Of Course We Knew, or Should Have Known, This Was Coming

  • Frank Bruni on the fiasco of Trump’s cabinet;
  • The Guardian’s Emma Brockes calls them “a bunch of pathetic sleazebags”;
  • And the stunning hypocrisy of this scandal compared to Hillary Clinton’s emails;
  • Short items on the new Lavender Scare, how a GOP rep thinks NPR and PBS “hate our Lord” (dadgum!); and how scientists mull leaving the US.

    – – –

    Frank Bruni nails it.

    NY Times, Frank Bruni, 27 Mar 2025: Trump’s Crackerjack Cabinet Is a Fiasco Foretold [gift link]

    It’s been pointed out time and again that Trump’s choices for his cabinet were among the least qualified people to hold those positions, ever.

    Who could have imagined it? That Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, of all peacocks, would commit an egregious error in judgment, display a complete lack of professionalism and be sloppy enough to divulge war plans in a group chat that included a prominent journalist?

    Sure, there were reports of Hegseth’s gross mismanagement of the veterans’ groups that he once led. There were accusations of public drunkenness and a violent temper. But how many of the men who previously held his job could rock a bright blue suit the way he did? Or pose shirtless to such fetching effect?

    What he lacked in rectitude he made up for in pulchritude. Give that man a big say in military operations and a Signal account. What could possibly go wrong?

    Trump and MAGA disdain expertise; all Trump cares about is loyalty, and an inclination to wreck things. One more:

    And Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s immunity inanity — I mean, no one saw that coming. When the Senate held hearings on his fitness to be the secretary of health and human services, he assured lawmakers that his vaccine denialism was overstated. That his views were measured. That his words and deeds would be cautious.

    Then came a measles outbreak in western Texas, and he sagaciously decreed: Hey, this isn’t a failure of inoculation. It’s a failure of diet. If those sickly children were just eating better — and maybe taking some cod liver oil — they’d be superheroes resistant to these vestigial viruses. And bird flu? Here’s a thought: Let it run rampant through affected flocks. Yes, it might mutate and spread catastrophically among humans, but perhaps we’d glean important insights along the way. Think of the approach as a new, microbiological season of “Survivor,” only with pathogens in the mix and countless lives on the line.

    And then an overview:

    As President Trump’s crackerjack cabinet settles in and unsettles any sentient American, we are not beholding a series of discrete embarrassments and outrages. We are witnessing iterations of the same horror story. Trump chose people for senior administration positions not because they had demonstrated the skills and disposition that those jobs required, not because they had paid their dues, not because they had proved their mettle. He wanted provocateurs. He wanted sycophants. He wanted to test his supporters’ compliance and send his detractors into a tizzy.

    Competence didn’t enter the equation, so competence isn’t among the results. He got exactly what he paid for, and now a nation is paying the price.

    Further examples: Tulsi Gabbard, Marco Rubio.

    \\

    Another take. About the corrosion of discourse under the current Republican administration. (Not surprising: they’re the very opposite of intellectuals.)

    The Guardian, Emma Brockes, 27 Mar 2025: Let’s put it in language the Signal leakers will understand: what a bunch of pathetic sleazebags, subtitled “The leaking of top-level military secrets was bad enough, but I’m obsessed with Maga’s fratboy lexicon”

    The Maga-fication of American political discourse, which started, arguably, with Donald Trump mocking a disabled reporter in 2015, peaked this week with news of Pete Hegseth referring to European countries in the leaked Signal chat as “PATHETIC”, and enjoyed a detour last Tuesday when Tim Walz, the governor of Minnesota and former running mate of Kamala Harris, appeared at a town hall in Wisconsin and called Elon Musk “a dipshit”. (This is not the first time he has referred to Musk this way. Right before the election last year, Walz told a crowd: “Look, Elon’s on that stage, jumping around, skipping like a dipshit.”)

    Parking for a moment the perfection of the phrase “skipping like a dipshit” to capture Musk’s very particular style of movement and speech, the range of what can and can’t be said in politics has clearly, radically changed. When you look back on the phrase that caused Hillary Clinton so much trouble in 2016 – “basket of deplorables” – it sounds like a quote from an 18th-century novel. “Take that, sir! You and your basket of deplorables!” Now we have Trump referring to Jeffrey Goldberg, the Atlantic editor mistakenly added to the Signal chat, as a “sleazebag”, and Hegseth, the US defense secretary, telling JD Vance that he fully shares the vice-president’s “loathing of European free-loading”. We are millimetres away from someone shouting “asshole” across the floor of the Senate.

    Further down:

    It’s not the rudeness, of course, it’s the flippancy that terrifies. The tone of the messages flying between the most powerful people in the world via an unsecure messaging app and on subjects of vital national security was that of someone idly texting with one hand while throwing and catching a hacky sack in the other.

    Again, this is no surprise.

    \\

    And the second point to nail is this.

    NY Times, Jill Filipovic, 27 Mar 2025: The Group Chat Saga Exposes a Stunning Hypocrisy [gift link]

    The writer recaps the story so far.

    By the end, it’s hard to figure out what to be most disgusted by. The recklessness? The incompetence? The danger? The use of prayer emojis before weapons were launched?

    Add to the list: The mother lode of hypocrisy. After the Trump administration denied that any classified material was shared in the group chat, The Atlantic published the conversation nearly in full, redacting only the name of a C.I.A. employee. If the story was bad before, it’s now worse. And one thing is clear: In Trump world, the rules often — maddeningly — seem to apply only to other people.

    The obvious comparison here, already made on repeat, is the Great Hillary Clinton Email Scandal of 2016. (“But her emails!”). As secretary of state, Mrs. Clinton ran some of her emails through a personal server, a violation of protocol and a security risk, although one that the State Department later said was minimal. (“There was no persuasive evidence of systemic, deliberate mishandling of classified information,” was the ultimate conclusion from the State Department’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security after a three-year investigation.)

    \\

    Washington Post, Philip Bump, 27 Mar 2025: What the lack of consequences for the Signal scandal means, subtitled “The point of accountability is to reinforce that bad things are bad.”

    By the time the Atlantic published nearly the entirety of a group chat in which senior Trump administration officials were presented with detailed plans to strike targets in Yemen, a consensus opinion had emerged: No one from the administration was likely to face any consequences.

    \\\

    Short items.

    Slate, Christina Cauterucci, 27 Mar 2025: The New Lavender Scare, subtitled “The McCarthy-era purge of gays and lesbians in the American government was a uniquely dark episode. Some federal workers see chilling parallels now.”

    In the early 1950s there was a campaign by Joseph McCarthy to root out “communists” in the US government, but also homosexuals. This was the Lavender Scare. Recently dramatized on Showtime, in Fellow Travelers (miniseries) with Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey.

    Now, it’s about transgenders.

    \

    Dadgum.

    JMG, 27 Mar 2025: GOP Rep: Defund NPR And PBS, “They Hate Our Lord”

    \

    Via Nature.

    JMG, 27 Mar 2025: POLL: 75% Of Responding Scientists Mull Leaving US

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Fewer and Fewer Are Mincing Words

  • Tom Nichols on the recent crisis;
  • Paul Krugman concludes Trump’s people are both incompetent and evil;
  • Even Fox News blames incompetence;
  • Europe reacts to insults;
  • Children with measles are getting sick from overdoses of Vitamin D, per JFK Jr.’s advice;
  • The Trump administration is cancelling medical research;
  • And MTG identifies migrants with rapists.
– – –

On the major story this week, let’s look at Tom Nichols’ take.

The Atlantic, Tom Nichols, 26 Mar 2025: The Trump Team’s Denials Are Laughable, subtitled “The president’s officials must know that what they did in the Signal group chat was wrong—and dangerous.”

The defense of the United States is a serious business. Breaches of national security are especially dangerous. So perhaps I should not have laughed at the reactions of Donald Trump and his staff and Cabinet members to the revelations by The Atlantic’s editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, and staff writer Shane Harris about a group chat on Signal (one that accidentally included Jeff) dedicated to planning strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen.

I laughed because I am a former government employee and Senate staffer with a fair amount of experience in dealing with classified information, and the administration’s position that nothing in the chat was classified is ludicrous. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth added a bit of topspin to that position on Monday when he got off a plane in Honolulu and, seemingly in a panic, fulminated against Jeff and tried to deny that any “war plans” were shared in the chat.

None of this is funny. If any of this had leaked at the moment Hegseth blathered it over Signal, American servicepeople could have died. (As my friend David French at The New York Times wrote on Monday, if Hegseth had any honor at all, he wouldn’t wait to be fired. He’d resign.)

But I couldn’t help it: I laughed at the reaction of top Trump officials. As I read White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s grammatically challenged statement, in which she claimed that information included in the conversation was “sensitive” but not “classified,” I thought she was trying to engage in some sort of not particularly convincing parsing. But listening to her briefing later in the day, I realized that Leavitt doesn’t seem to know the first thing about classified information. Unfortunately, apparently neither does Hegseth, nor CIA Director John Ratcliffe, nor any of the other people involved in this mess.

It goes on, for another five screens. Someone who knows something calling out the morons who know nothing.

\\\

So, is it just incompetence? Or do they have some kind of plan, or at least underlying motivations?

Paul Krugman, 26 Mar 2025: Incompetent or Evil: A False Dichotomy, subtitled “Trump’s people can be and are both”

Are we looking at mind-boggling incompetence on the part of what Dan Drezner, using the technical language of international relations theory, calls “the dumbest motherfuckers alive”? Or are we looking at a sinister plot to destroy America as we know it?

The answer is “yes.” These people are both incompetent and evil.

The incompetence is obvious. How are they evil? Case in point, threats to Social Security.

One answer is incompetence. …

An alternative answer sees the damage to Social Security as part of a deliberate scheme to undermine public faith in government, and to create an opening for lucrative privatization schemes.

This is consistent with my recent thoughts that the reason conservatives want to privatize government functions is to give themselves a chance to become wealthy running those functions themselves.

Krugman has developed this idea before, about the billionaire brain:

Which of these views is right? My answer is both. Musk is incompetent and evil. He suffers from billionaire brain — that special blend of ignorance and arrogance that occurs all too frequently in men who believe that their success in accumulating personal wealth means that they understand everything, no need to do any homework. But he also clearly detests anything that makes life better for non-billionaires.

\\\

Even Fox News sees the incompetence.

Media Matters, Matt Gertz, 26 Mar 2025: Fox defense for negligent texting of war plans: Top Trump national security officials are incompetent

\\

Meanwhile,

Politico Europe, 25 Mar 2025 (via JMG): Europe fumes at Trump team’s insults in leaked Signal chat, subtitled “British forces already took part in strikes against Houthis, so don’t call us ‘freeloaders,’ former defense secretary says.”

Trump and his team are burning the bridges of 80 years of political alliances among western nations.

\\

While children with measles are getting sick from overdoses of Vitamin A, per JRK Jr.’s anti-scientific homespun advice, there seems to be an underlying motivation.

Salon, Amanda Marcotte, 26 Mar 2025: The misogynist agenda of “MAHA moms”, subtitled “RFK Jr. is using his ‘MAHA moms’ to push women out of the workplace and into the kitchen”

It’s not so much, I think, that he has this conscious agenda in mind; it’s that this motivation to return to traditional gender roles is part of the conservative [tribalist] mindset, and a reject of Enlightenment and scientific values.

\\\

And oh by the way, this is much more serious than Hillary’s emails.

Slate, Fred Kaplan, 25 Mar 2025: The Signal Chat Fiasco Sends a Clear Message to Our Allies, subtitled “This is a much bigger security breach than Hillary Clinton’s emails.”

So how serious was this Signal conversation as a security violation? First, let’s compare it with the Republican Party’s blue-chip example of a security violation: Hillary Clinton’s sending and receiving classified information through her personal cellphone while she was Barack Obama’s secretary of state. “Hillary’s email” became the rallying cry for GOP activists—one of the dangerous offenses for which the FBI should “lock her up”—during the 2016 presidential race between her and Trump.

The Trump team’s Signal chat contained information that was about as “top secret” and timely as one can imagine. Back in 2016, the FBI examined 30,000 emails that Clinton turned over and found that 110 of them—the back-and-forth of 52 email chains—contained classified information. Of those, just eight had material that agents claimed she should have known was “top secret.” (Only 36 had “secret” info; eight had “confidential” info.)

Followed by details.

And that’s it. Nothing about ongoing or upcoming military campaigns or any other sorts of operations, the disclosure of which could have significantly damaged U.S. security. And yet those emails—the subject of three front-page stories in one issue of the New York Times, among many others—may well have cost Clinton the election. Trump referred to them many times as serious leaks that should disqualify her from the presidency.

\\\

A few items from aggregate site JMG.

Imbeciles. It’s easy to imagine the MAGA thinking here. We know enough! We follow the Bible! Don’t confuse us with more facts!

And.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, the lowest of low in the Republican party, automatically conflates immigrants with rapists. Pure xenophobia… the visceral fear of ‘the other’.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Lunacy, Politics | Leave a comment

OK For Me But Not For Thee

  • Reactions to yesterday’s story;
  • A comment about how perhaps Americans are actually not very good people;
  • Robert Reich recalls the four pillars of civil society: universities, science, the media, and the law; all the ones the current administration is trying to tear down.
– – –

Following up on yesterday’s story. They’re minimizing or even denying that the incident happened, and it’s triggered Trump’s reflex to insult anyone who impugns him or his administration in any way. (Yet again, he’s always concerned about ratings and accuses publications he doesn’t like of “failing.”)

AlterNet, Alex Henderson, 25 Mar 2025: ‘Hire clowns, expect a circus’: Leaked chat exposes ‘stupidity and recklessness’

The Daily Beast, David Rothkopf, 25 Mar 2025: Why Signal Leak Shambles Isn’t Even Trump’s F***wits’ Worst Foreign Policy Move So Far

The New Republic, Greg Sargent, 25 Mar 2025: Transcript: Trump’s Angry Rant over Hegseth Fiasco Makes Scandal Worse, subtitled “An interview with national security lawyer Bradley Moss, who explains why the stunning exposure of highly sensitive war-planning texts might have been unlawful—and reveals Trump as a disastrously failed leader.”

Salon, Nicholas Liu, 25 Mar 2025: “It happens”: Republicans shrug off Trump administration’s leak of Yemen war plans, subtitled “Republican lawmakers are trying to blame the media for the Trump administration’s war-planning group chat”

From aggregate site JMG, in reverse chronological order over the past day and a half:

From CNN: Trump Suggests Reporter “Broke Into” Signal Chat

From NBC: Gabbard Refuses To Admit Taking Part In Group Texts

From social media: Leavitt Lies: “No War Plans Were Discussed” In Texts

From Politico and NBC: https://www.joemygod.com/2025/03/nbc-trump-claims-he-still-has-confidence-in-waltz/”>NBC: Trump Claims He Still Has Confidence In Waltz

From CNN: Goldberg: Hegseth’s “No War Plans” Claim Is A Lie

From Fox News: Watters Goes “But Her Emails” On War Plan Texts

From Fox News: Hawley Mocks “Leftist Media” Over War Plan Texts

From Fox News: Hannity: “Nobody Will Care About” War Plan Texts

From Fox News: Hegseth Attacks Atlantic Reporter As “Deceitful And Discredited Hoaxer Who Peddles In Garbage” [VIDEO]

From CBS News: Johnson Shrugs Off Texting Of War Plan To Reporter

From Fox News: Fox Host Is “Proud” Of Texted War Plan Messages

Once again, it is entirely obvious to everyone except members of the cult: when Republicans do something like this, it’s fine! fine! Nothing to see here! And the guy who pointed it out is a reprobate, a fraudster, a low-life, and he has low ratings! When Democrats do anything remotely like this, it’s “Lock her up! Lock her up!”

\\\

A comment from Facebook:

Don D’Ammassa’s Post, yesterday at 4:30 PM

I am appalled at the number on the left, many of them good people, who are looking for a scapegoat for why Trump got elected. They blame the media, voter apathy, and various other causes, all of which admittedly share the blame. But the truth is that the US has developed a society based on selfishness and self interest and reinforced it with ignorance, lack of education, and glorification of self righteousness. We are not a good people, on the whole.

This reflects again on my takes on politics and morality: conservatives, the ones motivated by “selfishness and self interest” and the profit motive, are winning. They’re currently back in charge, and are doing all they can to “reinforc[e] it with ignorance, lack of education, and glorification of self righteousness”

Americans are very insular, and most simply do not understand that there are other ways of living, other societies that have better results, by most any measure, than the US.

\\

Let’s close tonight on an idealistic note.

Robert Reich, 25 Mar 2025: The Big Chill, subtitled “Trump’s attacks on the four pillars of civil society will succeed unless the pillars demonstrate courage and take collective action against the attacks.”

I was talking yesterday to a friend who’s a professor at Columbia University about what’s been happening there. He had a lot to say. When he needed to run off to an appointment, I asked him if he’d text or email me the rest of his thoughts. His response floored me. “No,” he said. “I better not. They may be reviewing it.”

“Who’s ‘they’?” I asked, suddenly worried.

“They! The university! The government! Gotta go!” He was off.

My friend has never before shown signs of paranoia.

I relate this to you because the Trump regime is starting to have a chilling effect on what and how Americans communicate with each other. It is beginning to create mass paranoia, which is exactly what Trump intends.

The chill affects the four major pillars of civil society — universities, science, the media, and the law.

Reich goes on to explain why those institutions are so important. These are the institutions the current administration is tearing down.

Well, we had a good run.

Posted in Morality, Politics, Social Progress | Leave a comment

Security Breach; Socialism vs. Capitalism

  • Today’s big news is about the security breach by Pete Hegseth, and if he or anyone will face consequences;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on the 15th anniversary of Obamacare;
  • And my reflections on the motivations behind the debates between capitalism and socialism, and why some conservatives think government workers are useless scum;
  • And how in the 21st century there’s a White House Faith Advisor scamming people for $1000.

Can you imagine what Republicans would have said if Biden or one of his officials had done this?

The Atlantic Jeffrey Goldberg, 24 Mar 2025: The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans, subtitled “U.S. national-security leaders included me in a group chat about upcoming military strikes in Yemen. I didn’t think it could be real. Then the bombs started falling.”

The world found out shortly before 2 p.m. eastern time on March 15 that the United States was bombing Houthi targets across Yemen.

I, however, knew two hours before the first bombs exploded that the attack might be coming. The reason I knew this is that Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, had texted me the war plan at 11:44 a.m. The plan included precise information about weapons packages, targets, and timing.

This is going to require some explaining.

\

CNN explains:

CNN, Zachary B. Wolf, 24 Mar 2025: Trump intentionally hired amateurs for top jobs. This is their most dramatic blunder

I was already writing an edition of the “What Matters” newsletter Monday about how President Donald Trump’s choice of businessmen and political allies to shake up and downsize government work has also created an amateur-hour atmosphere.

But all the examples I’d gathered pale in comparison to the revelations in a new story published Monday by The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg with the headline, “The Trump Administration Accidentally Texted Me Its War Plans.”

More specifically, the official doing the texting of the war plans to a journalist appears to be Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who was confirmed by the Senate despite serious questions about his lack of official experience – Hegseth’s most recent job before taking charge of the US military was as a Fox News host.

\

David French reacts:

NY Times, David French, 24 Mar 2025: If Pete Hegseth Had Any Honor, He Would Resign

I don’t know how Pete Hegseth can look service members in the eye. He’s just blown his credibility as a military leader.

On Monday, The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg published one of the most extraordinary stories I’ve ever read. President Trump’s national security adviser, Michael Waltz, apparently inadvertently invited Goldberg to join a Signal group chat (Signal is an encrypted messaging app) that seemed to include several senior Trump officials, including Stephen Miller, JD Vance, Marco Rubio and Pete Hegseth.

A National Security Council spokesman told The Atlantic that the chat “appears to be authentic.”

No one apparently noticed Goldberg’s presence, and he had a front-row seat as they debated Trump’s decision to attack the Houthi rebels, an Iran-backed militia that had been firing on civilian shipping in the Red Sea.

Then, at 11:44 a.m. on March 15, the account labeled “Pete Hegseth” sent a message that contained “operational details of forthcoming strikes on Yemen, including information about targets, weapons the U.S. would be deploying and attack sequencing.”

This would be a stunning breach of security. I’m a former Army JAG officer (an Army lawyer). I’ve helped investigate numerous allegations of classified information spillages, and I’ve never even heard of anything this egregious — a secretary of defense intentionally using a civilian messaging app to share sensitive war plans without even apparently noticing a journalist was in the chat.

There is not an officer alive whose career would survive a security breach like that.

I’m guessing Hegseth will not resign, and Trump won’t ask him to, and MAGA folks won’t care. White men can be forgiven anything, seems to be the track record, while non-whites and women are automatically assumed to be guilty of something, and fired or deported or erased.

\\\

Heather’s column today is about Obamacare.


Heather Cox Richardson, Letters from an American, 23 Mar 2025: March 23, 2025

Fifteen years ago today, President Barack Obama signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, often called Obamacare, into law. In addition to making healthcare more affordable, the law eliminated lifetime limits on benefits, prohibits discrimination because of pre-existing conditions, and allows young people to stay on their parents’ health insurance policies until they are 26. In 2024, about 24 million people signed up for Obamacare coverage for 2025, while another 21 million adults were covered by the law’s expansion of Medicaid. The ACA has increased the number of Americans covered by health insurance and slowed the rise of health care costs across the board.

Republicans immediately vowed to get rid of the ACA because they object to government regulation of business, provision of a basic social safety net, and promotion of infrastructure. Such a government, Republicans argue, is essentially socialism: it prohibits individuals’ ability to control their businesses without government interference, and it redistributes wealth from the haves to the have-nots through taxes.

This is a modern-day stance, by the way: it was actually Republican president Theodore Roosevelt who first proposed universal healthcare at the beginning of the twentieth century, and Republican president Dwight Eisenhower who first tried to muscle such a program into being with the help of the new department created under him: the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, which in 1979 became the Department of Health and Human Services. Its declared mission was “improving the health, safety, and well-being of America.” In contrast to their forebears, today’s Republicans do not believe the government has such a role to play.

Followed by a 2014 quote from Bill O’Reilly about Republicans’ opposition to the law:

“Obamacare is a pure income redistribution play. That means President Obama and the Democratic Party want to put as much money into the hands of the poor and less affluent as they can and the healthcare subsidies are a great way to do just that. And of course, the funds for those subsidies are taken from businesses and affluent Americans who have the cash…. Income redistribution is a hallmark of socialism and we, in America, are now moving in that direction. That has angered the Republican Party and many conservative Americans who do not believe our capitalistic system was set up to provide cradle to grave entitlements…. Obamacare is much more than providing medical assets to the poor. It’s about capitalism versus socialism.”

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The more I reflect on George Lakoff’s characterizations of conservatives and progressives and their different views of government, the more I see his ideas applying everywhere. (I confess I’m a little slow in putting these pieces together. When you live within a system all your life, if can be difficult to see it from a different perspective. Reading books helps.)

So: What’s so important about capitalism? It’s to allow certain people to make lots of money. What’s wrong with socialism? It’s giving certain people free stuff that they don’t deserve; it’s income redistribution. (But of course it’s the system that allowed the rich to become rich, not because they genuinely worked harder, or were smarter. Trump and Musk inherited.) What’s the difference in outcome? On the one hand, a nation of extreme inequality in which oligarchs now have managed to take over the government… and want to privatize everything, taking things out of government hands into private hands, to make those private hands, and themselves, wealthier. (We noted this earlier re: the California prison system.) On the other hand, socialism ideally organizes everything at a higher level, reducing the inefficiency of reproducing similar functions 50 times in every state, and thus reducing inequality — and costs. Primary example: America’s health care system, much more expensive and inefficient than those of all the other wealthiest, and ‘happiest,’ nations. That’s why the animosity against insurance companies, who are out to make money (for their shareholders), not to actually provide healthcare.

And of course, capitalism is about individuals, socialism about society. Back to that moral divide between the tribalists and cosmopolitans. Capitalists, conservatives, reject any notion that would make society as a whole wealthier and healthier, for the benefit of all, including themselves. They’re in it for themselves only.

Another point. I just heard about this the other day, on NPR or perhaps CBS Sunday Morning, but I can’t find the link. You hear conservatives ranting about government employees as useless scum who don’t deserve their jobs. It seems there was a time when that was closer to the truth — an era of 100 or more years ago, when it was routine for US presidents to appoint family members and croneys to government positions, whether qualified or not (mostly not). Then in the late 1800s a motion was passed in Congress to discourage this, by establishing minimum requirements for government positions. Was it the Peterson Rule? Something like that. I’ll find it. Of course this rule, whatever it was, hasn’t prevented Trump from installing non-qualified amateurs into government roles. And so we see the traditionally anti-intellectual Republican party dismissing experts right and left, in order to install amateurs, as long as they’re *loyal* to Trump. And here we circle back to the lead story above, about Peter Hegseth.

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Again: liberals are about a government that provides protection and empowerment; conservatives are about maintaining traditional business and religious interests, in spite of evidence that those interests are, in the long run, counter-productive. Conservatives don’t understand, or selfishly dismiss, long-term thinking.

And so here we are. This is the current White House Faith Advisor.

JMG, 24 Mar 2025: WH Faith Advisor: Send Me $1000 And God Will Cure Your Sickness, Assign You Angels, Smite Your Enemies

And I’m reluctantly concluding this is why humanity is doomed. We can’t seem to get past this nonsense.

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Today’s Doom Watch

A beautiful weekend here in the Bay Area.

We’re witnessing the downfall of the United States as an idealistic nation that for many decades has led the world on enlightenment principles and scientific achievements. At the same time, most people won’t notice this downfall. And it’s happened before.

  • Why doesn’t MAGA care that Musk donated hundreds of millions and is getting government contracts worth billions?
  • Another explanation of why conservatives do not prevail in academia;
  • Why not pray to God for everything? (Because prayer doesn’t work, and God is an illusion);
  • And how a dual state is arising in the US, as it did in Nazi Germany.
– – –

NY Times, Eric Lipton, 23 Mar 2025: Musk Is Positioned to Profit Off Billions in New Government Contracts

Subtitled: “The boost in federal spending for SpaceX will come in part as a result of actions by President Trump and Elon Musk’s allies and employees who hold government positions. Supporters say he has the best technology.”

Continue reading

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Tribalistic Politics

  • Frank Bruni on why Trump keeps attacking Biden;
  • Paul Krugman, via Adam Tooze, on how Trump has prejudices rather than ideas;
  • Heather Cox Richardson recalls how Republicans have tried to create their own reality;
  • Why MAGA voters want their opponents to suffer, and why Trump voters love him despite everything.
– – –

It’s not enough for Trump to win; his enemies must be excoriated as well. The attitudes of a zero-sum tribalist.

NY Times, Frank Bruni, 20 Mar 2025: Why Trump Can’t Quit Biden [gift link]

For President Trump and many of his closest aides and allies, every day is a great day to beat up on Joe Biden. They treat bashing the previous occupant of the White House as proper political hygiene, best repeated and ritualized, the autocrat’s equivalent of flossing your teeth.

Continue reading

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“The Wholesale Destruction of the United States Government”

  • Heather Cox Richardson on the dismantling of the US government, on libraries and museums, and on the rule of law;
  • WaPo’s Dana Milbank on Musk’s ignorance of the government he’s dismembering, on what judges do, and on the administration’s bows to white nationalism;
  • Robert Reich on the attacks on education, and on the American mind;
  • Headlines about DEI and white supremacy, the cruelty of closing a library to Canadians, how Trump voters don’t regret that he’s ruining their lives, and burying the names of non-whites at Arlington.
– – –

Heather Cox Richardson, 21 Mar 2025: March 20, 2025

It seems as if the Trump administration is rushing to tear apart as much as it can as opponents of its wholesale destruction of the United States government organize to stop them.

Continue reading

Posted in authoritarianism, Conservative Resistance, Decline, Politics, Psychology | Leave a comment

The Devolution of the United States

  • America is 24th in a ranking of the happiest countries in the world. Don’t Americans wonder why so many other countries are happier? I suspect they do not. [Update: this is a fairly superficial measure. Even so.]
  • Trump and his administration take tactics to cripple the left, without actually debating issues;
  • Elon Musk, even as he wants to expand the human population, disdains retirees;
  • Short items reflecting the tribal mindset: demons, straws, measles, autism, will of God, the Holocaust, anti-White bias, Hitler-curious, appetite for revenge, fighting free speech, long-term thinking, anti-constitutional thinking.

Admittedly, many Americans, especially the MAGA crowd, don’t care what’s going on in the rest of the world. But don’t any of them wonder *why* people in so many other countries are happier than Americans?

AP News, 20 Mar 2025: Finland is again ranked the happiest country in the world. The US falls to its lowest-ever position

I’ll acknowledge that a primary reason might be that these Nordic nations are monocultural, unlike the US. (But many African nations are monocultural, and they’re unhappy, mainly because they’re poor.)
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Is Science Partisan? How Could It Not Be?

  • The astronauts have returned, and Trump and Musk lie about what actually happened;
  • The idea of blaming Mexico for the overdose epidemic is wrong, and will not work;
  • Short items about eating less, globalism, cutting aid to the poor to fund tax cuts for the rich;
  • White supremacy: Jackie Robinson, a repeal on rules prohibiting segregation, and dismissing human rights;
  • RFK Jr spews childish libertarian nonsense;
  • And Trump’s war on education, to fuel autocratic populism.
– – –

Well, when one side consistently, repeatedly distorts and denies facts, then how can it, as we already know, be on the side of science, which is about identification of truth and reality?

Ars Technica, Eric Berger, 18 Mar 2025: Can NASA remain nonpartisan when basic spaceflight truths are shredded?, subtitled “Let’s bring them home NOW, Sir!”

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How MAGA folks don’t actually believe in traditional American values

Rather, they embody the essence of primitive tribalism.

  • A Ben Shapiro host renounces the Statue of Liberty and its “stupid” poem;
  • The disappearance of Navajo Code Talkers on government websites suggests again that MAGA is a white supremacy movement;
  • Shameless lies about Canada and fentanyl;
  • DOGE cancels weather tracking, the EPA’s scientific research arm, and positions at NASA — all about short-term thinking, with recollections about conservative resistance to the space program in the 1960s;
  • The reality of how Trump’s plans are sinking the global economy, and the fantasy by his supporters who think that the bad is actually good.
  • And another example of how conservatives try to deny reality by passing bill, in this case about trans people.
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Anecdotal, but significant. In case it hasn’t become obvious, MAGA, or at least a portion of it, has never accepted the ideals of the nation they supposedly revere.

JMG, 18 Mar 2025: Shapiro Host: I Don’t Love The “Pagan, Liberal” Statue Of Liberty, Remove That “Stupid Poem Off The Bottom”

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