Opinion

The messy truth about America the right wing can't bear to admit

I got a second dose Saturday. I was bed-ridden Sunday. I'm feeling better today, but writing is hard labor. I won't do the usual dissection of recent events. I'll instead swing for the fences and see what happens. Even if I strike out, it might prove to be useful.

The president and the vice president were asked last week if Tim Scott is right. In a GOP response to the State of the Union address to the United States Congress, the United States Senator said America is not a racist country. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris agreed. America is not racist country. But, they said, there is work to do.

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Republicans sabotaged America's hopes to reach herd immunity to end pandemic

Herd immunity just ain't happening, folks. Once anti-vaccine rhetoric became normal on the right, the goal of herd immunity to stop the spread of COVID-19 was doomed.

Many folks have been saying it for a few months now, but it appears that the slower-moving medical experts in the federal government are finally admitting it. Despite half of Americans getting the shot, Apoorva Mandavilli of the New York Times writes, "vaccination rates are slipping, and there is widespread consensus among scientists and public health experts that the herd immunity threshold is not attainable — at least not in the foreseeable future, and perhaps not ever."

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This former Trump aide just launched a new group -- and it's both pathetic and shady as hell

Former White House senior advisor Stephen Miller appeared on Fox News today to hawk a new conservative legal group he has formed to sue the Biden administration on behalf of white people whenever possible.

During an interview by Fox host Maria Bartiromo, Miller's advised listeners "to go to aflegal.org to find out more, that's aflegal.org and you learn all about it" with regard to his America First Legal Foundation (AFL).

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Is America now on the verge of re-fighting the American Revolution?

Former Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney being booed in his own home state raise an urgent question: Are the Redcoats back?

This article was originally published at The Hartmann Report

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The Jeopardy ‘white power’ controversy shows that trivia nerds can also be really dumb

When Kelly Donohue racked up his first win on the beloved trivia TV game show Jeopardy!, he likely had no idea that by his third win, he'd be defending himself against a growing mob of people on the internet accusing him of being a covert white supremacist. As of this writing, almost 600 former Jeopardy contestants have signed an open letter demanding that he publicly apologize for the "ramifications" of a "gesture he made" at the outset of his fourth appearance on the show.

The gesture the former contestants are referring to came during a moment when Donohue raised his hand to his chest and extended three fingers, signifying to the audience that he was a three-time champion. Returning after his first win, he raised one finger. After his second, he raised two. But the former contestants, many of whom likely think of themselves as having above-average intelligence, didn't share in Donohue's excitement. They saw the gesture as a "racist dog whistle" -- namely, the "OK" hand symbol, which many in left-wing circles are convinced is a way white supremacists say hello to each other. Some pointed to the fact that Donohue previously had a cover photo on his Facebook page of a famous image of Frank Sinatra giving the OK sign while sitting at a dinner table, an unfortunate coincidence for Donohue, since it only further fanned the flames of the accusations.

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Republicans still try to claim Abe Lincoln's heritage — that's offensive and absurd

The challenge these days isn't proving that the Republican Party has become a hotbed of racism and fascism. It's figuring out where to start with the evidence. Do we begin with Donald Trump's Hitler-esque Big Lie about the 2020 election? Should we focus on its attempts to suppress minority voters? Perhaps we should emphasize the way Trump used fascist tactics throughout his presidency, or go all the way back to when the Republican Party began its rightward shift in the middle of the 20th century?

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Conservatives claim to hate 'cancel culture' — but it's the heart of the right-wing agenda

You know who's not canceled? The endless parade of conservative pundits and politicians complaining about "cancel culture." You know who is canceled? George Floyd is canceled. Breonna Taylor is canceled. Ma'Khia Bryant is canceled. Andrew Brown Jr. is canceled. They are the true victims in America's longest-running culture war. Anyone who tells you different is just gaslighting. You want "cancel culture"? America is plagued with cancel culture. And no one is more American than conservatives, as they never cease reminding you.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Heaven help us if court upholds DeSantis' assault on free speech in Florida

Of all the bills rammed through by the Florida Legislature this session — sometimes revived late at night and then quickly passed by GOP lawmakers — the most egregious remains House Bill 1. It's Gov. Ron DeSantis' baby, and he has already signed it into law. The session is about to end, but HB 1 set the stage for this year's legislative theme: Strip power from local governments, and trample Floridians' constitutional rights underfoot. Civil-rights attorneys from a nonprofit called the Lawyers Matter Task Force, and additional plaintiffs, have already filed a lawsuit challenging the governor's ...

'Whataboutism' has become the last refuge for defensive Republicans

Over a year ago, and in violation of my own good advice, I got caught up in a Facebook argument with a Republican relative about Donald Trump. I don't remember what the topic was, and it hardly matters now, since the past four years was just a constant churn of Trump doing terrible stuff and his defensive voters constantly grasping for dumb excuses for why the terrible stuff wasn't actually all that terrible. What I do remember, however, is that, at one point, I linked the Washington Post's daily counter of Trump false statements — he was up to over a dozen a day by then — and demanded an explanation of why she would support such a liar. (I am not proud of myself, as noted.) She retorted with something along the lines of, "Oh, like Elizabeth Warren has never told a lie!"

This article originally appeared at Salon.

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This maniacal anti-vaccine quote highlights the GOP's embrace of sadism

I think normal people possess an instinct the Washington press corps does not, which is this: some things are debatable while others are not. Specifically, very few things are debatable at all. More specifically, very few are worth debating. Who's got the time when there are jobs to do, kids to raise, classes to attend, elders to care for and so forth? Most people most of the time have other things to do than sit around debating minutia. Most people seek out, and accept, what's reasonable—and move on.

What's reasonable is getting vaccinated in the time of the covid, a disease that has killed, as of this writing, more than 589,000 Americans. It will probably kill a million before it's over. Getting vaccinated in the time of the covid is as reasonable as washing your hands after using the bathroom; as wiping your feet before entering the house; as brushing your teeth before going to bed. The likelihood of death or serious harm from failing to wash your hands, wipe your feet and brush your teeth is too ridiculous to bother mentioning. But that doesn't make doing those things any less reasonable.

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You’d have to be abnormal not to have Trump Derangement Syndrome right now

Rudy Giuliani and his lawyers are suggesting that the reason a search warrant was issued for his premises and computers is "Trump Derangement Syndrome."

Yeah.

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The only thing keeping Republicans from electoral oblivion

United States Rep. Glenn Grothman was kind enough to send his thoughts on DC statehood in an e-newsletter last weekend, as he does for his constituents. If you haven't had the fortune to know the congressman from Wisconsin's Sixth, well, bless you. I first encountered him at a pancake breakfast, where he was picking fights with constituents. He has a long history of making ill-informed, inflammatory statements as a state senator and now as a member of the United States Congress.

Recently, Grothman found himself embroiled in controversy when he accused Black Lives Matter of disliking "the old-fashioned family." He defended that statement on-camera while wearing a jaunty hat he'd worn in a local St. Patrick's Day parade.

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