- This week’s note in Trumpian “Alternative Facts” comes from CNN where simple math and documentation demonstrate that we now have a President who tells more than 7 lies a day on average. Yeah, it’s gone up.
- Tommy Christopher reports the many voices in my President’s head as Mr. Trump invents easily disprovable lies that insult Queen Elizabeth and Beyoncé within a few breathtaking moments. The lies themselves are petty and pointless. WotTheEl!!
- T. Paine, at Saving Common Sense, writes to dispute my characterization of, uh, inaccuracies in his articles about patriotism and San Francisco, and encounters a buzzsaw of reality combined with affection and respect. At least from me.
- At The Moderate Voice, David Robertson suggests that Donald Trump may not turn out to be the worst President ever. My choice would be Andrew Johnson, but there are several in close contention.
- tengrain at Mock Paper Scissors gathers the data, then performs a brief point by point comparison of economic performance of Democratic and Republican Presidents over 50 years.
- Jonathan Bernstein explains that one of the few things Mr. Trump has learned how to do effectively as President is carefully endorse candidates in primary campaigns.
- North Carolina pastor John Pavlovitz looks past the revulsion at Trump crowds and sees an inner void. He perceives that they are, at the core, miserable people.
- Jon Perr at PERRspectives makes a compelling case that right-wing rage has veto power over American political life.
- Actually not related (I think), The Journal of Improbable Research discovers a study at Cornell into whether small dogs, urinating to mark territory, do so dishonestly by aiming high to create the illusion of height.
- M. Bouffant at Web of Evil brings us incidents from 1943 and the 1962 love affair the comic book world had with JFK’s PT-109. Don’t forget cinema and Cliff Robertson who was a hero himself in a different way.
- Infidel753 posts extraordinary accomplishments in photoshop forming dream images. Wonderful visions can begin in the imagination.
Month: August 2018
An Economic Prediction
From Green Eagle:
Donald Trump: “We’re on track to hit the highest annual average growth rate in over 13 years and I will say this right now, and I’ll say it strongly.”
A lie, of course, from the man who has told thousands of them in the last two years.. NBC news has this reply:
“President Barack Obama, whose first election coincided with a debilitating economic collapse, had four quarters of higher growth than this during his presidency. It would tie for the fifth strongest quarter under President George W. Bush and the 13th strongest quarter under President Bill Clinton.”
If you go online, you find various accounts, for some reason, of what the quarterly growth rate has been the last decade.
World’s Oldest Toddler Rages On
From Our favorite Earth-Bound Misfit:
By that logic, they might as well mandate that cars weigh a minimum of three tons. That way, the cars would get shitty mileage and people would take mass transit.
He’s Only the President of Planet Trump
From Professor PZ Myers:
This seems like a good loophole: he’s not really our president, he’s a president who leaked through from a parallel universe. For instance, he thinks we’ve got invisible airplanes.
Amazing job, and amazing job. So amazing that we’re ordering hundreds of millions of dollars of new airplanes for the Air Force, especially the F-35. Do you like the F-35? I said how does it do it in fights, and how do they do in fights with the F-35. He says we do very well, you can’t see it. Literally you can’t see. It’s hard to fight a plane you can’t see right? But that’s an expensive plane you can’t see. And as you probably heard we cut the price very substantially, something other administrations would never have done, that I can tell you.”
Why Is Russia Cashing Out Its U.S. Treasury Securities?
From Ted McLaughlin at jobsanger:
The chart above shows the U.S. treasury securities held by Russia from 2011 through May of 2018. Note the sharp drop on the right side of the chart. Russia has sold off most of their holdings recently — going from $96.1 billion to only $14.9 billion.
That sell off has mystified investors, since the interest rates on U.S. Treasury securities is still high, and Trump’s recent overtures to Putin would seem to make those investments even better than in the past.
Is Leah Vukmir Never Trump?
From Wisconsin conservative James Wigderson:
Dear Readers,
It’s become a trite saying on the right, but Andrew Breitbart must be rolling over in his grave when he sees what has happened to the website that bears his name. Breitbart News has all the credibility of the Weekly World News, and it’s not nearly as entertaining.
The latest target of Breitbart is state Sen. Leah Vukmir (R-Brookfield), a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate. Vukmir is running in the Republican primary against Kevin Nicholson who is the second coming of Hans Delbrück, according to Breitbart.
Designated Breitbart hitman Matthew Boyle attacked Vukmir last week for trying to hide the fact that she drives a Toyota. He actually accused Vukmir of leaving the trunk open on her car in a commercial to hide the Toyota logo, even though nobody at Breitbart has explained how else Vukmir was supposed to get the groceries out of the trunk to hand to the “union boss.” I didn’t like the commercial either, but that’s at the level of dope-smoking-induced paranoia.
Now Breitbart is attacking Vukmir for being Never Trump. Hey Breitbart, I was there in 2016. I remember Never Trump. I was Never Trump. Vukmir was not Never Trump, and she isn’t Never Trump now.
The attack on Vukmir is largely based upon how she has a few people in her campaign that were Never Trump, or at least Trump critics, in 2016.
Bruce, How Do You Handle Fear of God’s Wrath and Hell?
From former pastor Bruce Gerencser:
Many people exposed to Fundamentalist Christianity abandon it in their teenage years or when they go off to college. Others, such as myself and many of the readers of this blog, spent decades dutifully and faithfully serving the Christian God. I was part of the Christian church for fifty years, and I pastored Evangelical churches for twenty-five of those years. Every crevice of my mind was saturated with Evangelical belief. The Bible said it is a fearful thing to fall under the hands of the living God, and I certainly feared God. In times of feeling guilt over my “sins” I felt that God was just around the corner waiting to mete out his wrath upon my life and my family. God lurked in the shadows, ready, able, and willing to chastise me for my sins. I may have been saved, but there were days I felt as if I was dangling over the pit of hell, and the only thing that kept me from falling in was God’s long-suffering patience.
It should come no surprise then, that people who grow up this way are indoctrinated and conditioned in such a manner that they have a deep reverence and fear of God. He was touted as the creator of all things who holds the entire universe in the palm of his hand. God was not one to be messed with. Yet, despite all of this, many of us left Christianity and embraced atheism, agnosticism, humanism, or some other non-Christian religion. We are so glad to be free from the bondage and chains of our Christian past.
Republicans Accuse Rosenstein of Plotting to Uphold Constitution
From Andy Borowitz:
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—House Republicans on Thursday accused the Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein, of “secretly and nefariously” implementing a plot to uphold the United States Constitution.
Magic Ruralism ™
From driftglass:
Noun: a literary or artistic genre in which realistic narrative and naturalistic technique are combined with surreal elements of political fantasy.
As I have mentioned before, the Beltway media’s hot new genre is something I call Magic Ruralism.
…just as Thrilling Detective and Detective Fiction Weekly were in the business of cranking out hard-boiled crime genre fiction for the titillation of their readers, so have The New York Times and the Washington Post gone into the business of cranking out True Tales Of Rust-Belt Trump Murricans! for the titillation of their readers.
Of course, for those of us who actually live in Middle America and who have been actively yelling for decades about the monster factory the GOP has been building, this development is as pernicious as it was predictable. Because rich city folks live a million social and economic miles from the actual Middle America and because their lives are substantially untouched in any material way by the Republican madness abroad in the land, they are free to savor hair-raising tales (from today’s WaPo) —
White, and in the minority
She speaks English. Her co-workers don’t. Inside a rural chicken plant, whites struggle to fit in.
— of rural Murrican pity and terror (from yesterday’s NYT) —
How to Talk to a Racist
White liberals, you’re doing it all wrong.
— from a safe distance.
‘Unconstrained’ Capitalism or Unconstrained Socialist Government
From libertarian Michael A. LaFerrara:
Rights are moral principles sanctioning every individual’s freedom of self-advancing action, not an automatic claim on material benefits that others must be forced to provide. Healthcare does not just happen in nature. It must be produced by the individual efforts of human beings, and that fact of nature cannot be arbitrarily wished away. For a government to guarantee a right to healthcare beyond what one can acquire through voluntary dealings with others, the government must force others to pay for and/or provide it. To do that, the government must have the power to commandeer the efforts and property of productive citizens: i.e., the government must enslave those citizens.
“Unconstrained capitalism” is an interesting package deal, since capitalism is the only social system that banishes aggressive force from human society by constraining the government to the task of protecting every individual’s inalienable rights to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, which necessarily includes the right to the product of one’s own, not others’, work. Once we accept the notion of a right to healthcare or any other material benefit that others must be forced to provide, we have abandoned the basic principle of capitalism—a society in which each person is free only to deal with others by voluntary, mutual consent. Then we’re left with the basic principle of socialism, the society of masters and slaves, in which material need makes one a master and the ability to satisfy that need makes one a slave—“from each according to his ability, to each according to his need,” with the government as the tool of the masters rather than the institution to secure equal rights.