2/14/2021

Cancel Culture Threatens our Freedom and Safety

I know next to nothing about Gina Carano, either as an actress or of her political views, but entire college programs have been developed trying to understand how the Holocaust was made possible. From Auschwitz survivors like Max Frankl to noted scholars, it comes down to desensitizing the population to cruelty by dehumanizing an entire group. You refer to Jews (or Gypsys or Communists) as vermin, an infestation, snakes and the like, while blaming them for what ails society. As Frankl said in his book "Man's Search for Meaning," the Nazi death camps had only a handful of sadists who took actual pleasure in the torture and murder of prisoners, while the vast majority of guards had been "dulled by the number of years" that they'd been exposed to the dehumanization of their foes.

It is said, those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. It is instructive what the CEO of the parent company of Cambridge Analytica had to say about Donald Trump's tactics. Cambridge Analytica helped Steve Bannon field test things like "build the wall" and "lock her up," as well as more vile things like "Can Blacks succeed in American without the help of Whites" or "Are Blacks genetically predispositioned to fail?," seeking out people who would respond positively to such messages and suggestions. Not surprisingly, the CEO of Cambridge Analytica's parent company was later recorded saying that the tactics the Trump campaign used in 2016 were identical to those used by Hitler to turn Germany against the Jews.

Which brings me to Gina Carano. This is what she posted:

"Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers, but by their neighbors...even by children. Because history is edited, most people today don’t realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views?”

The result of such desensitization, whether directed at Jews, Gypsies and Communists, or at Blacks, Muslims and socialists (and Mexicans, liberals and NeverTrump Republicans, or conservatives, Christians and white males) is to villify the opposition such that resisting becomes an act of courage, where those who act in defiance of the leader and in solidarity with the oppressed are treated as outcasts and enemies of the state. Below are a two images that show the horrors of such dehumanization, two images suggesting how such atrocities are made possible, and finally, two photos showing how standing against the hatred is an act of courage. I would argue that what Gina Carano was warning us of, is that we risk following the path that Germany followed. We should not - must not - ignore history. It is why our founding fathers felt freedom of speech, the press, and to protest were so vital that they placed them first among our Bill of Rights. What has been done to Gina Carano via cancel culture, while fully defensible from a legal standpoint (she was fired by a private company) is so misguided. I don't know if the hatred against political opponents she decried was against liberals or conservatives, but she is correct in her assertion as to the potentially tragic outcome ignoring her warning could bring about. She wasn't saying that where we are is just like Holocaust, she was saying what we are now witnessing is akin to what transpired in Germany that made the Holocaust possible. It is an accurate and critical distinction.

Please tell me where I am wrong in that belief.



Nazi Germany

America

Nazi Paramilitary

American Paramilitary

German Outcast

American Outcast


1/28/2021

The Poisoning of the Conservative Mind

radical_center
I have referenced my time on the Butler County GOP central committee as the penultimate straw in my growing disgust with the Republican party (Donald Trump was the final straw). When I was approached about running, it was by a good friend who suggested it as part of a group seeking to repair the party. This was in 2010, just as the Tea Party was beginning to take root. I saw that movement nationally, in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, as one growing out of misplaced and misguided anger at the response needed to avoid financial calamity. Misplaced, because the real anger should have been directed at the lasseiz-faire policies that created the environment that made those bailouts necessary. Misguided, because it stirred up a lot of anger that should not have been stirred in the first place.

One of the people in the group that approached me, Ann Becker, is referenced in this piece. I was shocked when I found she was overtly campaigning for Trump in 2016. I was also shocked to find others in that group, including the person who approached me, supporting him as well. 

In her book, "Twilight of Democracy," conservative writer Anne Applebaum describes the rift in the GOP that began somewhere in the mid-2000s. I can trace my own disillusion back to that period. What you had were two wings that had been battling behind the scenes for decades - the nationalist wing, led by folks like Pat Buchanan, and, for lack of a better term, the limited government wing represented by Ronald Reagan, Jack Kemp and the like. One was backward looking, the other forward looking. Somewhere post-9/11, those wings began to diverge. The latter, which included people like George Will, William Kristol, Anne Applebaum, Mitt Romney and John McCain became outcasts - RINOs in conformity-enforcing terminology. The others, including folks like Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity, Joe Digenova and their cast of burn-it-all-down flamethrowers like Jim Jordan, Louis Gohmert and Josh Hawley delivered us the GOP of Donald Trump. It proudly proclaims to be the party of God, guns and Trump. That is not a governing philosophy by any stretch, but that is what they live by.

The article linked above shows how that mindset not only lives, but is thriving at the grassroots level. Too many are oblivious to it, but if not reversed, it will be our downfall. I believed that in 1992, when I wrote against Pat Buchanan's nationalist rantings. I believed it in 2004 when I wrote the GOP faced a coming rift between the chamber of commerce limited government sorts and the "do as I believe you should do" religious right. I believed it in 2008 when I wrote that the GOP had stopped being the party of limited government and self-reliance, choosing instead to celebrate limited thought and self aggrandizement. And I believed it in 2010 when I ran and won a seat on the county GOP central committee in an attempt to correct the party's course. But it was already running off the rails. I am convinced that it can no longer be righted. It must crash or we will all suffer.

1/13/2021

My Agenda for America


I hope to flesh these out in the coming days and weeks, but for now, a simple agenda.

1) Decouple health insurance from employment

2) Preserve the environment

3) Enhance custodial responsibility for gun owners, buyers and sellers

4) Reform and demilitarize the police

5) Reform immigration, including a path to citizenship or legal status for those productively entrenched here.

6) Educate our populace for a 21st century world, including critical thinking skills

7) Restore a balance of power between business and workers

8) Reduce the deficit, with higher taxes on the table

9) Ensure the voting rights of every legal voter.

10) Defend our rights and privacy from government and corporate overreach.


Related links:

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/01/opinion/amazon-workers-union.html (#7)

https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2023/01/ftc-proposes-rule-ban-noncompete-clauses-which-hurt-workers-harm-competition (#7)

8/30/2020

The Kenosha Chaos Our Guns Have Wrought

Folks are sharing this NY Time timeline as evidence that Kyle Rittenhouse was acting in self-defense. It will be up to the courts to sort that out, but it appears obvious that his possession of a gun is the source of his situation today. And the possession of guns by others did nothing to make a tense and tragic situation better. They only served to turn chaos into tragedy.

According to photos and video in the accompanying story, a gun was fired and Kyle Rittenhouse turned towards the sound. Joseph Rosenbaum, a 36 year-old father then apparently moved toward Rittenhouse. It is certainly just speculation, but it is quite likely that in the confusion he believed Rittenhouse was the shooter because he had a rifle in his hands. Thus, Rosenbaum was possibly trying to disarm what he thought was an active shooter. He was shot in the head and killed by Rittenhouse.

Rittenhouse then flees. One would expect he would be agitated and anxious, having just shot and killed someone (there is video elsewhere where he seems to be heard saying he had just shot someone). In any event, his adrenaline and fight or flight response are almost certainly high at this point, not a circumstance that is going to make for what we might call "good choices."

Meanwhile, the nearby crowd, having heard at least two gunshots and seeing one person with fatal injuries, is also certain to be in a highly agitated state. Others exercising their Second Amendment rights apparently pull out their guns, as multiple gunshots can then be heard. Whether they were in response to Rittenhouse's act, the first gunahot that had drawn Rittenhouse's and Rosenbaum's attention or just the general chaos is impossible to discern at this point, but those folks firing can be viewed no more, nor less justified than Rittenhouse at this point. In fact, it could be possible that they, too, were the subject of attacks from others who might have thought THEY were the source of the original gunshot and thus, active shooters in need of takedown, the only difference being their gunshots hit no one.

Amid all this chaos, Anthony Huber, a 26 year-old skateboarder, runs towards Rittenhouse, who bystanders are identifying as an active shooter. Rittenhouse trips and falls, at which point Huber appears to try to hit or tackle him. Rittenhouse, understandably agitated turns and begins firing blindly, killing Huber. He also shot Gaige Grosskreutz, who was holding a hand gun.  Grosskreutz was shot in the arm and ran off.

It is important to keep in mind that by this point, Rittenhouse has fired his gun repeatedly and killed two people. This is precisely the type of situation where the argument for concealed carry is often made - when the so-called good guy with a gun is needed to take out the bad guy with a gun. But in a chaotic scene like this, who is to decide who is good and who is bad? Herein lies the entire problem with our misplaced faith in guns to deliver peace, safety and freedom. They do not. They only deliver what we witnessed here, and apparently witnessed in Portland overnight as well - chaos and death.

Kyle Rittenhouse is no hero. He shot three people, killing two. If he was acting in self defense,  it was only because his gun appears to have made him the subject of suspicion when another gun went off. And we have no idea why that other gun went off (perhaps they were acting in self-defense as well). It is a simple case of armed insanity. This is what our fascination with firearms has wrought. And we can expect more of it. The cycle of insanity must stop. It is hard to see how it can.

8/19/2020

We Ignore Disenfranchisement at Our Own Peril

At the end of his first live show after the lockdowns ended, Dave Chappelle closed by warning that if we don't begin to take the concerns being expressed by the George Flynn protesters seriously and act upon them, rather than simply paying them lip service, we risk an ugly progression of the frustration into something more than protests (the last words spoken were a drawn-out "rat-a-tat--tat---tat----tat"). It wasn't a threat, but a warning - a warning of what can happen when the oppressed and downtrodden feel ignored and powerless.

It is not just the violence against blacks and other people of color. It is the lack of a voice. It is troubling how many still dismiss the violence with an "all lives matter" retort, but the dismissal of systematic disenfranchisement is even more troubling. From the Electoral College to Senate representation to gerrymandering to outright efforts at voter suppression, the combination of institutional violence with an intentionally limited voice in the halls of power is a dangerous and combustible mix.

We are all aware that Donald Trump won the presidency despite being favored by 3 million fewer American citizens than was his opponent. But are we aware that in 2018, the Democrats received 59.3% of the votes for the US senate, yet LOST two seats? Granted, California's method of running the top two primary vote getters - both Democrats - skewed those results, but even absent that aberration, the Democrats still out-polled the GOP 55/45, yet are in the minority in the upper chamber of congress.

In the House, Ohio is instructive. As the table below shows, the GOP edged the Democrats in statewide voting by a slim 52 to 47.3 percent margin, yet the GOP won 12 seats to the Democrats' four, a 3 to 1 ratio. Regardless one's political views, it is foolhardy to think folks in a nation that claims its government is of, by and for the people will continue to quietly and peacefully acquiesce to non-representation.

Conservative commentator David Frum has stated that if conservatives become convinced they cannot win democratically that they will not abandon conservatism, they will abandon democracy. No true believer in America, no one who truly loves this country and what its ideals proclaim to be, can accept or support such an outcome.

Much is made of the United States being a republic rather than a democracy. But a republic is not defined as a system where the minority rules, as has become the case today, where an ever-shrinking number of voters rely upon archaic rules and nefarious means to maintain a grip on power. Instead, a republic is meant to provide all segments of the citizenry with representative government in the truest sense of the word - a government that is representative of the wishes of the governed. The further we stray from that truth and the longer we ignore it, the greater the strife this nation will suffer. And it will not be the fault of the aggrieved, but of those who choose to look the other way. Eventually the day will come where the couple in St. Louis will become a metaphor for the American ruling class - fearful, gun-toting citizens hiding behind gated walls of their own making. We owe it to both our forefathers and our children to be better citizens than what we've become. 

5/02/2020

Paramilitary Groups Find Their Target in Michigan

Does anyone recall how the Michigan Militia gained notoriety after it was learned that Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, co-conspirators in the Oklahoma City bombing, flirted with the organization in the 1990's? Michigan has long been home to numerous paramilitary groups, many with anti-government leanings. In 2010, Michigan was second only to Texas in such groups.

The rise of these groups parallels the evolution of the NRA from a sporting and gun safety advocate into a gun rights organization increasingly focused on the threat of an overbearing government intent on robbing the people of their rights. It should come as no surprise that Michigan, which long had more licensed hunters than any state in the nation, would follow the one-time sporting and gun safety group down the extremist, anti-government path.

We are now witnessing the next step in that evolution, with the armed protesters taking up position within the halls of the Michigan Capitol Building. This is one more example of the normalization of the anti-government mindset that drove McVeigh to bomb the federal building in Oklahoma City. In the twenty-five years since, these para-military groups have continued to grow (some would say fester), building their ranks on a foundation of fear and mistrust. As is so often true, one sees what one seeks, and in the case of these groups, what they've been seeking - expecting - is government overreach. The demands of public health in the face of COVID-19 provides the ideal opportunity to find such overreach and put their decades of paramilitary practice to work.

To date, these protests have remained thankfully peaceful, but as happened when a similar showing of paramilitary groups in Charlottesville drove state police to refrain from confrontation for fear of provoking violence, they risk allowing anarchy to rule in ways that leads to violence regardless.

The well-worn phrase that the pen is mightier than the sword underlies the reason that freedom of speech, press, assembly and the right to petition government for redress of grievances are enshrined in the First Amendment, coming before the right to bear arms in the second. It is also the well-educated, thoughtful intellectualism of the men who put those rights into our Constitution that made both our revolution against Great Britain and the nation that resulted a model for the world, rather than the inflamed mob Alexander Hamilton warned his contemporaries might arise when passions are fanned.

These so-called patriots believe an America flag and an AR-15 makes them Patriots. They do not. It is the hard work of rational thought, reasonable debate and defense of democratic principles that make a true patriot. Armed reactionaries wearing masks meant to conceal identity rather than protect public health are not patriots. It is hard to see them as anything but weekend warriors looking for a chance to play patriot. Unfortunately, they don't know the meaning of the word. Thus, our increasing tolerance of their unpatriotic acts threatens the very foundation of our democracy, and quite ironically, the liberties found therein. Their evolution, allowed to continue, will not end well. This, I fear, is but a mere way station on the path to disaster.

4/25/2020

Wealth Gap, Agitated Populace, 2nd Amendment a Volatile Mix

The last time we faced massive government spending that helped pull us out of an economic dive this deep was when WWII pulled us out of the Great Depression. We paid for that by increasing top tax rates to over 90 percent. It was a time when we took fiscal responsibility seriously (which coincided with our greatest period of middle class economic might and global respect). It will be interesting to see how we proceed this time once the need for stimulus has passed. I would not expect similar tax rates, but I do believe our current tax structure and faith in the myth that tax cuts pay for themselves will need to come to an end.

On a related note, I was pondering the oft-repeated claim that  prior to onset of COVID-19 we were in the greatest economic period in our nation's history. On a GDP and unemployment basis, there is some merit to that claim, but how does it stack up by other measures such as income inequality and overall measures of economic security of the middle class, including number of bankruptcies due to medical bills, ability to pay for a 4-year degree without incurring significant debt on a middle class income, retirement security? I've done some preliminary research and it is not quite as rosy as it's been portrayed, which should surprise few.

That such struggles were increasing, as are federal deficits, while the economy was humming on all cylinders should be a matter of concern for all regardless their income level. Sadly, I fear the IBGYBG (I'll be gone, you'll be gone) attitude that lured so many to dismiss the threat of the looming mortgage crisis a decade ago because they figured they'd cash out before the bill came due, has now become an IGMYGY attitude (I got mine, you'll get yours). It's a kind of Gadsden flag, don't tread on me approach to economics. However, history has rarely been kind to societies with vast wealth gaps.

The last time the US faced such inequality was during the Gilded Age of the late 19th century, which eventually saw the rise of the American Communist Party as a valid political player. Its appeal grew even greater with the onset of the Great Depression, which increased the calls for wealth distribution and overthrow of the old economic system. Ironically, Franklin Roosevelt saved capitalism by fighting fire with fire, implementing a vast array of socialist-style works programs, as well as Social Security, as part of his New Deal. They alleviated the pain of the Great Depression and quieted the most extreme calls for action, but it was only WWII (as noted at the opening of this post), which finally put an end to the economic hardship. Oddly, the real savior of capitalism may have been the man who started that war. We can only guess at how prolonged economic hardship would have played out had the war not intervened.

All this is to say that those who look the other way as income inequality grows without considering the long-term consequences risk fomenting a rebellion that the support of Bernie Sanders-style socialism only hints at. A return to the gilded age puts all at risk of becoming victims to the adage that hungry people gripe, starving people revolt. In a nation founded in rebellion, with a populace prone to agitation backed by Second Amendment rights, it will only take a skilled demagogue with the wrong message at the right time to light a fuse we may wish we had doused long before.

4/16/2020

Beware Attempts to Politicize the Voice of America

The president made a point of referencing the need to replace the head of the Voice of America during yesterday's coronavirus briefing. I happened to attend a talk at the VOA museum here in West Chester, OH last fall by Elez Biberaj, the VOA's Eurasia director, where he made it clear the mission of the VOA is to provide truthful reporting rather than propaganda because gaining the trust of those in nations without a free and open press is critical to US influence in those countries (the accompanying photo shows the level of that trust in select countries). He went on to say the VOA has taken pride and comfort in the fact that their mission has never been politicized, allowing them to freely broadcast the good, the bad and the ugly, which is what underpins those high levels of trust abroad.

The president's comment yesterday that the current director is allowing "horrible things" to be broadcast almost certainly was driven by that "good, bad and ugly" aspect of the VOA's factual reporting. In fact, it was directly related to their reporting on the coronavirus pandemic, which he apparently feels has not been critical enough of China. If he succeeds in placing a director more intent on propaganda than truth, global trust in the VOA will crater, its effectiveness will plummet and any influence the US garners from our shining example of press freedom will be forever lost.

This is just one small but significant example of the many ways this administration is not just damaging our global influence, but more dangerously, undermining the very principles countless Americans have fought and died to gain and protect. It may seem insignificant, but it is an attack on the very concept of what America is.


4/04/2020

The President's Underwhelming Performance


Supporters of President Trump often argue that his detractors ignore his successes and thus, their opinions are based upon intangible emotions. A look at those alleged accomplishments may help quell that argument. This review will put the coronavirus impact and response aside, looking only at the performance through December 31 of last year, the date China first revealed it was dealing with a new infectious disease. It will also focus exclusively on policy, refraining from touching on rhetoric, personality and other apsects of the president's behavior, save for how those might influence policy. Suffice it to say, this is by no means an exhaustive review of presidential shortcomings as viewed by his detractors.
First, the economy. Despite the president’s boasts, it has been every bit as sluggish/robust as it was under his predecessor (one must choose which adjective to use, since the numbers are nearly identical). In Obama’s last eleven quarters (the number for which data exists under Trump), annual growth was 2.3 percent. Under Trump it has been barely a quarter point higher at 2.56 percent. Comparing the most recent five quarters for both makes for a statistical dead heat, with both coming in at 2.1%, well below the 3% considered robust and even further shy of the 4% or more the president had promised.
The president may actually be fortunate that the economy has been hammered by the coronavirus, because the global economy had been sliding into a recession and early warning signs, including a significant drop in truck capacity utilization nationwide, suggested the US economy was beginning to teeter on the brink of a downturn (see Fig 1). That will now be more than masked by what has transpired in the past few months. 







Fig. 1: Logistics Manager’s Index of Transportation Utilization

The other thing the president proudly boasts of is the stock market. There, too, it is not all it’s cracked up to be. Given that the president’s signature economic achievement - his tax cuts - did not take effect until January 1, 2018, it is instructive to look at the markets performance in their wake. Ironically, the market quickly peaked on the first anniversary of his inauguration (I typically begin assigning credit to a president for the economy beginning on that date), then remained essentially flat or underwater for the next twenty-one months. Only in the last quarter of last year did we see any improvement in stock prices, and even then, from his one year anniversary to the peak during his term on February 12 of this year, the Dow grew at a substandard 6% annual rate, significantly below the historic return of 7.75% return that excludes dividends. (see Fig 2)


Fig 2: Dow Jones closing prices January 3, 2017 - March 18, 2020

Under virtually any comparison, President Trump’s performance versus Obama’s is substandard.  During the first three full years (12 quarters), President Trump’s market lags Obama’s in every one except the first, which is typically a quarter a new president inherits rather than can take credit for the market. (see Fig 3)



Fig 3: Comparison of Cumulative Change in Dow Jones 

The most troubling aspect is the price we’ve paid for an economy and a market that has barely budged versus their performance under his predecessor. Deficits were already crossing the $1 trillion mark before the recent COVID outbreak (see Fig 4). These tax cuts predictably fueled deficits normally seen during economic downturns, leaving little in the tank when true need arose, as we are now experiencing. Furthermore, the regulation rollbacks the president boasts of put the health and well-being of workers and communities at risk with virtually no payoff. One of the most ironic - some would say, hypocritical - regulatory rollbacks involved auto emissions and fuel economy, where the Trump administration has gone to court to overturn California’s strict rules. Given how this administration seeks to argue for state’s rights to oversee health regulations and a host of other policy measures, one can only question the motives behind such moves.



Fig 4: Federal Deficits 2009 - 2019

Bottom line, the president has virtually nothing to show for putting our physical and fiscal health in peril. Therefore, this can arguably be called a net failure in terms of governance and economic policy. And we have come nowhere close to paying the full bill for those policies.

So much for economics. On healthcare, the president has offered nothing in terms of a plan. He promised one during his first campaign, referring regularly to “repeal and replace,” but he offered nothing but repeal. No replacement plan was offered. Now, he again promises a “beautiful” plan after his reelection, but refuses to say what that might be. Volumes could be written regarding the perils of repealing the ACA without a replacement, but the one thing that has been floated - allowing insurance companies to offer tiered pricing for preexisting conditions - is a cynical attempt to have their cake and eat it, too. In this case, they would get to take credit for protecting those with preexisting conditions, while avoiding the inconvenient fact that such tiered pricing will effectively make coverage for those conditions prohibitively expensive. For people not covered by large group plans, including small businesses, contract workers, freelancers and gig workers, it would make insurance affordable for those who don’t need it and unaffordable for those who do,effectively making insurance pointless. That is the strategic vision of this administration’s health policy, which means there is neither a strategy nor a vision. We can only hope this plan never comes to fruition.

Regarding immigration it is difficult to separate the policy and the rhetoric, but much can be questioned simply on a policy basis. Beyond the cruel aspects of family separation and denial of asylum, there are real economic costs to our growing aversion to immigration. But first, let's clear up the common misconception often made by the president's supporters that the family separation policy began with Obama. There is a vast difference between the two in that federal law prohibits the jailing of minors when their parents have been arrested. Thus, children were only separated from their families when their parents or guardians had been arrested for felonies that included drug and human trafficking, in accordance with the law. The Trump administration's separation policy went well beyond that and forced families apart even when parents had a perfectly legal basis for requesting asylum. This is where the outrage arose, and rightfully so.

This obscures the far more troubling aspects of our immigration policy. Influenced by Stephen Miller, our immigration policy is geared not only to stop illegal immigration, but to limit and reduce legal immigration as well. This is foolhardy at a time when we face an aging population, a demographic trend that economists are virtually unanimous in citing as the precursor to a stagnant economy. We have seen this at work in Japan for nearly two decades, where birthrates and limited immigration have hamstrung every effort - including sub-zero interest rates - to kickstart their economy. We are headed down a similar path under our current administration. Furthermore, the immigrants we are discouraging are now remaining in their homelands, where they will compete against us rather than contribute for us. Imagine how much weaker the NBA, NHL or MLB would be vis-s-vis the rest of the world without immigrants. The same holds true for our businesses. Yet we are foolishly turning talent and dedicated workers away, while stigmatizing them at the same time. It cannot even be justified as short-term thinking. It will hurt us today and tomorrow, as worker shortages translate into higher prices due to shortages of products, services and most critically, innovation. The price we pay in the next couple of decades will thus be paid in both dollars and influence as our economy sags further in relation to the rest of the world.

Internationally, the president has achieved virtually nothing. His supporters often argue that his two signature achievements - moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem and meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un - were successes, measured by the fact that the worst case scenarios failed to materialize in their wake. This, however, fails to take into account that our reticence to pursue either of those initiatives was not fear of repercussions, but the unwillingness to give them up as bargaining chips. With regard to the embassy, we saw the move as something we could use to entice Israel to make concessions to the Palestineans as part of a long-term peace solution. Likewise, we refused to give Kim Jong Un the legitimacy he sought unless he permitted real and lasting concession regarding inspections and cessation of nuclear weapons and missile development. In both cases, we gave up our biggest bargaining chips for nothing in return. To classify those as not just failures, but monumental missteps with historic implications would not be hyperbole.

Those are just two of the most glaring foreign policy blunders, but the loss of U.S. prestige and influence on the global stage is both pernicious and likely permanent. We earned that position of leadership through the blood and sacrifice in two World Wars and the aftermath that saw us as the most magnanimous victor in human history. We have simply given that away. We should hope it doesn’t require a similar price to regain it.

An argument can be made that changes in the global balance of power were inevitable, as was a concurrent loss in U.S. influence. And some will argue that Barack Obama sped that along. However, the Obama approach was one that sought more to manage that shift, whereas the Trump approach is to, quite honestly, it is nearly impossible to know what it might be. That is to be expected from someone who has never revealed the slightest hint of strategic thinking, save for bluster (that is less a dig than it appears - it does seem that bluster is a Trump strategy). There is no Trump doctrine, however, beyond "America First," whatever that means (it is standard operating procedure for Trump to use catch phrases that allow others to assign their own meaning, which is one reason so many believe he thinks as they do. What those supporters fail to realize is that they are only thinking as they, themselves, do. Whether the president thinks alike is no certainty).

These are just a handful of the areas where even this president’s alleged successes are really no such thing. And this does not touch on the corrosive nature of his personality or politics. All the evidence points to the truth that this man is poorly informed, incapable of anything but the shortest of short term thinking and incredibly sensitive to his own ego,which far too often takes precedence over the demands of his office. In time, history will view him as every bit as unqualified as so many of us have argued from the start.

==============≈

Here is a link to a story citing our need to manage America's relative loss of influence as other nations inevitably rise:

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/04/opinion/america-rome-empire.html

And here is an economic analysis from 2014 that reminds us the country was sliding towards recession when COVID hit:

https://www.mauldineconomics.com/global-macro-update/cracks-in-the-labor-market#share

2/15/2020

This is Not Politics as Usual

To those who would attempt to dismiss the actions of the Trump administration, arguing they all “do it,” I have to respectfully disagree. We cannot dismiss behavior by saying they all do it, for two reasons. First, it creates a false equivalency that all actions are equally amoral, illegal, untruthful or damaging. They are not. It is why I consistently ask for evidence to support such claims. Often they are non-existent, and when they do exist, they're almost always taken so out of context that comparisons become unsupportable. In fact, it is often when one is unable to justify the action or behavior being questioned that they fall back upon the "they all do it" argument, trying to equate the hard evidence they cannot dispute with unspecified acts committed by a nebulous someone. That neither justifies, nor excuses the act in question. It is simply deflection.

Second, and far worse, is that dismissing illegality and amorality with the excuse that they all do it undermines all faith in our system of government. It effectively tars all public servants as corrupt, which is patently untrue. The damage this does to our ability to self-govern is beyond measure, especially when it is used to dismiss precisely the type of behavior we should not tolerate.

I have said for years now that when faith in any system is destroyed, the system itself is destroyed. When faith in banks is destroyed, banks fail. When faith in a currency is destroyed, the currency fails. And when faith in the institutions that make self-government possible is destroyed - faith in a free press, the rule of law, the validity of free elections, the system of justice, the loyalty of the opposition - self-government fails. One side, led by this president, has consistently and deliberately worked to undermine faith in all the above.

I realize an argument can be made both ways on many of those issues, but one needs to ask why so, so many conservatives have spoken out on precisely these issues. George Will, Bret Stephens, William Kristol, Charlie Sykes, Rick Wilson, Mike Murphy, the late Charles Krauthammer (and his son), David French, George Conway, David Jolly, Justin Amash, Max Boot - the list goes on and on. Can you ever recall an administration that has driven so many of its own party to not just criticize, but warn of the dangers that administration represents?

I realize many think this is politics as usual, but it is not. Every demagogue in history first sought to discredit the truth-tellers, whether the intelligentsia, the elites or the press. If one seriously considers which side has worked tirelessly discrediting each of those for the past several decades, culminating in where we stand today, there is only one answer - and many of those conservatives listed above, including Charlie Sykes and Rick Wilson, who were part of the conservative media ecosystem, have issued mea culpas for their complicity in destroying our faith in the truth.

Yes, both sides play the game, but one has taken it to an extreme rarely, if ever, seen in American politics. As former George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum (another insider) has stated, "If conservatives become convinced that they cannot win democratically, they will not abandon conservatism. They will reject democracy." He said that for a reason and he is warning us about it now.

All this and more are why I’ve added my name to the list of one-time Republicans who have walked away from the party that once represented reasoned thought and responsible government, but now turns its back on both.