the Baltimore bridge


THOM HARTMANN 
The early days of Fox: Losing money to gain political power


HANK KALET 
Ill-defining antisemitism: IHRA definition will chill speech and academic freedom

MARIAH MONTGOMERY 
‘Gaslighting and greed’: How Uber overcharges riders and underpays drivers

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas 
Opill: A victory for women (and their male partners)

SAM URETSKY 
Be very afraid of Republican ‘reforms’

PAUL ARMENTANO 
State-level marijuana legalization has been a stunning success

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Democrats bite the bullet

JOEL D. JOSEPH 
The end of recessions in the United States?

GENE NICHOL 
The arrogance of unaccountable power

JUAN COLE 
Chef José Andrés’ World Central Kitchen accuses Israel of “targeted attack” on 7 of its aid workers

JASON SIBERT 
Détente again

JAMIE STIEHM 
A key to Baltimore’s broken heart

BARRY FRIEDMAN
Leaving home

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Walk this way: Reviewing Anne Braden’s letters, speeches and writings

RALPH NADER 
Is the same old Democratic Party ready to correct course? In time?


STEPHEN TRIMBLE 
Culture wars and an embattled Utah monument

ROB PATTERSON 
Bradley Cooper’s Bernstein

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson 
Golden boy


FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell
New left ex-fugitive lived underground after prison shootout

From The Progressive Populist, May 1, 2024


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Friday, March 29, 2024

Editorial: Are You Better Off Than Trump?

Donald Trump’s promoters are now asking “Are you better off today than you were four years ago,” when Trump was in office. Seriously?

By almost any objective standard, the US is in much better shape today than it was when Joe Biden took office in January 2021.

Trump inherited a healthy economy from Barack Obama, who led the recovery from the recession George W. Bush left him in 2009. Trump took a 4.5% unemployment rate and rode it for three years until the COVID-19 pandemic hit the US in early 2020. Nonfarm employment fell by 1.4 million jobs in March 2020 and a staggering 20.5 million jobs in April, a loss of 22 million jobs that largely erased the gains from a decade of job growth, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities noted in March. Unemployment was 6.3% in January 2021, the gross domestic product had dropped 3.5% during 2020, grocery shelves were empty as supply chain problems made everything from toilet paper to computer chips hard to find. 

The British medical journal The Lancet in February 2021 blamed Trump for an error-filled response to the coronavirus pandemic that analysts said contributed to 40% more deaths compared to other wealthy countries.

Trump undermined science at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, he pulled the US out of the World Health Organization, and cast doubt on the public use of masks, among other things..

“Instead of galvanising the US populace to fight the pandemic, President Trump publicly dismissed its threat (despite privately acknowledging it), discouraged action as infection spread, and eschewed international cooperation.”

“His refusal to develop a national strategy worsened shortages of personal protective equipment and diagnostic tests,” it added. “President Trump politicised mask-wearing and school reopenings and convened indoor events attended by thousands, where masks were discouraged and physical distancing was impossible.”

During his first year, Biden got COVID vaccinations distributed throughout the country, which slowed the spread of the virus and helped people get back to work and school. He also helped clear up the supply chain problems and got Americans back to work.

All those jobs lost during Trump’s last year have been recovered under Biden, plus 423,00 manufacturing jobs that have been created since passage of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021.

Inflation spiked from a 1.4% annualized rate when Biden took office to more than 6%, but it has settled back to 3.2%, much of which is caused by corporate profiteering, which Republicans have shown little interest in checking. And real wages (adjusted for inflation) are up, with particular gains at the low end of the income scale.

Despite Republican claims that crime has run out of control under Biden, a recent FBI report noted that crime actually declined significantly in 2023, continuing a post-pandemic trend. 

The fourth-quarter 2023 numbers showed a 13% decline in murder in 2023 from 2022, a 6% decline in reported violent crime and a 4% decline in reported property crime, based on data from around 13,000 law enforcement agencies, policing about 82% of the US population.

NBC News noted that the drop in crime does not appear to be understood by most Americans. A Gallup poll in December found that 77% of Americans believe crime rates are worsening.

And this all happened after Trump failed in his attempt to reject the election results and resisted the transferof power. Trump and his allies tried to persuade Republican state officials in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin to reject Biden’s victories in those states, he was recorded on a phone call trying to bully Georgia state officials into finding 11,780 more ballots to put him ahead of Biden in that key state, and Trump incited an insurrection at the Capital in an apparent attempt to interrupt the certification of the election on Jan. 6. More than 2,000 “tourists,” pushed past police lines to enter the Capitol, in what the Republican National Commisttee later called “legitimate political discourse.” Much vandalism and looting followed, 174 police officers were injured and damages exceeded $2.7 million. In the past three years, 1,200 of the “tourists” have been charged with federal crimes relating to the attack. As of December 2023, 745 defendants have been found guilty and sentenced. Trump has said they are hostages, whom he would pardon if he makes it back into the White House, after a year in which he has been found liable in New York State courts for sexual assault and civil fraud. 

A New York appeals court on March 25 reduced the amount of bail Trump must post to proceed with his appeal of the $454 million civil fraud judgment imposed on Trump and his business associates, including his sons, for lying about the Trump Organization’s assets to qualify for lower interest rates on loans. The court gave Trump 10 days to put up $175 million, to prevent New York Attorney General Leticia James from seizing his assets during his appeal. Trump also posted $91.6 million bond in the defamation case he lost to E. Jean Carroll.

Some of our progressive friends were dismayed that James wasn’t allowed to seize Trump Tower as her first prize, but she can wait. Unlike the thousands of contractors who were forced to take Trump to court to pay them for their work, only to be forced to settle for cents on the dollar as the unscrupulous developer starved them out, James and the state of New York can carry the case until Trump’s appeals are judged groundless. 

Trump, who displayed contempt for New York state Judge Arthur Engoron throughout the trial, has claimed he has almost $500 million in cash, but he accused James and Engoron of seeking “to take the cash away so I can’t use it on the campaign.” Apparently, he has not heard the old adage, “If you can’t pay the fine, don’t do the crime.” And, with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg prepared to start prosecuting Trump in his hush money criminal trial on April 15, Trump may be testing the corrolary, “If you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime.”

Trump faces trial in April on 34 felony charges that he falsified his company’s business records to cover up payments his lawyer made before the 2016 election to porn actress Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal, to keep them quiet about extramarital encounters with Trump years earlier, as well as a Trump Tower doorman who claimed Trump fathered a child out of wedlock. Trump is known to have cheated on all three of his wives, which is not illegal, but falsifying business records to cover it up is illegal in New York, and covering it up for election purposes is a federal crime, for which Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, went to prison in 2018. Trump let Cohen take the fall, but Trump’s Department of Justice chose not to prosecute the new president. Federal prosecutors said in court filings Trump directed Cohen to make the payments, though they referred to him in court filings as “Individual 1,” not by name.

The New York grand jury indicted Trump April 4, 2023, 15 months after Trump returned to Mar-A-Lago, in Florida.

If convicted on the New York charges, Trump could be sentenced to four years in prison, but that would keep him until the federal insurrection and espionage cases and the Georgia election racketeering cases are decided, which could put Trump in prison for the rest of his life, if justice is served well done. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, April 15, 2024


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Selections from the April 15, 2024 issue

 COVER/Topher Sanders, Dan Schwartz and Gabriel Sandoval 

What’s missing from railroad safety data? Dead workers and severed limbs. 

EDITORIAL 
Are you better off than Trump?

JIM HIGHTOWER 
Tom Paine: What a guy! Guess What? Americans want to be woke! Sen. Katie Britt plays a cruel political game to exploit a Mexican rape victim. Why are we letting financial hucksters dictate our local news?  

FRANK LINGO 
Plastic proliferating on the planet

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 

DON ROLLINS 
A study in tax dodging

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
Who passes the dishwasher test? 

DISPATCHES 
Donation to Trump’s RNC is a donation to his lawyers before it’s a donation to is party.
Trump lawsuit against ABC, Stephanopoulos is risky.
Senate map is tough for Dems, but they can beat Ted Cruz and Rick Scott.
Budget proposal shows GOP is ‘party of cutting Social Security and Medicare.’
Trump-in-law calls for ethnic cleansing in Gaza.


ART CULLEN 
What’s the matter with me? 

ALAN GUEBERT 
Meet the ‘barons’ who corrupt your dinner table

JOE CONASON 
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s farce — and our tragedy 

SARAH ANDERSON,WILLIAM RICE and ZACHARY TASHMAN
More for them, less for us

JOHN YOUNG 
Hoax that launched a thousand lies

DICK POLMAN 
The aspiring fascist’s ‘bloodbath’ comment, in the context of the last nine years 

GENE NICHOL
Robert Francis Kennedy Sr. — glimpses of the anti-Trump

DAVID McCALL 
Building America, fighting greed 

LES LEOPOLD 
A working class susceptible to Trump needs much more from Biden


ROBERT KUTTNER
Man of steel

THOM HARTMANN  
What Americans and the media are missing about the TikTok crisis


SONALI KOLHATKAR
Trump plans to make his massive tax cuts for the rich and corporations permanent


KEN WINKES  
Physician, heal our health care 

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
Our bodies, our minds: The big bubble

SAM URETSKY 
Memory can be a fleeting thing for the elderly

WAYNE O’LEARY 
Reflections on the new American pastime

JOEL D. JOSEPH  
Solomonic justice in Georgia

MATTHEW ROSING  
We can break the cycle of poverty, mental illness and prison

JUAN COLE 
UN and EU slam Israel for imposing on Palestinians ‘levels of food insecurity never recorded anywhere in the world’ 

KENT PATERSON  
Mexico poised to elect first woman president

JAMIE STIEHM
A tale of two contagions

BARRY FRIEDMAN
Outrage and lip service

SETH SANDRONSKY
Facts against industrial farming

RALPH NADER 
Israel’s right-wing wants all the Palestinian land — and this explaims its state terrorism


CLINT McKNIGHT 
Freed wolves move into their old niche

ROB PATTERSON 
My TV I Love Lucy is worsley

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
On the Christian trail: Dramatizing the story of the first Black woman presidential candidate


SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
The great embryo imbroglio

From The Progressive Populist, April 15, 2024


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Thursday, March 14, 2024

Editorial: Biden Goes Long and Scores!

 Joe Biden showed up for his State of the Union address in the House of Representatives March 7, facing low expectations after years of Republicans depicting the elderly president as in decline. 

But the President effectively jump-started his re-election campaign with a supposedly nonpolitical speech that kicked MAGA Republicans’ asses for more than an hour, taking shots at his unnamed predecessor, whom he accused of “bowing down to a Russian leader” in encouraging Russian President Vladimir Putin to do “whatever the hell you want” in Europe. Biden called the former guy’s remarks “outrageous, dangerous” and “unacceptable.” 

Biden talked about how “my predecessor” tried to “bury the truth” of the attempted insurrection on the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He noted that his predecessor failed to take care as the pandemic began to rage across the nation four years ago, how his predecessor had done little to oppose China and how his predecessor had not acted to curb gun violence.

Biden listed his accomplishments in the past three years, but he also teased Republicans who were heckling his speech.

Biden departed from his prepared text to urge the former president to join him in reviving the bipartisan border reform bill that Trump had ordered Republicans to abandon after the deal was reached in the Senate. Instead, Trump hopes to keep the alleged border “chaos” issue alive in the campaign.

Biden also talked about codifying reproductive freedom, taxing billionaires and corporations, cutting health care costs and banning assault weapons in the hands of civilians. Biden gave Democrats in the chamber and progressives watching on TV plenty to cheer about, and restored confidence that there’s fight in the old man, after all.

Conservative commentators had to scramble for new talking points. Sean Hannity on Fox “News” said Biden was “frightening” and called him “Jacked-Up Joe.” Erick Erickson complained, “This whole speech is about rallying Democrats. Not persuading independents.” But Never Trumper and Bulwark publisher Sarah Longwell, quoting Erickson, observed, “The substance is about rallying Democrats. But the delivery is about showing hesitant swing voters he’s still up for the job. And I think it’s working.”

Taking credit for the economic recovery since the COVID pandemic, Biden boasted that “consumer confidence is soaring” and inflation was dropping. But he also called on voters to “remember” the depths of 2020, before he took over, and compare that to where the nation is now, with more than two years of record low unemployment. “I inherited an economy that was on the brink,” he said. “Now our economy is the envy of the world.”

He took a swipe at lazy reporting by media that have focused on his age and occasional stumbles instead of his successes, as he noted the economy is “the greatest comeback story never told,” but with the nation tuned in to the State of the Union speech, he was determined to tell it. 

Biden also predicted that the “power of women” would show itself in the 2024 election, as it did in 2022 and 2023, when Democratic candidates won elections the polls said they’d lose. “We’ll win again in 2024,” he said, as women are responding to Republican threats to their reproductive rights, including birth control, after Trump’s three appointees to the Supreme Court furnished the majority that overturned Roe v. Wade. 

“My God, what freedoms will you take away next?” Biden asked the Republicans.

Biden promised to “restore” the abortion rights Roe v. Wade had guaranteed if voters re-elect him, as well as a Congress that could pass such legislation.

The centrality of “reproductive freedom” was clear in the speech, as well as guests in the White House’s box, who included a woman who had to leave Texas to get an abortion to save her own life and an Alabama woman whose fertility treatments were suspended when the Alabama Supreme Court shut down in vitro fertilization treatments in that state.

He sparred with Republicans in the chamber several times, departing from his prepared text to ad-lib responses to hecklers. And as he neared the end of his speech, the president joked about his age.

“I know I may not look like it, but I’ve been around a while,” the 81-year-old commander in chief said, to chuckles in the audience. “And when you get to my age, certain things become clearer than ever. … The issue facing our nation isn’t how old we are, it’s how old are our ideas. Hate, anger, revenge, retribution are the oldest of ideas. But you can’t lead America with ancient ideas that only take us back.”

Republicans in the House Chamber were unmoved, but an instant poll CNN conducted that night showed 65% of viewers had a positive review of Biden’s speech. Viewers shifted 17 points toward believing the country is headed in the right direction — from 45% before the speech to 62% afterward.

And that was before Alabama Sen. Katie Britt delivered a cringeworthy performance as the Republican responder. The “highlight” was her story about a Mexican a woman who had been a victim of sex trafficking by cartels, which the senator implied had happened in the US under President Biden’s watch. “We wouldn’t be okay with this happening in a Third World country. This is the United States of America, and it is past time, in my opinion, that we start acting like it,” Britt said. “President Biden’s border policies are a disgrace.”

In fact, Britt’s story was based on abuse suffered by Karla Jacinto Romero in Mexico between 2004 and 2008 — while George W. Bush happened to be president. Romero, who has become an activist for victims of sex trafficking in Latin America, told her story to Congress in 2015 and later to three senators, including Britt, on the border in Texas in 2023. But among Republicans, facts are fungible and are twisted to suit their prejudices. 

So we’re heading into a presidential campaign matching two old men. One of them has a long career in public service and has surrounded himself with capable aides, and his accomplishments during his first three years invite comparisons with Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. His SOTU speech showed Old Joe may be channeling “Give ‘Em Hell” Harry Truman as he outpaces his detractors. 

The opponent is a disgraced real estate developer, con man, rapist, fraudster and aspiring dictator whose running commentary on “Truth Social” framed Biden as “angry” and “shouting,” which he said “is not helpful to bringing our Country back together!” The predecessor raged overnight with more than 75 posts in various stages of derangement. He has surrounded himself with dodgy aides, five of whom needed pardons for crimes before Trump was run out of office, and he has feverishly sought to delay his criminal trials until he can get back into the White House and fire special prosecutor Jack Smith. And now his team has brought the Republican National Committee into his racketeer influenced corrupt organization.

Thus, we propose a slogan for President Biden’s re-election campaign: “81 years is better than 91 felony indictments.” — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, April 1, 2024


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Selections from the April 1, 2024 issue

 COVER/Dana Milbank

Biden gave $90 billion to Rural America. The thank you went to spam.

EDITORIAL 
Biden goes long and scores!

JIM HIGHTOWER
Is ‘Icarus’ the solution to climate change? 
What if there was a natural substitute for plastic? There is! 
How corporate lobbyists can engineer a train wreck. 
What happened to the ‘miracle of meatless meat’?  

FRANK LINGO
Solar revolution is on the way

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
The southern border: When suffering begets suffering

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
‘Show Me’ bad legislative ideas

DISPATCHES 
‘Social Security is on the ballot,’ say advocates, as Trump threatens cuts.
Trump team takes over RNC, slashes staff.
Trump’s affection for dictators is at heart of his plan for America — and Ukraine.
To regain youth support, groups say Biden must embrace ‘Finish the Job’ youth agenda.
Trump endorses Gaza genocide: ‘Finish the Problem.’ ...
Senators call for new ‘war profiteering’ panel.

ART CULLEN 
Iowa has robins in February and we can barely water the hogs

ALAN GUEBERT
The growing disconnect between hard numbers and soft policy

JOE CONASON 
Over congressional Republicans, Putin casts his dark shadow

MARTHA BURK
Backlash: Women’s History Month in a post-Roe world

JOHN YOUNG 
Tales of the embryonic highway patrol

SETH SANDRONSKY
Closing California prisons will save taxpayers money, budget watchdog agency reports

DICK POLMAN 
During the pandemic, his fraudulency got a lot of people killed. Has that slid down the memory hole?  

TOM SCHALLER and PAUL WALDMAN/ The Daily Yonder 
Lack of political competition harms rural Americans

DAVID McCALL 
Defying the South’s corporate lackeys 

JOSEPH B. ATKINS 
Workers once again try to organize the South

MARK ANDERSON 
Support for aid to Ukraine is waning 


ROBERT KUTTNER 
Civil War II

THOM HARTMANN  
The Saudi & Putin scheme for screwing Biden’s election hopes


SONALI KOLHATKAR
Countering corporate propaganda


CHRIS MILLS RODRIGO  
We need a ‘Marshall Plan’ for public media 

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas  
Welcome to the Twilight Zone: Strange rulings in family care

SAM URETSKY 
The pandemic has long-term effects on the economy

PHYLLIS BENNIS  
Gazans are starving — don’t cut aid now 

WAYNE O’LEARY
Big Pharma on the defensive

GRASSROOTS/Hank Kalet  
An assault on campus speech

JASON SIBERT 
Military rivals of the US in the second Cold War

JUAN COLE 
Trump, like Biden, supports Israeli campaign against Gaza: ‘You’ve got to finish the problem’

N. GUNASEKARAN  
‘The world cannot afford conflict in Asia’

JAMIE STIEHM 
The Roberts Supreme Court: Too exteme for voters

BARRY FRIEDMAN
Summer of discontent/Part 2

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
Say it ain’t so, Joe

RALPH NADER
Count the real Gaza death toll


DAVE MARSTON
Glen Canyon Dam has created a world of mud

ROB PATTERSON
‘The Crown’ was a crowning TV achievement

ELWOOD WATSON 
The creep of Christian nationalism

FILM REVIEWS/Ed Rampell 
Pan African Film Festival offered new media for Black History Month

From The Progressive Populist, April 1, 2024


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As the Dominos Fall

 

Many are questioning whether Trump can cope with all his many indictments and court appearances, and still run an effective campaign for president.
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The New Republicans

 The Chubb Group has underwritten Trump's $91.6 million bond in the E. Jean Carroll judgement. Chubb Group CEO, Evan Greenberg's father, Maurice Greenberg, has close business ties to Vladimir Putin. Guess where Trump's money came from.
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Friday, March 1, 2024

There's a Senator in the Punch Bowl

 

Ex senator Joe Lieberman’s “No Labels” Unity Party is considering candidates to run in the 2024 election - possibly throwing the election to Trump. With our nation hanging in the balance, can we risk it?

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Trump's Cult

 

Donald Trump’s cult like followers continue to worship and send money to his campaign, in spite of the indictments and multi million dollar judgments against him. 

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Netanyahu: His Day of Reckoning


 By continuing to prosecute war in Gaza with Hamas and Hezbollah, Prime Minister Netanyahu is putting off his day of reckoning. He missed the cues that might have spared Israel the horrors of Oct 7.

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Editorial: Bill for Trump’s Lies Comes Due

 Donald Trump has been lying about his businesses for his entire career and now he’s squealing like a stuck pig since a New York court called him on it.

Manhattan Justice Arthur F. Engoron ruled Feb. 16 that Trump engaged in a yearslong conspiracy with top executives at the Trump Organization to deceive banks and insurers about the size of his wealth and the true value of such properties as Trump Tower in Manhattan and his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida.

Engoron ordered the disgraced former president to pay $355 million of his fortune, plus interest, which makes a total of $454 million. And that’s on top of $88.3 million he owes E. Jean Carroll for lying about his 1996 sexual assault of the writer. That includes $5 million in damages a federal jury in Manhattan assessed in May 2023 for the sexual assault, and $83.3 million by another jury in January for continuing to defame Carroll after the original verdict. 

Trump said the civil fraud decision was “election inference” and “weaponization against a political opponent,” complaining to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida that he was being penalized for “having built a perfect company, great cash, great buildings, great everything.”

New York Attorney General Leticia James sued Trump in 2022 under a New York statute that gives the attorney general wide scope to investigate and prosecute corporate fraud. She alleged that he lied for years about his wealth on financial statements he used to secure loans and make deals as he built the real estate empire that vaulted him to fame and the presidency. Trump has said repeatedly the loans were paid back and the banks he dealt with made money, and he accused James of singling him out for political reasons.

Trump claims he was singled out for prosecution, but the New York Times noted that the New York attorney general’s office has relied on the law for years in high-profile cases, including against UBS, ExxonMobil and Juul — as well as Trump University and the Trump Foundation, which forced Trump to shut down both scams and pay $25 million to Trump U clients.

It is a federal crime to make false statements on loan applications, but because James sued Trump and his business associates under the state law, the claims were decided in a bench trial — one decided by a judge, as the state law requires, rather than by a jury. 

Trump disregarded that explanation and complained that he was denied a jury trial. Still, knowing that Engoron would decide the case, Trump showed contempt for the 74-year-old judge throughout the trial, in an apparent attempt to provoke Engoron.

Engoron started the trial in late September 2023 with a summary judgment that ruled the Trump Organization had committed fraud by inflating property values by as much as $2.2 billion to get better loan and insurance terms. The bench trial began in October to examine other counts and determine penalties.

Engoron let Trump boil through the three-month trial with insults at the judge and Attorney General James, though Engoron fined Trump $15,000 for disparaging remarks about the judge’s clerk. Finally, on Feb. 16, Engoron ordered the former president and his company to pay $355 million, which he determined were savings from the lower interest rates and windfall profits from the recent sale of two properties, as “ill-gotten gains” that should be paid to the state, with interest.

“The frauds found here leap off the page and shock the conscience,” Engoron wrote in a 92-page decision. “The English poet Alexander Pope first declared, ‘To err is human, to forgive is divine.’ Defendants apparently are of a different mind,” he continued. “Their complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological.”

He said the “defendants are incapable of admitting the error of their ways … Indeed, Donald Trump testified that, even today, he does not believe the Trump Organization needed to make any changes based on the facts that came out during this trial.”

Engoron added, “the Court intends to protect the integrity of the financial marketplace and, thus, the public as a whole. Defendants refusal to admit error — indeed, to continue it, according to the Independent Monitor — constrains this Court to conclude that they will engage in it going forward unless judicially restrained.”

Among other things, the court bans Trump and the Trump Organization and its affiliates from applying for loans from any financial institution chartered by or registered with the New York State Department of Financial Services for three years, and Eric and Don Jr. can’t serve as an officer or director of any New York corporation or other legal entity for two years. 

Meanwhile, Trumpublicans who narrowly control the House of Representatives continue to look for pretexts to impeach President Joe Biden, based on imagined corrupt relationships of the president to his son Hunter and brother Jim, even after a sketchy FBI informant, Alexander Smirnov, on whom the Trumpers were basing their case, was indicted on charges that he lied to federal investigators about the Biden family’s business dealings.

These lies included claims that Joe Biden and his son each sought $5 million bribes from Ukrainian energy company Burisma when Biden was vice president, in exchange for protecting the firm from scrutiny by Ukraine’s national authorities. Now, Smirnov, a 43-year-old Israeli American, has admitted that “officials associated with Russian intelligence” fed him that information. 

Republicans have based their attacks on President Biden on that apparent Russian disinformation. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), partnered with House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) in May 2023, demanding the Justice Department release an FBI-generated Form FD 1023, which could reveal a “criminal scheme involving then-Vice President Joe Biden … involving an exchange of money for policy decisions.” That form contained statements that the FBI warned were unverified, but the Republicans insisted it be published.

“That to me is really the heart of this matter,” House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) said Jan. 11 on Fox “News.” “The most corroborating evidence we have is … from this highly credible, confidential human source.” On Feb. 21, after the source of the information was disclosed, Jordan insisted the revelations about Smirnov’s Russian connection don’t “change the facts.”

But other witnesses have sworn under oath that President Biden wasn’t involved in any of his son’s or his brother’s schemes.

The facts that need to be established now include when Grassley, Comer and Jordan discovered that Smirnov, their “star witness,” was a Russian agent, and whether the Republican inquisitors suborned perjury during the investigation. For people who claim to be Christians, they sure do seem to bear a lot of false witness.

Republicans need to swear off the lies, the bullying and unfounded slurs about the “Biden Crime Family” and instead straighten up, drop the impeachment nonsense and pass the budget that should have made it through Congress six months ago. — JMC 

From The Progressive Populist, March 15, 2024


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Selections from the March 15, 2024 issue

 COVER/Art Cullen

Breaking the Red Wall

EDITORIAL
Bill for Trump’s lies comes due

JIM HIGHTOWER
What is a banker’s promise worth? 
The debacle of ‘God’s army’ at Eagle Pass. 
Abortion-ban extremists are using a slave law to repress women. 
Where did our local newspapers go? 

FRANK LINGO
Peace and the planet

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

DON ROLLINS 
A puzzle, a wonder and a miracle

RURAL ROUTES/Margot McMillen 
The weeds fight back. What’s next? 

DISPATCHES 
Trump underperformance in South Carolina is anti-MAGA triumph.
Trump’s weekend at CPAC was tour de force of bigotry and incompetence.
Childcare crisis grips US as IRS chief says wealthy tax dodgers cost $150B a year.
Trump will destroy health care, and his voters don’t care.
Make big money peddling COVID misinfo
Catholic leaders protest Texas AG’s lawsuit targeting El Paso migrant ministry.


ART CULLEN 
Vilsack’s lament

ALAN GUEBERT 
From ink to electrons, the retirement of print journalism


SARAH ANDERSON 
Poor, low-income voters are a sleeping giant

JOHN YOUNG 
Agent Orange’s inspiration: “Be like Vlad”


DICK POLMAN
Putin’s bootlicker condones political murder. He wants to bring Kremlin values to the White House. 

JOE CONASON
Behind the special counsel smear of Biden

JOHN CULLEN 
Old enough to know better

DAVID McCALL 
Solidarity saved him 

LES LEOPOLD 
Did Wall Street just end the class war?  


ROBERT KUTTNER
Dealing with the bad stewards

THOM HARTMANN
Why the corporate tax bracket should go back to 52%


SONALI KOLHATKAR
Cash bail system violates due process

HEALTH CARE/Joan Retsinas
Scrooge returns: No food for children during the summer

SAM URETSKY 
Supreme Court takes on ballot access

FARRAH HASSEN  
The rent is still too high 

WAYNE O’LEARY
The empire reenergized

LINDSAY K. SAUNDERS
Having a child shouldn’t cause financial catastrophe

JAKE JOHNSON
Labor leaders condemn GOP fiscal commission as anti-worker ‘power grab’

JUAN COLE
Biden, tired of being called ‘Genocide Joe,’ finally blinks

GENE NICHOL
The attorney general’s jam

ELWOOD WATSON
Women and the future of politics

JAMIE STIEHM 
Lincoln’s life lesson on saving democracy

BARRY FRIEDMAN 
The summer of our discontent/party one

SATIRE/Rosie Sorenson  
All Tuckered out

SUSAN HARLEY 
Free tax filing: A crucial step toward unrigging our economy

RALPH NADER 
Biden & Blinken — rule of illegal power over rule of law


JOHN CLAYTON 
You’re not the boss in wilderness

ROB PATTERSON 
Max is anything but that

SETH SANDRONSKY 
Book it: Reading about heterodox economics

FILM REVIEW/Ed Rampell 
‘Kipkemboi’: Kenya’s genius, from a mud hut to Wall Street

From The Progressive Populist, March 15, 2024


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Saturday, February 17, 2024

Editorial: Biden Floats in Flooded Zone

 The special counsel assigned by Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate President Joe Biden’s handling of classified documents finally produced his report that concluded “no charges are warranted” in the case. But Robert Hur, a Republican appointee in Donald Trump’s Department of Justice, took the opportunity to criticize Biden’s mental acuity, portraying the president as “a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.” 

The slur went beyond Hur’s commission, particularly since Hur is not qualified to diagnose neurological conditions, but it blew up in the media to amplify questions about the president’s fitness for office at age 81.

We are expected to ignore that Biden’s all-but-certain opponent in November is a sociopath and compulsive liar who not only has trouble remembering which countries foreign leaders rule — Donald Trump also has said Nikki Haley was in charge of security at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, confusing his Republican rival with then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and he said Jeb Bush launched the war in Iraq after 9/11, among his recent “senior moments.” 

Of course, Trump also faces 91 felony charges in state and federal jurisdictions and he has been found liable for rape and defamation of his sexual assault victim, as well as fraud in his financial dealings. And his evangelical Christian supporters believe he was sent by God, who apparently overlooked Trump’s cheating on all three of his wives, as well as hundreds of contractors he refused to pay for work during his business career, so we guess it shouldn’t bother us. 

The Former Guy is desperate to get back in the White House to stay out of prison. And if he gets back into the White House, the wannabe dictator has threatened to ignore the United States’ NATO responsibilities and let his friend, Russian President Vladimir Putin, take Ukraine and possibly Poland by force, as well as other Eastern European nations, as Putin tries to put the Soviet bloc back together. 

Trump’s political operation has embraced Russian-style disinformation, which uses media to produce enough distrust to ensure the public can never mobilize around a coherent narrative. “The Democrats don’t matter,” Trump’s political strategist, Steve Bannon, said in 2018 when he outlined plans to dismantle the “deep state.” “The real opposition is the media. And the way to deal with them is to flood the zone with sh*t.” 

The zone has been flooded ever since.

PolitiFact in January reached a milestone of 1,000 facts checked on statements made by Trump, when he claimed after his New Hampshire primary win that Democrats used the COVID-19 pandemic to “cheat” in the 2020 presidential election. The claim was rated “Pants on Fire.”

PolitiFact started examining Trump’s statements in 2011, when he was amplifying “birther” conspiracy theories to undermine then-President Barack Obama’s eligibility. Since then, about 76% of Trump’s statements examined by PolitiFact have earned ratings of Mostly False, False or Pants on Fire, which puts him in a class by himself. “It’s not unusual for politicians of both parties to mislead, exaggerate or make stuff up. But American fact-checkers have never encountered a politician who shares Trump’s disregard for factual accuracy,” PolitiFact reported Feb. 1.

Trump’s median rating of False is worse than a cross-section of frequently checked Democratic and Republican politicians. Politicians with median ratings of Half True include Obama, Biden and Hillary Clinton; three senators who ran for president, Mitt Romney, R-Utah, Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.; and two longtime congressional leaders, Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

“It’s been an astounding eight years in American politics,” said Jennifer Mercieca, a Texas A&M University communication professor and a historian of American political rhetoric. “He’s built his entire political identity on the fact that he doesn’t owe anyone the truth about anything.”

PolitiFact, for all its work, can’t match the Washington Post for comprehensive review of Trump’s contempt for the truth. The Post’s Fact Checker team recorded 30,573 “untruths” told by Trump during his presidency. The team, led by Glenn Kessler, noted on Jan. 24, 2021, “What is especially striking is how the tsunami of untruths kept rising the longer he served as president and became increasingly unmoored from the truth.”

Kessler noted that the Fact Checker staff has been unable to continue that comprehensive pace, but they did review all the public statements during Biden’s first 100 days, and counted 78 false or misleading statements. That compares to 511 such statements in Trump’s first 100 days. Fact Checker noted that, unlike Trump, Biden generally does not repeat claims that have been fact-checked as false.

Onr of Trump’s biggest lies was that the economy was never stronger than during his presidency. The facts: by just about any important measure, the economy under Trump was not doing as well as it did under Presidents Eisenhower, Johnson or Clinton — and, as Trump rode the economic recovery that started under Barack Obama, Trump also rode the COVID pandemic into the economic dumps. Unemployment shot up to 14.7% in April 2020. By the time Trump was turned out of the White House in January 2021, Trump left a 6.7% jobless rate, after a net loss of 2.67 million jobs.

Since then, Biden got the COVID pandemic under control, resolved supply-chain problems left over from Trump’s adminstration, passed an economic package that helped to create more than 14 million jobs, and unemployment dropped below 4% for the past two years. However, Republicans continue to undermine public confidence in Biden’s ability to manage the economy. 

People who have spent time with Biden know the president is in full possession of his faculties — completely lucid, with an excellent grasp of detail, Paul Krugman noted in the New York Times. “Of course, most voters don’t get to see him up close, and it’s on Biden’s team to address that. And yes, he speaks quietly and a bit slowly, although this is in part because of his lifetime struggle with stuttering. He also, by the way, has a sense of humor, which I think is important.” 

“Most important is that Biden has been a remarkably effective president. Trump spent four years claiming that a major infrastructure initiative was just around the corner, to the point that ‘It’s infrastructure week!’ became a running joke; Biden actually got legislation passed. ... Biden’s technology and climate policies — the latter passed against heavy odds — have produced a surge in manufacturing investment. His enhancement of Obamacare has brought health insurance coverage to millions.

“If you ask me, these achievements say a lot more about Biden’s capacity than his occasional verbal slips,” Krugman wrote. We agree. — JMC

From The Progressive Populist, March 1, 2024


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