Monday, November 25, 2024

We’re not helpless! Here are 10 ways to defend democracy

 

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Welcome to Stop the Presses, a weekly newsletter about how right-wing extremism has exploited the weaknesses in American journalism and what we can do about it.


We’re not helpless! Here are 10 ways to defend democracy

The right played the long game and won big this year. We can play the long game too.

Like many of you, I’m struggling to be realistic and optimistic at the same time in the wake of the brutal election results and the steady march of fascism.

There’s a saying that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. popularized: “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” I hope that’s true, but right now I don’t know where justice is bending. I just know I’m bent out of shape.


Yet it’s vital not to give in to despair. The other side – the sexist, racist side – was on the run after the Roe vs. Wade ruling and the election of Barack Obama. Did they give up? No. They came back and won, through determination … and dark money and propaganda and corruption and … well, the point is, they came back. And we can do so too. 

Which is not to say the next few years will be easy. They may be ghastly. People on TV speculate about a big Democratic comeback in the 2026 midterms. But I’m not convinced there will even be 2026 midterms, at least not fair ones. The Republicans have shown us what they’re capable of. I’m scared. But I’m not paralyzed by my fear, and I hope you’re not either.

Here’s my advice for the pro-democracy public and media in these coming tough times. 

5 SUGGESTIONS FOR THE PUBLIC

1. Hold onto your outrage. 

Trump’s horrible picks for key government positions are an attempt to wear us down. They want us to surrender our standards and accept the idea of sexual predators and hucksters running our government. The Matt Gaetz nomination for attorney general was a test. The fact that he had to withdraw was an indication that decency is not dead, even if it is gravely wounded. 

2. Be loud.

A lie told often and loudly becomes the truth in many people’s minds. So it’s important to repeat the facts over and over again. Elon Musk’s Twitter/X has given people a bad impression of social media, but there are other options, such as Bluesky. People need to make their opinions heard. It’s good for democracy.

3. Choose an issue and get going.

Electoral politics isn’t everything. You can contribute to a healthy society by picking an issue you care about and making a difference. Groups that help immigrants are in particular need right now. The Republicans want you to tune out and hide in your home. Don't. 

4. Think local.

An important step in the right wing’s road to power was winning local races and taking control of legislatures so they could gerrymander election maps to win congressional races. They translated local power into national power. A lot of cultural issues such as book banning play out on the local level. If you’re disheartened by your inability to elect a pro-democracy president, try electing a qualified person to your town council.

5. Support quality journalism. 

Yes, there is some excellent journalism left. If you’ve canceled your subscription to the Washington Post or Los Angeles Times over their cowardice in avoiding a Kamala Harris endorsement, direct that money to a quality nonprofit news source like ProPublica.

5 SUGGESTIONS FOR THE MEDIA

1. Don’t let the government hide the cruelty.

Trump and his collaborators will do everything possible to conceal the human toll of their actions. This will be especially true if the Trump regime puts huge numbers of immigrants in camps, as it has promised to do. The media must find creative ways to reach the victims and tell their stories. 

2. Don’t normalize.

Susie Wiles, Trump’s campaign chief and incoming White House chief of staff, describes herself as “a moderate on the political spectrum.” And some news outlets are buying it as if it’s centrist to support would-be dictator Trump. Many media outlets, including the supposedly liberal MSNBC, have also cited the selection of Marco Rubio for secretary of state as a reasonable and even “traditional” pick. Rubio did vote to certify the 2020 results, but this year – when he wanted to be Trump’s running mate – he spread lies about election fraud, including a claim from the debunked film “2000 Mules.” And Rubio seemed to apologize for his certification of the 2020 results, saying he did so “because, at that stage in the process, you have no options.”

Wiles and Rubio are not moderates or traditionalists. They are fascist enablers.

3. Don’t be slaves to access.

Perhaps some of the friendly treatment of Wiles comes from news outlets’ hopes that she’ll read their texts, answer their phone calls, and green-light their interviews with Trump. This thirst for access and fear of being frozen out may have prompted the humiliating make-nice visit to Mar-a-Lago by Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” 

4. Don’t soft-pedal fascism.

When Trump abuses power, the media must say so directly. Don’t give it a candy coating. After Trump won by lying constantly and getting judges he appointed to stall his criminal cases, the New York Times credited him with “remarkable political grit and resilience.” Similarly, when the media use the word “conservative,” they paper over the fact that today’s Republican Party is not conserving anything. In fact, it’s a repudiation of longtime American values. Call it “right-wing.”

Beware of certain terms disappearing from news coverage. When major news outlets stop using words like “authoritarian” and “extreme,” you’ll know that the authoritarians and extremists have prevailed. Legitimate journalists must fight against that.

5. Don’t contribute to public amnesia.

A damaging issue for Trump four years ago was his bungling of the Covid crisis, but that failure was hardly mentioned this year. The misery of 2020 was such a non-issue that the right wing dared to ask: “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” – even though four years ago we had a pandemic and mile-long food lines and social unrest over the murder of George Floyd and huge job losses.

Voters didn’t remember how bad it was, and the media rarely reminded them. Trump’s record should have been front-and-center in media coverage. It wasn’t. Even an event of historic proportions like the Jan. 6 coup attempt got short shrift.

Giving people the big picture – not just events in isolation – is a key duty of journalism. Do it.

AND FINALLY

For me, the first Trump term was a nightmare of doom-scrolling social media to keep up with the latest White House abomination. For Season 2, I’ll keep paying attention to the news but will try not to be consumed by it. It’s important to detox – to preserve our physical and mental health. For me, that means walking along Lake Michigan, listening to the music of the Decemberists, and admiring the paintings of Remedios Varo.

Find your joy. Stay hydrated. We can win in the end. 

So...I've been getting death threats after the election

 

Many who celebrate Trump's election haven't thought through the consequences & are in for very rude awakenings! Cutting $2 TRILLION from the Budget will be painful!


Farron Balanced

589K subscribers


The threats of retribution and attacks on the media from Donald Trump have become far more realistic with his nomination of Matt Gaetz as Attorney General. But even without Trump's threats of retribution, his followers are warning that they will do it themselves. In the weeks since the election, Farron and other progressives have been hit with an abnormal number of threats and doxxing attempts, as MAGA fanatics feel empowered to take down any opposition. Farron Cousins explains what has happened. Follow me on social media!   / farronbalanced     / farronbalanced     / farronbalanced   https://www.threads.net/@farronbalanced   / farronbalanced   Listen to my videos in an audio format by subscribing to my podcast: https://farronbalanceddaily.buzzsprou... Don't forget to like, comment, and share! And subscribe to stay connected!

UH-OH! TWO MAGA Republicans HIT with MAJOR LAWSUIT

NOTICE CNN REPORTED IN 2017 THAT CONGRESS HAD PAID OUT 

$17 MILLION TO SETTLE CLAIMS

MAGA MATT GAETZ & MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE sued CITIES & NON-PROFITS for their refusals to allow rallies based on KKK LAW.... 

COURT DISMISSED CLAIMS....those groups are now suing for ATTORNEYS' FEES!

SOME OF THE SCANDAL ARE ALREADY KNOWN: 

THE BASTION REPUBLICAN SCANDAL DATABASE


MeidasTouch

3.39M subscribers


MAGA's bad week gets EVEN WORSE after it was announced Representatives Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene may owe hundreds of thousands of dollars over frivolous lawsuits they filed against civil rights groups such as the NAACP. Dina Doll reacts. Produced by Francis Maxwell. Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Support the MeidasTouch Network:   / meidastouch   Add the MeidasTouch Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Buy MeidasTouch Merch: https://store.meidastouch.com Follow MeidasTouch on Twitter:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on Facebook:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on Instagram:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on TikTok:   / meidastouch  

The one big constraint on Trump

 

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Scott Bessent

Friends,

Will anything stop Trump?

He will have control over both chambers of Congress, a tractable Supreme Court, a political base of fiercely loyal MAGAs, a media ecosystem that amplifies his lies (now including Musk’s horrific X as well as Rupert Murdoch’s reliably mendacious Fox News), and a thin majority of voters in the 2024 election.

He doesn’t worry about another election because he won’t be eligible to run again (or he’ll ignore the Constitution and stay on).

Of course, there are the midterm elections of 2026. But even if Democrats take back both chambers, Trump and his incipient administration are aiming to wreak so much havoc on America in the meantime that Democrats can’t remedy it.

The Republican-controlled Senate starting January 3 won’t restrain Trump. Yes, Trump overreached with his pick of Matt Gaetz for attorney general. Apparently even Senate Republicans can’t abide sex trafficking girls for drug-infested orgies, but this is a very low bar.

So, as a practical matter, is anything stopping Trump?

Yes, and here’s a hint of what it is: On Friday, Trump picked Scott Bessent to serve as treasury secretary.

Bessent is the man Elon Musk derided only a week ago as the “business-as-usual choice” for treasury secretary, in contrast to Howard Lutnick, who Musk said would “actually enact change.”

Musk’s view of “change” is to blow a place up, which was what Musk did when he bought Twitter.

Over the last two weeks, Musk has convinced Trump to appoint bomb-throwers Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Health and Human Services and Pete Hegseth to Defense, and to put Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy in charge of cutting $2 trillion from the federal budget.

But Bessent is the opposite of a bomb-thrower. He’s a billionaire hedge fund manager, founder of the investment firm Key Square Capital Management, and a protege of the MAGA arch-villain George Soros (he’s also gay, which the MAGA base may not like, either).

Why did Trump appoint the “business as usual” Bessent to be treasury secretary? Because the treasury secretary is the most important economic job in the U.S. government.

Trump has never understood much about economics, but he knows two things: High interest rates can throttle an economy (and bring down a president’s party), and high stock prices are good (at least for Trump and his investor class).

Trump doesn’t want to do anything that will cause bond traders to raise long-term interest rates out of fear of future inflation, and he wants stock traders to be so optimistic about corporate profits they raise share prices.

So he has appointed a treasury secretary who will reassure the bond and stock markets.

Stock and bond markets constitute the only real constraint on Trump — the only things whose power he’s afraid of.

But wait. What about Trump’s plan to raise tariffs? He’s floated a blanket tariff of 10 to 20 percent on nearly all imports, 25 percent on imports from Mexico, and 60 percent or more on Chinese goods.

Tariffs of this size would increase consumer prices and fuel inflation — driving interest rates upward. (The cost of tariffs are borne by American businesses and households, rather than foreign companies.)

Tariffs could also invite retaliation from foreign governments and thereby dry up export markets for American-based corporations — in which case the stock market would tank. (The last time America raised tariffs on all imports — Herbert Hoover’s and Congressmen Smoot and Hawley’s Tariff Act of 1930 — the Great Depression worsened.)

In short, tariffs will rattle stock and bond markets, doing the exact opposite of what Trump wants.

So Trump has appointed a treasury secretary who will soothe Wall Street’s nerves — not just because Bessent is a Wall Street billionaire who speaks the Street’s language but also because the Street doesn’t really believe Bessent wants higher tariffs.

Bessent has described Trump’s plan for blanket tariffs as a “maximalist” negotiating strategy — suggesting Trump’s whole tariff proposal is a strategic bluff. The Street apparently thinks tariffs won’t rise much when other countries respond to the bluff with what Trump sees as concessions.

Instead, the Street expects Bessent to be spending his energies seeking lower taxes, especially for big corporations and wealthy Americans, and helping Musk and Ramaswamy cut spending and roll back regulations.

It’s a sad commentary on the state of American democracy when the main constraint on the madman soon to occupy the Oval Office is Wall Street.

I suppose we should be grateful there’s any constraint at all.

The Week Ahead

 

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The Week Ahead

November 24, 2024

A number of you have written to ask my thoughts about social media and whether I’ll be part of the exodus from X. I feel the same way about this issue that I felt about breastfeeding and cloth diapering as a young mom. They worked great for us in our household. But I had lots of friends who used formula or disposable diapers with great success. I’m a big fan of people doing what works best for them on these sorts of issues, and that’s how I feel here. Different options make sense for different people. As for me, I’m keeping a toehold on Twitter because I don’t believe in making it easy for them. Nolite te bastardes carborundum, as fans of Margaret Atwood’s novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” say. But I am posting more often on BlueSky, and I’m liking it there. The tone is respectful, and more and more interesting people, including journalists so you can find breaking news, are there. Also, the knitters, chicken and other animal people, and liberal Alabamians (yes, there is such a thing), seem to be out in full force. I like the respectful conversations and the tone so far. You can find me here if you’re considering heading in that direction, too.

Looking towards the week ahead, I’ve been forced to confront the past. It’s that feeling of déjà vu—we’ve been here before—and honestly, I have no clue how so many Americans could have thought it was a good idea to go back. My tweet from 2018 fills me with such a sense of sadness and naivete. At the time, a lot of people dismissed me as an overly dramatic female type. But I understood that Trump was pushing the country into klepto- and kakistocracy (a government whose corruption benefits its leaders and a government of incompetence, respectively) and stacking the Court to gain power, even though I couldn’t yet contemplate that Court would one day give Trump absolution for his crimes and Americans would return him to power nonetheless.

So many of us are stuck in that place of sadness and wondering what more we could have done. That’s understandable. But we cannot let it prevent us from getting back to work. We teach our children that when you fail, you pick yourself up and get back to work. I intend to remain relentlessly in favor of democracy.

Donald Trump was scheduled to appear in a New York courtroom this week, on Tuesday, November 26, to be sentenced for his conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records to keep Americans from learning he’d paid hush money to adult film star Stormy Daniels on the eve of the 2016 election to keep her from making their sexual encounter public. Trump denies it ever happened. A Manhattan jury didn’t believe him and found him guilty of cooking the books to conceal the payment.

Now, that sentencing has been delayed indefinitely. It’s not clear it will ever happen. Trump’s lawyers have suggested evidence that the Supreme Court said is protected as part of his presidential immunity was improperly used against him, and the Judge has given them until December 2 to file a motion to dismiss based on the fact that Trump is now the president-elect. We don’t even whisper that no man is above the law in this country anymore.

It’s not clear what the DA’s position is, although they’ve suggested they may argue that sentencing could be continued until after he leaves office, although Trump’s lawyers say the threat of that sentencing would be an unlawful impediment on his performance while in office. In a practical sense, for those who fear Trump will not leave once reinstalled in the White House, it would be yet another incentive to cling to power.

At this point, it does not appear that Trump will face justice in a criminal court, despite being indicted in four of them and convicted in one. Future historians will undoubtedly assess this era as a dark time where the rule of law was under attack and a demagogue rose to power. But it does not have to be the final chapter in the American experiment. Already, as Trump prepares his next administration, there is work for us to do.

Last week saw the announcement of people who were absolutely unfit to hold office to take cabinet positions, including some who made it clear that Trump’s effort to separate himself from Project 2025 last summer was a farce. As you doubtless recall, Project 2025 was so stunningly unpopular that Trump lied and said he knew nothing about it to keep the association from dampening his chances. To put it down where the hogs can get it, he lied to the American people, unsurprisingly and again, about what he was committed to doing if he became the president. Let’s not let him get away with that. There is still value in the truth, and this is a big one: the truth that Project 2025, which frightened and disgusted many Americans, is Trump’s plan.

Project 2025 was 900+ pages of anti-American authoritarianism and Christian nationalism brought to life under the rubric of conservatism. But I have never known conservatives who thought it was a good idea to have Russia-friendly people like Tulsi Gabbard as the Director of National Intelligence, or a man like Seth Hegseth, who has been accused of sexual assault and who paid off his accuser, in charge of the Department of Defense. Conservatism is out, even more so than during the first Trump administration, and Trumpism is in—firmly and exclusively in place.

Sometimes it’s the “little” things that take your breath away, like this from Marjorie Taylor Greene.

National Public Radio (NPR) was founded in 1970. According to the MacArthur Foundation, it serves as a major source of news and cultural programs for more than 60 million Americans each week, with 260 local member stations and more than 50 podcasts. Its mission from the outset: To be a “source of information of consequence,” “celebrate the human experience,” help citizens be “enlightened participants” in society and “speak with many voices and many dialects.” So, of course, that means it’s on the chopping block with Trumpism. I wonder how many of you share my experience of having learned important details about daily news and democratic principles while commuting to or from work and listening to NPR? Greene would take aim at that free flow of information in our society.

Then there is Federal Communications Commission nominee Brendan Carr, who wrote the FCC chapter in Project 2025. The mission statement sounds good, “The FCC should promote freedom of speech, unleash economic opportunity, ensure that every American has a fair shot at next-generation connectivity, and enable the private sector to create good-paying jobs through pro-growth reforms that support a diversity of viewpoints, ensure secure and competitive communications networks, modernize outdated infrastructure rules, and represent good stewardship of taxpayer dollars.” But it goes downhill fast, for instance early on, where he lays out the the tradition of bipartisanship on the FCC is a matter of tradition, not law, suggesting without coming out and saying it that Trump could change that.

The FCC regulates radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable networks. In response to an LA Times tweet, suggesting Carr might “make life more difficult” for media companies, Carr confirmed it, suggesting he could take away broadcast licenses from media companies that don’t “operate in the public interest.” That’s preparation for authoritarianism.

So many people on both sides of the political equation have checked out, and, for entirely different reasons, are unaware of the truth. But these are facts that people need to be aware of, and we are the people who can do that. Make sure you share what Carr has threatened or that Trump’s nominee for Secretary of Defense is a TV presenter who paid off a woman who filed a police report accusing him of rape.

We live in times where courage is called for. We already see signs that some people will not be brave, that some people will obey in advance. But I take heart from the following quote, a line from the film “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey”—that speaks forcefully to how I am feeling as we enter this holiday week: “Some believe it is only great power that can hold evil in check, but that is not what I have found. It is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay. Small acts of kindness and love.”

What small acts of kindness or truth-telling can you plan for yourself this week? I’d love to hear about your ideas. Let’s make a difference, even when that seems challenging.


We’re in this together,

Joyce

We’re not helpless! Here are 10 ways to defend democracy

  Forwarded this email?  Subscribe here  for more Welcome to  Stop the Presses , a weekly newsletter about how right-wing extremism has expl...