Frontpage Commentary - 6 articles

Oath Keepers' Jan. 6 trial: Why Stewart Rhodes is pushing an 'I'm not racist!' defense

In the wake of the break-in and attempted murder at the home of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, the threat of right wing political violence is at the top of people's minds again going into the midterm elections. In his speech last week on the topic, President Joe Biden warned about "the dangerous rise in political violence and voter intimidation," which really kicked into high gear after Donald Trump incited the riot at the Capitol on January 6, 2021. New polling by ABC News and the Washington Post shows 88% of Americans worry about political violence. Unfortunately, polling also shows large numbers of Americans don't understand that the "antifa" violence of Fox News fantasies is largely imaginary, while right wing violence is very real. Still, it's against this backdrop of concern that Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes and four of his militia members are facing trial for seditious conspiracy for their part in the January 6 insurrection.

It might seem a little odd at first that, as the first day of the defense case played out Friday, their argument seems to be that Oath Keepers can't be guilty because they're just a bunch of harmless kooks. Also they claim they can't be racists who rioted to install a fascist leader in the White House because — yep, they went there — they have Black friends.

On Thursday, in a trial that's likely to last over a month, the prosecutors for the Justice Department rested their case that the five defendants had conspired to overthrow the government. The case relied heavily on text messages showing the group members and leadership talking, often with far less subtlety than they thought, about their plans to use violence to prevent the peaceful transition of presidential power from Trump to Biden. Throughout this first part of the trial, the defense made it clear that their main goal is to dissuade the jury from convicting on seditious conspiracy, by portraying the Oath Keepers as little more than a bunch of cosplayers who like to imagine they're providing "security," and not as people who went to D.C. with a preplanned intent to stop the election certification by force. By spinning insurrectionist activities of the day as a spontaneous reaction, they hope to avoid the most serious conspiracy charges.

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Political violence in America isn’t going away anytime soon

A warning about the threat of political violence heading into the 2022 midterm elections was issued to state and local law enforcement officials by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Oct. 28, 2022.

The bulletin was released the same day that Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi’s husband was hospitalized after a home invasion by a lone right-wing extremist seeking to harm her.

This incident is the latest in an increasing stream of extremist confrontations taking place across the United States in recent years. These incidents have primarily targeted Democrats, including a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in 2020. But threats from both sides of the political spectrum are up significantly.

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'They cannot survive without fear': A heretic on the hard but necessary journey of escaping fundamentalist Christianity

"I was leaving the Garden, the evangelical church, and the only version of myself that I had ever known. I was choosing who I wanted to be — but I had no idea who she was."

In her new book, "Heretic," writer and self-declared "recovering academic" Jeanna Kadlec weaves her personal experiences walking away from the faith of her youth with a larger meditation on the larger social and political damage wrought on the U.S. by the popularity of evangelical Christianity. In an era when the hardcore Christian sect's hunger for power leads them to back faux-repentant sleazes like Donald Trump and Herschel Walker, there's an even greater need for her insights about how this religion wields so much control over its followers.

Why do people, especially women, stay in a religion that's so abusive? What does it take to leave? Kadlec can't answer those questions for everyone, but as someone who was fully immersed into young adulthood, only to escape after she discovered her lesbian identity while married to a preacher's kid, there's much to be learned from her journey.

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We’re the grandsons of Social Security’s founders. Here’s why it’s worth saving

Republican Mehmet Oz rightly observed in his sole Senate debate with Lt. Gov. John Fetterman that Social Security is something which American workers have “paid into” their entire working lives and which should be protected.

But Pennsylvanians need to know that Republican leaders have entirely opposite views if Oz wins and they take over the Senate in the Nov. 8 midterm election.

What are national Republican party leaders proposing? U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., who leads the Republicans’ Senate campaign committee, wants to end the guarantee of Social Security and Medicare.

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Michigan GOP candidate Tudor Dixon wants a new book ban: No divorced characters

With so many radical Republicans running for office across the country, there's been relatively little coverage of Tudor Dixon, the Trump-endorsed Republican nominee for governor in Michigan, who's running against incumbent Democrat Gretchen Whitmer. But Dixon, whose name admittedly should belong to the socialite villainess of a Harlequin romance novel, is definitely one to watch in the "how far-right can Republicans get" sweepstakes that is midterm-watching. She has described working women as having "lonely lives," declared a 14-year-old incest victim to be a "perfect" candidate for forced childbirth, and, unsurprisingly, backs Trump's Big Lie. During her debate with Whitmer on Tuesday night, Dixon accused Michigan schools of distributing "pornographic" books.

Naturally, Dixon's idea of what constitutes pornography was lurid but entirely vague, such as "books describing how to have sex." Which could mean anything from actual sex education books to books that simply have sex scenes, a category that encompasses classics like "Romeo and Juliet" and also the Bible. (Neither of which are pornography, a commodity readily available on the internet should Dixon desire to grasp the distinctions.) Whitmer responded by noting that there are many opportunities for parents to be involved in children's education, but also that there's a "duty to make sure that all children feel accepted and safe and can learn and play when they are in school."

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The ReAwaken America Tour is The Warped Tour for right-wing cuckoo birds

This weekend, a cabal of right-wing figures — some who are looking to win votes, and some who are looking to save souls, have rallied together at the perfectly named Spooky Nook Sports in Manheim, Pennsylvania for an anti-vax, anti-trans, pro-QAnon rally called The ReAwaken America Tour.

Eric Trump, one of the speakers of the event along with a long list that includes Roger Stone, pillow man Mike Lindell and Doug Mastriano, gave the audience a thrill during Friday's kick-off when he called his dad from the stage and played the audio into a mic for all to hear.

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There's only one way to restore democracy

As long as money is considered First Amendment-protected “free speech” under US law, we will remain gridlocked in a corrupt stasis where the will of the American people is ignored in deference to the will of billionaires and giant corporations.

I just checked, and there’s $86 in the pocket of my jeans. I rarely use cash anymore; it’s probably been in there for at least a month, maybe two. And in that entire time, I’ve never heard a single word, sound, or even a grunt from my small wad of dollar bills.

Nonetheless, in defiance of literally hundreds of good government laws passed over a 200-year period by both federal and state legislatures and signed by multiple presidents and governors, “conservatives” on the US Supreme Court have declared that my $86 is “speech.”

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No-questions-asked GOP support for Herschel Walker in abortion scandal

Probably no one, including Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker himself, would argue against the premise that the former football star is a deeply flawed human. He has lied, cheated on his wife, fathered multiple children out of wedlock and made a fool of himself while speaking in public. Walker’s party has tried to find workarounds for all that, but the latest scandal has far more volatile implications. Credible allegations surfaced this week that he impregnated a woman and paid for her abortion. Walker adamantly denies the allegations, reported by The Daily Beast, and insists ...

Hold the condescending lectures. Give hurricane aid to everyone in need.

Southwest Florida is filled with Chicagoans. In Naples, Chicago philanthropists such as the late Raymond Lutgert transformed those communities, supporting their museums and galleries. The founding CEO of the Naples Philharmonic Center for the Arts was a former Chicago advertising executive. Plenty of real estate developers from this city turned their attention to sunnier climes, later in life. If you’re hunkering for a Chicago-style sandwich or pie, you’ve got Beefstros Gourmet Beef or Chicago Calzone in Fort Myers. And if you long for a sheltered retirement, there’s the gentle Shell Point, lo...

Despite what the president says, the pandemic is definitely not over

President Joe Biden is flat-out wrong if he thinks the pandemic is over. Although the trendlines are pointing downward, the United States still registers around 360 deaths per day from the coronavirus along with a seven-day average of 55,000 new infections, with 13,700 people currently hospitalized. Those numbers are a far cry from the earlier days of the pandemic, but that hardly means the threat is gone. Biden’s pronouncement on CBS’ “60 Minutes” that “the pandemic is over” did a disservice to his own administration’s efforts to promote getting a third booster shot with a new vaccine deemed ...

Voting for Republicans is voting against America — it’s really just that simple

Last week a very reasonable sounding fellow called into my show and said, essentially, “I voted twice for Trump and would again. Why do you think I’m a threat to America?”

We ended up debating tax policy and I never did fully answer his question (I’m a sucker for “reasonable”), so here’s my shot at it.

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How vote count mistakes by two rural counties fed Trump’s big lie

Since 2020’s presidential election, two rural counties in Michigan and Colorado that initially reported incorrect results have had outsized roles in spreading Donald Trump’s big lie that his second term was stolen by Democrats colluding with one of the country’s biggest computerized voting systems makers.

The mistaken 2020 election results occurred in two out of the more than 8,000 election jurisdictions across America. They were caused by county officials who did not properly set up the election system computers in Michigan and properly use them in Colorado. The errors, which notably were caught and corrected, received scant attention compared to the sensation they sparked in Trump circles where a cadre of self-proclaimed IT experts—and, later, some of the same officials who erred—asserted that the computers had been sabotaged.

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People have moved on from 9/11. Is that really so terrible?

September 11, the anniversary of the three terrorist attacks on the United States, this year passed almost unnoticed. Granted, it was the 21st anniversary, which is not a milestone. But more importantly, the news media was also oversaturated with coverage of a dead queen.

Queen Elizabeth II began a long, winding passage to her final resting place as pundits wrestled with the meaning of monarchy, surely one of the more idle (although endlessly fascinating) topics if you are not an English taxpayer.

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