519 Comments

Thank you @HeatherCoxRichardson. I'm grateful for all of the research and effort going into the crafting and production of the LFAA.

“[Netanyahu] has lost his way by allowing his political survival to take precedence over the best interests of Israel.” -Sen. Chuck Schumer.

Simple word substitution: "The GOP, by becoming the Trump/Putin/MAGA party has lost its way prioritizing the concentration of power and wealth to take precedence over the best interests of the United States."

In the 2024 election cycle in the United States, I can only hope that reasonable conservative pragmatists (granted, an endangered species) who have traditionally been members of the former GOP will vote alongside moderates, and liberal progressives to make it clear to all that we support democracy, justice, and continuing our evolutionary work toward a "more perfect Union."

There is no place in government for those who reject and continue to attack the very system they claim to represent.

The world is watching. Will we support experienced, leadership and promote the United States as a stable and responsible partner in global trade, defense, and diplomacy? Or will we destroy the system by elevating a group of incompetent, corrupt individuals who seek to enrich themselves and their friends regardless of the cost to America and the world?

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

I believe many decent Republicans who have exited the Halls of Congress are doing so with the intent of stepping back and letting the M.A.G.A. G.O.P. implode under the weight of its vindictive partisanship with its ideology breeding idiocy. Then they may re-enter to re-build the Party. Those decent Republicans that have stuck around may resent their erstwhile colleagues invoking a right of return.

⚖️

In the meantime, Reaganism is plainly exhausted and has been for a long time. As the New Deal supplanted classical economics and supply-side economics supplanted Keynesianism, some new progressive economic philosophy is set permanently to replace Reaganomics. That may spell a liberal ascendency for twenty years or more.

Expand full comment

Thanks Ned -and would greatly enjoy seeing some generational ascendency. People expect immediate results, however -"People don't eat in the long run." My mantra continues to be any form of meaningful democracy requires an educated, informed, and engaged society. All 3 pillars have been assailed since the Reagan Administration -while wealth has concentrated through trickle-down fraud, privatization, and externalities.

The place where Reagan conservatives (sadly -not Eisenhower conservatives) figured this out architected in the Powell Memo to the US Chamber of Commerce. He provided the foundation for long-term strategy and tactics which have led to today's MAGA extremism and madness.

No one with decent education, who is well-informed, and sane has ever uttered the words: "These are challenging global times. We really need Marjorie Taylor Greene, James Comer, Ron Johnson, Lauren Boebert, and some religious zealots to lead us into the future."

Expand full comment

"Now it is true that I believe this country is following a dangerous trend when it permits too great a degree of centralization of governmental functions. I oppose this — in some instances the fight is a rather desperate one. But to attain any success it is quite clear that the Federal government cannot avoid or escape responsibilities which the mass of the people firmly believe should be undertaken by it. The political processes of our country are such that if a rule of reason is not applied in this effort, we will lose everything — even to a possible and drastic change in the Constitution. This is what I mean by my constant insistence upon “moderation” in government. Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history. There is a tiny splinter group, of course, that believes you can do these things. Among them are H.L. Hunt (you possibly know his background), a few other Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or business man from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid."

- Eisenhower

Expand full comment

Thank you JL!

I consider President Eisenhower to be the last great conservative President (of course the competition is thin considering the paranoia and crimes of Nixon, the elevation of Bonzo's co-star, "Dubya", and a fraud running a criminal enterprise).

The irony of the Lewis Powell memo was that it was a call for the very wealthy to form a Millionaire's Union (while attacking labor Unions and anyone else's ability to collectively bargain). With Powell laying out the architecture and the HL Hunt's, Koch's, Adelson's and others funding "The Powell Machine" -it has been highly successful at concentrating wealth and power (while eroding democracy).

A few years back in support of my civ.works project -I covered this in a brief (4 minute) film: https://youtu.be/eg9QrgSWajY

Expand full comment

One more time: Dwight David Eisenhower was the last Republican worthy of the Oval Office.

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

James, I grew up in the Eisenhower years, too young to understand the politics. But it seems now to have been the calm before the storm. I also think that a lot of the problems we see now were unseen and under the table. I grew up in a R family where the prejudices were casual, not virulent. I was fortunately to know a teacher couple who were miles ahead of that time. I finally woke up during late high school, college, and Peace Corps. I saw my first racial conflict when I was about 7 in Chicago and I never forgot how awful and unfair that was. By the time Nixon arrived, I was much more aware of the political problems of Rs. I did vote for Rs like Mark Hatfield here in Oregon, but never for a R president. Now I won't vote for any R. I consider the Bushes a crime family and now we have mafia don and his crime family.

Expand full comment

I didn't like it as a kid, but in retrospect the instability accompanying moving around and growing up in less than middle class neighborhoods was an unseen gift.

Expand full comment

Been there, done that. I have made the comment that growing up poor was the best thing that happened to me. I will add, I never went hungry, I never suffered physically, I had a flawed but adequate family, and I felt cared for. On the other hand, I didn’t expect much to be given to me. Just recalling, makes me know that my childhood was an ‘unseen gift.’ Thanks for that…

Expand full comment

I would like to hang Powell by his nuts, would be a pleasure Ma’am.

Expand full comment

It occurred to me that unions were a needed check and balance on power of product, share, and job controlling "trusts", but I had never quite framed it as a "Millionaires (now Billionaires) Union; both organize to maximize their power, although the advantage for the wealthy is that they can just will organization into being (and do) by paying for it, while democratic organizing is like herding cats. Power tends to corrupt, and I think there are many examples of the union movement gone wrong, but many of the now eroding rights workers (unionized or not) enjoyed in the last century were won or buttressed by the union movement. The key to liberty and justice for all, whether in a marriage or a society is to bargain in good faith, and install social rules that enable and reward that. And also discourage and foil predation by anyone. The boundary of organized billionaires can be indistinct from organized crime.

Expand full comment

Beautifully articulated -and indeed organized crime.

Expand full comment

What a different world it could have been if Ralph Nader had prevailed over Lewis Powell.

Expand full comment

And if JFK, RFK, and MLK weren’t killed.

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

Mr. Polisner: Just watched your clear and concise film - thank you.!

Expand full comment

Thank you Bruce! It needs an update however the background and context remain the same.

Expand full comment

Excellent film and organiization, George. Sharing. How do we contribute to civ.works.com, The Democracy Machine For Us?!

Expand full comment

Thank you so much MaryPat! If you visit https://civ.works and either click on the purple “Support civ.works” button, or click the donate link in the menu, either will open up a secure donate page with our payment processor, Stripe.

Very grateful. We use the funds strictly for critical new development, cloud operations, and testing.

Expand full comment

The best President of my life-time remains President Ford. Back in the days of Presidents Eisenhower and Ford, conservatism was a partner to liberalism. The liberals forged ahead with new initiatives. The conservatives were there to make those changes fiscally sustainable, except when said initiative was plainly repudiated or evidently undoable. It was more of a creative tension and foreign policy was a unified front against the evil of the U.S.S.R. and Red Chine.

Expand full comment

Perfectly said, Ned: "a creative tension." I believe the Founders meant for politics in this country to be a creative tension of intelligent, moral, well-meaning philosophies, not the political equivalent of Mutually Assured Destruction.

That's not to say the Founders lived in a kumbaya world--politicians routinely flayed each other in person and in the popular press--but in the end, governed in the moderate middle where Americans live.

Expand full comment

Ahh, the good ole days when those tiny splinters could be mocked, and the Koch Bros and other Ayn Rand acolytes hadn't built their empire of right wing institutes.

Expand full comment

Eisenhower was the last halfway decent republican.

Expand full comment

Wow! Yes, yes, and a million times yes, Mr. President Eisenhower!

His departing remarks were some of my Uber-Liberal mother’s favorites, along with those of Washington.

Expand full comment

Just read yesterday a report that claims that about 50% of us are helping our grown children financially. We can blame this on Reaganism. Our children (even those in their 40's at this time) didn't and don't have the financial advantages that we had - fair wages, affordable housing, affordable higher education, etc. Examples: 1) Our first home, a brand new townhouse in Cupertino, CA cost $39,250; 2) my 12 years of college (including Whittier, USC, Harvard Grad and Harvard Law) TOTALED less than $17,000. That's barely a quarter of a year's tuition now.

Expand full comment

We wonder why American society has become polarized, toxic, and violent -I think there is generational economic despair. As parents and grandparents we want to provide more opportunity for our children and future generations. Instead -higher education debt burden (looking at Reagan and bloodsucking Betsy DeVos here), an employer relationship that once included defined benefit pension plans to supplement social security is now a "gig" economy, people argue with each other over a minimum wage disconnected from the obscene wealth concentrated into the hands of the few like Elon Musk, Robert Mercer, Larry Ellison, and Peter Thiel. The concentration of wealth has led to multiple generations of people working paycheck to paycheck for a diminishing quality of life. And people are then intentionally misdirected to thinking the issue is related to government spending instead of understanding trickle down fraud and the GOP shills who have been paid to continue to perpetuate it upon American society -democracy, equity, and justice be damned.

Expand full comment

George, the older I get, the more I come to see the system created by Reagan, Bill Buckley and the wealthy with their propaganda to be a monster system and the more I look back to the genius of Frances Perkins and FDR in establishing the American Middle Class: "The people are what matter to government, and a government should aim to provide all the people under its jurisdiction the means for the best possible life." That's Perkins' theory of government. That includes an education, health care, job, housing and more. I started out life in Texas as a Libertarian. My political philosophy continued to mature along the way. I am now an outright Liberal. Government should be for ALL THE PEOPLE.

Expand full comment

The same progression here, would be more progressive if it were the least bit viable these days…

Expand full comment

I have to pay $5,000 this year extra, in taxes because I am now single (widowed) while Musk and his ilk can’t pay a dime it seems. My move, which was supposed to free up money for donations, now frees up money for the IRS. I should have known but I have been overwhelmed with bureaucratic BS, not having the brigade of lawyers who keep the rich, rich. You are so right, obscene wealth v. Just getting by. Blood sucking meant to cause division and despair. Time to see them without their PR masks.

Expand full comment

I cannot like this comment, Jeri.

Expand full comment

I feel your pain. Same here. No matter what I do the government gets any of my 'extra' money. I cannot cut anything else. At almost 70 I still can't take a day off.

Expand full comment

It's keep 'em on the treadmill, working their a**es off to manage their debt repayments, with the great added advantage, that the educated never get a chance to exercise their critical faculties, never the time to think things through.

Lincoln said you can't fool all of the people all of the time. True, you can't. But WE have ways to sideline and silence those we cannot fool.

What a brutal, gratuitously cruel society these poor bastards have brought in, a society so fragmented, even atomized, that it barely merits the name “society”. A manheap bearing the mark of Cain and “Am I my brother's keeper?”

What a pandemic of narcissistic perverts, minds consumed by limitless greed, cruelty, deep, deep stupidity—often riveted to high IQ—and suicidal destruction of the very basis of our shared existence.

Expressed at this moment by total indifference to the programmed massacre and maiming of tens of thousands of civilians, whole families, so many children.

My life was marked by bombing at a tender age. Now I veer between towering rage and depression, and if I had no spiritual support, I do not know how I could survive the horror into which we have descended.

Expand full comment

Thank you for sharing that Peter -I cannot begin to imagine the horror of your youth. All war is terrorism. Life itself is challenging enough without the cruelty, violence, and exploitation -all of which know no borders. My life now, with far more yesterdays than tomorrows (thinking of the Clarence Clemons quote) I wish Martin's dream could have been reality, the songs of John Lennon, and what the journey through this life might have been if people everywhere heeded the concept set forth by Carl Sagan and others -we are on a tiny blue dot life raft hurtling through space -that the physical and artificial borders between us are merely intended to keep us fighting someone else's war while our lives are drained through anxiety and worry. I imagine and work toward a collaborative world centered around peace and the alleviation of suffering -regardless of the odds and wealth expended to maintain the status quo -or worse.

Expand full comment

Try turning some rage energy into helping where and as you can. That will assuage your depression. My profound sympathies. I only feared bombing, never experienced the terror of it. But I can wish you all help possible with your PTSD.

Expand full comment

And now Steven Mnuchin wants to buy tik tok. What the blank! All the media in the world owned by a few rich white guys. Stinks.

Expand full comment

Not all ... https://civ.works (granted -the amoeba on the flea of the tail of the dog -but that's always how it begins).

Expand full comment

George Polisner succinctly stated the American political dilemma now, political chaos and uncertainty stemming from a skewed economic system.

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

Richard, my wife and I are certainly in the 50% who help our 3 adult children. In fairness, our parents helped us out tremendously during their lives and through bequests.

That said, we recently moved into a new home that we completely renovated. In the process, I found a stack of newspapers from the '70s. On March 28, 1978, a year after I graduated college, the Dow was at 753 points. That same month I had been hired with a BS Plant Science earned the year before to work in a well-known nursery, for which I was paid $1.85/hour (minimum wage was then $1.65, and horticulture/agriculture is famously low-paying). We were less than a year into ownership of a home for which we paid $43,450 (with help from parents, and for which we've been eternally grateful.)

We've moved a few times since, but I'd guess that home is now worth close to $500K (I'll check after I post this) and the Dow is nearing 40,000.

But minimum wage has only increased to $7.25 across most of the country.

Expand full comment

Stunning. 12 years of college less than 17k. They made a profit too.

I ordered a new British MG in 1976 and paid 3,600 which compared to your figures seems hefty.

Expand full comment

Ex-husbands entire law school tuition in mid 70's was $4500--$1500/year. Today it is $70K a year

Expand full comment

My tuition and room and board at Yale was $1,560 annually in the early 1950s. My first house—3 bedrooms-in Washington cost $36,000 in Washington. Of course, as a Foreign Service Officer in the 2nd lowest grade I received $6,065/year, until I went to Congo and received hardship pay (I personally had to purchase my 9mm Beretta.)

When first married, our two bedroom cost $88/month. We could not afford to dine out. Our modest vacation apartment was $125/week. Different strokes for different folks!

Expand full comment

How many of us are also helping our parents financially?

Expand full comment

In my parents' lifetimes, my wife and I did support them financially, providing them with a home and some financial support. Those of us who grew up in the 50's and 60's had it the best. We've simply got to take back some of that $34 trillion (and counting) that the Republican oligarchs have stripped out of the economy, literally making indentured servants out of our children and grandchildren. My goal is to leave my two daughters enough to make up for what they aren't going to get in terms of Social Security and Medicare, though they will have paid into it for most, if not all, of their productive lives. Theft, by any other name, is still theft. The Republicans call them tax breaks.

Expand full comment

This does not surprise me at all. We don't have children, but we help our nephews here on the west coast and sometimes my nieces in the midwest. We were over to our neighbors last night to do Christmas near St. Patrick's Day....lots of medical issues and then they got colds....so the delay. He is a retired banker who has a clear view on how the economics work these days and how much things cost including the cost of cement. We talked about mergers and how they affect the cost of food for example. Not a pretty picture.

Expand full comment

Great reasoning. Thank you. Funny, why is it that, every time Representative Comer speaks, he reminds me of Howdy Dooty on a bad acid trip?

Expand full comment

Millions of "Howdy Doody" fans will likely be protesting this comment Ned. I hope you are able to redirect their anger toward Rupert Murdoch, or someone equally deserving. :)

Expand full comment

Rupert is too ugly for planet earth.

Expand full comment

😃

Expand full comment

Can you believe someone is planning to marry that old fart?

Expand full comment

I can't wait to read his forthcoming book:

"How to find true love after 90*"

*age and or millions of dollars.

Expand full comment

I like the term Comer Fudd.

Expand full comment

Who daily steps on rakes

Expand full comment

Jeff makes my day a little brighter!

Expand full comment

The wealth divide has created a class of arrogant billionaires who pay little or no taxes. They put their money into far-right media, the Republican Party, and the Supreme Court. Some want to rule by cronyism and corruption, others by using A I. Still, it’s fascism and a way to destroy democracy. Too many Americans are impressed by money, and think these people are geniuses.

Expand full comment

So very true. Whenever the microphone is in front of Elon Musk for whatever ignorant opinion he wants to share with all of us I think "haven't we learned there are already far too many incompetent narcissists in the world?""

Why not cover what Naomi Oreskes has to say? Or Joel Bakan? Noam Chomsky? George Lakoff? Naomi Klein? Heather Cox Richardson?

News should be about fact-based/evidenced based information. It shouldn't just be a microphone and a talking horse.

Expand full comment

Last paragraph a hoot. Thanks…

Expand full comment

I beg to differ. The number of college educated people that support tfg is staggering to see and know.

Expand full comment

I may be naively optimistic about humanity. I suspect that a better educated and informed society, when given a choice (absent gerrymandering, voter suppression, and the Electoral College) will lean toward the non-criminal. Granted MaryLee -that's a generalization -and it is only a lean -it's not necessarily an absolute. I recognize that people might think they are informed by focusing on specific media and are motivated by confirmation bias as opposed to news and information predicated upon facts.

I've had great discussions with well-educated conservative friends -(they might be socially moderate, but fiscally conservative) -and they will not support Trump.

Expand full comment

Eisenhower's farewell address was prophetic

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eisenhower%27s_farewell_address

21st-century commentators have expressed the opinion that a number of the fears raised in his speech have come true.

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.”

Expand full comment

Imagine! -he'd be run out of town these days if trying to run as a Republican.

Expand full comment

The Regressives often name their programs to be the opposite of what they really are, like the "Patriot Act". "Trickle-down" is another good example. A more honest name for Reaganomics would have been "Gusher Up". That is what happened and trickle down never did.

Expand full comment

True Steven. You might already be familiar with the work of George Lakoff -“Don’t Think of an Elephant”. He deconstructs the Orwellian political language used by the GOP.

Expand full comment

Thanks for that reference.

Expand full comment

On generational ascendancy, that has been a pet peeve of mine for a long time. My generation does not want to retire. It is making our politics sclerotic, our rhetoric often crotchety. 🙂

Expand full comment

George! That final point does draw a clear picture, doesn’t it!

They are surely NO ONE’S choice of people to lead us forward … Bunch of shills …

Expand full comment

Thanks Pat! As the media has treated politics like a sporting event -too many have lost sight of the fact that our elected officials shape the now and the future for this and future generations. It isn't about Blue vs. Red. It's about living wages, affordable housing, education, defense, diplomacy, trade -everything.

If they want to see incompetent clowns juggling chain saws -they can go to the circus -not the ballot box.

Expand full comment

George, good thing I am just on coffee and not eating my breakfast because I found your last sentence to be vomit inducing.

Expand full comment

Good to know Michele -Just one of the other benefits of my writing: calorie management. :)

Expand full comment

LOL.

Expand full comment

The shiny hucksterism of the Reagan medicine show, that preached prosperity for all if we only granted the wealthiest impunity, has now lost it's luster, and the current claim is that government by the rich for the rich is holy writ from the will of the founders, and Almighty God.

Smells of feudal authoritarianism to me.

Expand full comment

I always said that greed got a green light under Reagan.

Expand full comment

Government by the rich for the rich. Mantra for the cult (made up of poor slobs handing over their money)

Expand full comment

Jeri, I had a man say to me, (he didn't know about my disdain for Trump.. Now he knows,) "Can you believe they ( not sure who "they" are) don't want to pay Trump's legal bills?"

My blood boils.

Expand full comment

No more proof of cult thinking. Born rich, plans to stay that way, no matter who has to pay. And the fools line up. When I contribute to Joe, I am supporting democracy, not a greedy bastard. I was raised to think that you don’t blow your own horn, you don’t steal, you don’t expect much, you work for what you get (unless you can’t), religion is about loving and caring about others (Golden rule). My grands, and great grands were poor immigrants and wanted opportunities. They got them, but later generations seem to have forgotten from whence they came. My blood has been boiling for a spell now….

Expand full comment

My mother, rest her sweet soul, stressed the Golden Rule to us.

She was a Pentecostal Holiness and my Dad was an atheist. (He said he married her for her fried chicken.)

Anyway, Dad stressed the Golden Rule too along with the importance of thinking on my own.

"Christianity" has lost the Golen Rule theme. It,'s now " I'm going to tell you how you should think and believe. I'll treat you like Trump tells me to,

but you can't treat me back."

Oh my.

Expand full comment

And obviously, we can blame the major media for allowing the failed idea that tax cuts would pay for themselves to go on unquestioned for so long. Shameful.

Expand full comment

Yes Ned that implosion possibility is there. A definitive electoral defeat of Trump and both hoses of congress would be needed.

Expand full comment

it is all burning, needing citizens with a fire hose of democracy blasting autocrats until their flames of greed are extinguished

Expand full comment

Hope you're right.

Expand full comment

What a lovely vision of the republicans. Mine is somewhat less rosier.

More like George Carlin

“Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.”

But I hope you're right

Expand full comment

Bob,

I would be a complete cement-head if I either could not or would not understand the anxiety you raise. Of course, I feel the same way, too. My comment is more of a last hope than a documented fact. The problem I have with my erstwhile Party, or the fragment of it that is still registered as Republican, remains one of disappointment with the cowardice of so many of us.

😢

It started in 2016 when the Party Elders refused to risk violence, cowering to threats of violence made by Trump, by denying Trump the nomination as being unfit. It has grown since then. Several Republicans have tried to stand up and have been abandoned only to twist in the wind then retire or, eventually, to lose. When a decided conservative of the calibre or Representative Buck throws up his arms and bails out in a week, we all know that life may be getting dire.

Expand full comment

Well, was Keynesian economics ever proven wrong? If so, certainly not by supply side. Take some great lessons from Keynes, skip over supply side altogether as utter garbage, and continue to take lessons from the real world.

Expand full comment

The basic point is that the Keynesian bag-of-tricks no longer worked in the late 1970s. Just as supply-side economics -- a modern variant of classical economics -- no longer works today.

Expand full comment

Just saying it doesn’t change anything. We the American People need to be out in the streets demanding a huge increase in taxes on the billionaires. Also, we need to demand a difficult and expansive test be giving to anyone running for a government job. This is not fraternity row! For gods sake people, this is your country. Do you care?????

Expand full comment

Maybe they are just cowards…

Expand full comment

I can't help but wonder where the many "decent" Republicans were after Jan 6. Why didn't they join the Dems in the investigations? Why didn't they denounce the insurrection? Why didn't they stay committed to that throughout, instead of backtracking like McConnell did or ducking out of their responsibility to stay and fight to defend the Constitution?

I think you'll find them having snagged cushy lobbying jobs, padding their savings and continuing to undercut the people's will.

Expand full comment

That is a great question. I suspect that Senator Flake expected other Republicans would back him when he stood up to Trump. Senators Sasse, Lankford et al. let him twist in the wind. Representatives Cheney and Kinzinger knew the price each would pay by joining the 06jan21 committee. Yes, the 'decent' Republicans are not brave, for the most part. That fear precludes their greatness of being like a Senator Goldwater or a Senator Dirksen. The latter two had differing world-views but always believed that outspoken integrity and a common devotion to the country were, together, job-1.

Expand full comment

At least Sen. Goldwater saw the danger of Evangelists getting political power.

Also, Ned...I can't tell you HOW MUCH I appreciate someone ELSE sees the thin veil of "decency" and "self-sacrifice" these cowards have been attributed. Our media has definitely swallowed the kool aid.

Expand full comment

What amazes me how the psycho-dynamics of bullying have changed so slightly since we were in fifth grade. One would think that craven quislings would learn.

Expand full comment

Sounds like it would be nice, but I’m worried the GOP has just scared off the good guys forever.

Yes, we need new paradigms and the people to carry them through, not work to undermine them.

I hope we get out the vote in November to keep Biden in place, and our system remains strong enough to weather another round of charges that the election was stolen. At least the guy charging it will NOT be in office this time …

Expand full comment

You mention “some new progressive economic philosophy”. I wondered about that. It seemed that some form of Keynesian economics has been employed a couple of times in recent years. First in 2008 when Obama and congress employed it to stave off a possible depression with bank bailouts and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the The Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010. And what happened more recently once congress and Biden started funneling money into the economy to offset all the economic effects that the pandemic was causing…wasn’t that evidence of a return to Keynesian economics?

Expand full comment

Modern monetary theory.

Expand full comment

George, Considering the jury is out on whether a sufficient number of eligible voters will vote to support democracy, justice, and the like, I would note that one of the challenges of centering democracy and justice as a campaign issue is that said concepts are abstractions for most people.

Not long ago, I posted a comment noting our leaders must make a greater effort to drive home what it would mean to lose our democracy and how our way of life would change. Trump already has stated he would enact the Insurrection Act on Day 1 of his presidency. He’s already spoken about rounding up his political enemies. Accordingly, we can’t relent on urging everyday people, whatever their reasons for being complacent or undecided, to imagine what America would look like were the President to start moving the National Guard around to put down our voices, our right to protest policy with which we disagree, perhaps indefinitely detaining us. This is not without precedent. Trump had wanted to criminalize protests around Black Lives Matter for the murder of George Floyd.

Given the hour and my need for sleep, I’ve barely touched upon rights and freedoms that would be ripped away nor have I yet mentioned women losing control of their bodies, nor what it would mean were we unable to depend on an independent judiciary (we’re already starting to see what that would look like), or depend on the rule of law, or an independent justice department, or an independent Federal Communications Commission—all things Trump has said he would do.

Ultimately, we have less than 8 months to urge uncommitted voters to listen to the things Trump says and the people he admires. No one should doubt that whatever the freedoms we have in this country, whatever one likes about this country, dramatically would change.

As a final point, I would note that the largest bloc of eligible voters in 2020 were non-voters and further would venture to guess they largely were not Trump voters. Hence our outreach to that huge bloc of “persuadables” could not be more consequential.

Expand full comment

Thank you -and fully agree Barbara Jo -and hope you are able to get some decent sleep. In terms of messaging it will be important for people to understand the loss of rights isn't theoretical, it has happened, and continues to do so. I also think there must be aspirational and positive messaging. All too often liberals have been good at reacting to what we are not -often on the defensive and reacting. There must be compelling and emotionally engaging to understand what a progressive American society would look like (instead of allowing the GOP shills to frame it as a Marxist dystopia overrun by gangs and criminals).

Expand full comment

George, Seeing I’m still awake, I will try and respond and ask that you view my reply as my thinking out loud.

Sensing our grassroots engagement has remained largely invisible to the public-at-large, lately, I’ve been struck by how Trump, contrary to any other current political figure, has built an actual movement, has singularly created an experience for his followers bigger than their individual selves that binds them, albeit it in an authoritarian bind, to a community. Accordingly, I have come to conclude that our side, too, requires a kind of public awakening that allows us to transcend admittedly legitimate grievances and connects us to a profound sense of democracy not top down, but from the inside, from bottom up, from citizens.

I’m thinking that once I’ve effectively stitched together a patchwork of thoughts I’ve developed (with help) over the past few months, I will reach out to a handful of courageous, moral, lightening-rod-type figures for help in bringing recognition to the pressing need for a nationwide call to action: uniting, inspiring, and energizing people broadly, who know we are under threat, to participate in protecting our rights and our freedoms, saving our democracy, if you will, and also, hopefully waking up those asleep to the necessity and the urgency.

Expand full comment

I have some ideas about this and I'm happy to share with you (and anyone else that is interested). Some of it relates to comprehensive aspirational short-form media communication that attempts to be informative yet also emotionally engaging. I also have been working on a "virtualized" Kitchen Table Democracy concept. More soon -hopefully after you have had a good night's rest!

Expand full comment

George, I’ve appreciated our exchange plus your generous offer to share ideas based on your own work. I’ve perused both your Substack and your Civ.Works project and, indeed, was struck by our shared interests and goals.

Presently, as intimated in my previous post, I’m itching to complete and deploy a co-authored work product to folks who, if interested, could help bring recognition to our project. Once that’s off my plate, I expect I’ll be back in touch. Meantime, I am grateful we have initiated a conversation. Barbara

Expand full comment

I look forward to being in touch -and hope all goes well with your current project. In all that I continue I fully embrace the concept of -it truly will take a village. A great friend who teaches at Stanford set forth the concept of an ecosphere as applied to sustaining vital progressive changes in society -and, it seems, his words echo through all I attempt to accomplish. So I'm always thinking about collaboration, and how a competition of ideas leads to a much stronger design and implementation of a "societal transformation engine".

Expand full comment

Recommending Tony Judt (friend of Timothy Snyder) again. “Ill Fares the Land” will answer many of your questions.

Expand full comment

Thank you Virginia.

Expand full comment

Barbara, I agree that it’s important for people to understand what freedoms we are at risk of losing. I’m currently writing letters to Michigan voters through Vote Forward. Rather than talk about saving our democracy I have chosen Vote to save our freedoms. The freedom to make your own healthcare choices. The freedom to peacefully protest. The freedom to practice the religion you choose. ETC. I feel the word democracy has been demonized by the Rs and people are becoming numb to what it means to Save our Democracy but Save our Freedoms they can hopefully relate to.

Expand full comment

Joanne, While I agree that rights and freedoms are more relatable, I also am keenly aware that Republicans claim, with their calls for deregulation and tax cuts, that they are the party that represents individual freedom. One way I’ve tried to dispel the confusion is to steer clear of the term “regulations” and replace it with “protections.”

Expand full comment

Barbara Jo, Thank you for this. I will make a note that if I use the term regulations I will replace it with protections. Appreciate your comments and advise.

Expand full comment

I've been writing for Vote Forward, too.

It's easy to do (really!) and while it is on your own dime, if you can't afford it, they have a program to send stamps and supplies to those who request them. I encourage anyone reading to check it out. It is a fine way to combat the depression induced by the MAGA.

Expand full comment

I also write postcards to voters through Tony the Democrat. If any of this helps just one person I feel it’s worth my time. It’s the least I can do.

Expand full comment

So do I, Joanne!!

You have made me smile! I have found yet another kindred spirit here on the forum!

:-D

Expand full comment

Sounds like an excellent approach, Joanne!

Expand full comment

Thank you

Hope it gets through to some

Expand full comment

Me, too!

Expand full comment

For Joanne and Miselle, I write to clarify, when posting my original reply to Joanne, I had focused solely on her treatment of the terms “freedom” and “democracy” because I had presumed nearly everyone on this forum was writing postcards and/or letters, was phone and/ or text banking, was canvassing, particularly if he or she resided in or near a battleground state, and so forth. I hope I’m right because the data show that our personal exchanges with voters can tip the scales by as much as 2 to 3 points, highly significant given 1) we can expect tight races and 2) with Trump having absorbed the Congress and largely the judiciary, we’re all we have to preserve our basic rights and freedoms.

Expand full comment

"I can only hope that reasonable conservative pragmatists (granted, an endangered species) who have traditionally been members of the former GOP will vote alongside moderates, and liberal progressives *united for Democratic candidates up and down the ballot* to make it clear to all that we support democracy, justice, and continuing our evolutionary work toward a "more perfect Union."

Expand full comment

Be careful holding your breath…

Expand full comment

The old fashioned R's I know have tuned out. Well they rage a bit and then throw their hands in the air and then seemingly tune out.

Expand full comment

To be fair, I suspect that’s what many of us will be doing next year if the worst should happen and Trump be elected. I don’t think I can maintain my equilibrium if I’m paying attention during another Trump administration, helplessly watching our democracy whirl down the drain.

Expand full comment

They need a break. I hope it's only a few months.

Expand full comment

Good Q, George.

Americans growing vulgarity at home, as foreigners do now so largely abroad, have lots to consider as we move towards November -- if we're moving to the extinction of democracy, and towards the embrace of the lower, dehumanized Heather's column cites today.

Expand full comment

I see "corruption" as misuse of entrusted powers, either by neglected associated duties, or misapplying power to serve personal and/or partisan ends in contrast to the purposes the role was created to serve. It's like flying passenger airplanes into the sides of building, but in the less visible form of short circuiting due processes of law, from the inside of the system. As always, power held unaccountably tends to corrupt.

Expand full comment

Interesting, J L, your use of the word "misuse."

The U.S. depraved who live for the values of billionaires, or the values of religious zealots, all probably feel fine as to their missions.

That's guaranteed when we severe ourselves totally from humanities. We inhabit instead dehumanized packages, abstractions, zealotries, quantifications, consumer demographics, tribalisms.

Expand full comment

Maybe like building and maintaining passenger airplanes to maximize immediate profit, disregarding the safety of passengers and employees and the long term value of the brand.

Expand full comment

Cameron, I dread entering aircraft. Dread being confined to it for any flights.

The guaranteed horrific "food." The guaranteed torture of seating "pitch" always getting smaller and smaller.

"Maintaining passenger airplanes" might really have a different gerundive as, in the effort by our debased billionaire classes "to maximize immediate profit," the predators maintain nothing, just as the so-called conservatives conserve nothing.

Expand full comment

I, too, miss walking uphill to get to my seat in the DC3.

Expand full comment

Still no mention of climate change in this discussion. Repeating my joke: It’s 2045, a group of billionaires sits down to a salad of greenbacks. One asks “Where’s the Caesar salad dressing?”

Expand full comment

Thanks, Phil. I shall keep repeating it until there are recycling bins within walking distance of every American and our trash heats and cools US.

Expand full comment

Oh nuts! "We"... if you're referring to you an I? "We" don't seem to be doing a darned thing to stem the tide of what Is clearly 'religiosity gone wild'. You see it. I see it. We are not making any headway, in fact, just the opposite. Religion has gotten us right by the balls. The blanket woven by the interpreters of the 'Good Book' have empowered entire States to accept their version of what the "founders" intended. The Constitution? Not so much. All Sen. Britt did was pull the blanket (the speech she recited to us) further over our heads. Any President of this great country has to walk carefully on this matter, separation of church and state, lest she/he be skewered and and shown the door. And, that is why we can't get anything done. But, #45 could be their worst nightmare.

Expand full comment

Interestingly it seems religious participation is declining, however, to your point (perhaps?) the money and power flowing into politics and candidates who either are or claim to be religious zealots (like Mike Pence, Mike Johnson, etc.) are not in support of spirituality -they are intended to be a place where voters are easily and readily divided.

Divide and continue to conquer, right?

https://www.npr.org/2023/05/16/1176206568/less-important-religion-in-lives-of-americans-shrinking-report

Expand full comment

Here is my peace plan for the Middle East:

1. Israel, with the unfolding horror in Gaza, is becoming a hated and shunned pariah state. Israel faces an existential crisis as soon as the U.S. "aid spigot" gets cut off for whatever reason (including possible American political or economic crisis).

2. Any durable peace must enable Israel to be secure without constant infusions of American aid.

3. This requires peace with Israel’s neighbors, including Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia.

4. This requires undoing the Nakba terrorist atrocity and withdrawing to the U.N.-mandated pre-1948 borders.

5. This can only be done in the context of peaceful economic integration throughout the region, for the benefit of all. A lasting peace must be guaranteed individually by each permanent member of the U.N. Security council, and endorsed by Israel’s neighbors.

6. The recent Hamas atrocities were "justified" (rationalized) by earlier police brutality at the Temple Mount. The dream of rebuilding the Temple of Herod must be given up and replaced by the will to rebuild the Temple of Solomon in its correct location.

Expand full comment

For peace to take root, the Palestinian leadership must embrace a peace plan instead of bitterly accepting crumbs.

My proposal would require the Palestinians to accept a lasting "immigrant" Jewish presence in what was once the land of Jews who converted first to Christianity and then to Islam (that is, the Palestinians).

Only with such an embrace will the Saudis endorse a peace plan.

I envision a federated one-state solution, but others may have other ideas.

My solution, returning to the 1947 U.N. map, requires Israel to give up Tel Aviv. Perhaps now that can be regarded as fitting compensation for the destruction of Gaza.

A lasting peace along these lines can only happen if there is sufficient will toward peace in the American Jewish community to overcome extremist efforts to sabotage the peace plan.

Expand full comment

George A. Polisner:

“In the 2024 election cycle in the United States, I can only hope that reasonable conservative pragmatists (granted, an endangered species) who have traditionally been members of the former GOP will vote alongside moderates, and liberal progressives to make it clear to all that we support democracy, justice, and continuing our evolutionary work toward a "more perfect Union." “

And

Ned McDoodle:

“I believe many decent Republicans who have exited the Halls of Congress are doing so with the intent of stepping back and letting the M.A.G.A. G.O.P. implode under the weight of its vindictive partisanship with its ideology breading idiocy. Then they may re-enter to re-build the Party. Those decent Republicans that have stuck around may resent their erstwhile colleagues invoking a right of return.”

The problem I have with so called reasonable conservative pragmatists who have traditionally been members of the former GOP and the decent Republicans who have existed is that they KNOW – they truly know the very real threat trump and the MAGA’s pose to our democracy. They KNOW that now we have a binary choice, not wishful thinking.

At this point the next president will be either Biden or Trump – either a MAGA or someone who cares about democracy albeit with a differing view then they may have on many issues – save for their common belief in a democratic United States. Yet these people leave congress in a huff, talk about a third party or say they will not vote.

If they truly love America – they would encourage people in their cohort to hold their nose and vote for Biden. To make clear, that they will survive another Biden presidency but not another one of trump.

A perfect example to me of what I consider the fecklessness of these ‘decent republicans’ is Haley’s statement that Biden is “MORE DANGEROUS THAN TRUMP” https://www.npr.org/2024/02/22/1232961899/nikki-haley-south-carolina-primary-super-tuesday-biden-trump

Seriously? She was supposed to be the ‘sane’ Republican – yet she made such a statement.

I understand she is hoping to someone get back into the race – but our very country is at stake and these conservatives are being called to serve their country by thwarting what will likely be an authoritarian ruler and still choosing party over country. They fail both. They fail their former party and they fail our country.

Please tell me I am wrong.

Expand full comment

All excellent points Sonny. I do know there are not enough of them (endangered species). And while I would not want either of their legislative agendas driving the United States, there is a vast difference between Nikki Haley (a Trump appointee) and Liz Cheney. And the House reality is if a few more of the "old" GOP resign -that will be a major act of rebellion -as Mike Johnson will need to relinquish the gavel.

There are some conservatives who are vocal about the threat to democracy -such as Nicole Wallace, Bill Kristol, and Steve Schmidt. They are just not in the mainstream media as often as they should be because they aren't wearing MAGA clown suits, yelling about lasers from space, or providing extracurricular adult entertainment in a theater.

Expand full comment

I like your idea of those who may be "conservative" leaning should "hold their nose" and vote for Biden. My main worry is that those who wouldn't vote for Trump might splinter and vote for third parties, or not vote at all, who think they couldn't possibly bring themselves to vote for Biden but who will inadvertently throw the presidency to Trump.

Expand full comment

Hear! hear!, excellent post, George.

Expand full comment

Thank you Fay -I'm sincerely grateful to Professor Richardson who, with The Guardian, and copious amounts of caffeine inspire me to transform thinking into occasionally cogent writing (accidental or otherwise).

Expand full comment

I do enjoy your writing George, and am in agreement.

Expand full comment

Off topic:

Please protest "the Dwight D. Opperman Foundation’s plans to give its “Ruth Bader Ginsburg Leadership Award” to conservative billionaires Elon Musk and Rupert Murdoch, among others, “an affront to the memory of our mother and grandmother.” Without specifically criticizing any of the honorees — who also include Martha Stewart, Sylvester Stallone and financier Michael Milken — the Ginsburg family said the foundation “has strayed far from the original mission of the award and from what Justice Ginsburg stood for.”

Protest here:

press@rbgaward.org.

https://www.oppermanfoundation.org

https://www.washingtonpost.com/style/power/2024/03/14/ruth-bader-ginsburg-award-elon-musk-martha-stewart/

Expand full comment

Mike Pence apparently heard you.

Expand full comment

I have several anonymous subscribers.

Well-done Mike!

Expand full comment

Perfectly said.

Expand full comment

Amen!

Expand full comment

George, great post. I'm asking your permission to quote parts of this (today's) response/comment to HCR. Thanks in advance!

Expand full comment

Thank you for asking Kent -and yes -my words are all free range (when deemed worthy enough) for sharing.

Expand full comment

I agree with you George!!👍

Expand full comment

That changes everything! (Thank you Lynette). :)

Expand full comment

Yeah, George, remarkable the similarities, the intellectual dishonesty, the callousness, the demagoguery in both parties.

Expand full comment

Most talk about both parties sharing similarities, for me, begins and ends at the Supreme Court, or in judicial appointments like Aileen Cannon And Matthew Kacsmaryk.

Expand full comment

Thank you, Heather, for zeroing in on what Schumer said today about Netanyahu and on what Pressman said about Orban. Two “strongmen” as Ruth Ben-Ghiat professes. I was extremely happy that Schumer addressed how tyrannical Bibi has become. He really was a golden boy, in his youth. He was sensible and was not driven to what we see today. Very few Israelis and Jews want to be associated with him or his ideals now. The vengeance, the revenge mission, on Hamas has gotten completely out of hand. Over 30,000 dead and most are children. I have said it more than once that when he allowed the Ultra Orthodox to move over into the West Bank and then expand their occupation, he was inviting war. He has absolutely made it extremely hard on us Jews here in the US and throughout the world. Bibi, like the Donald, cannot and should not be trusted one iota. It seems all of these men want to make our lives miserable. They’ve succeeded.

Expand full comment

Not to forget how miserable he made the lives of the Palestinians.

Expand full comment

Both men really want to have power to keep their sorry asses out of jail.

Expand full comment

Well said Marlene

Expand full comment

So hard to tolerate the Bibi view of the world, he is doing more damage than Adolf. Chump is doing more damage than anybody. Wins that, hands down.

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

Jeri, while Bibi is blinded by rage at Hamas, well deserved embarrassment, and fear of prosecution, there's no fucking way he's "doing more damage than Adolf ".

Adolf invaded peaceful neighbors based on a sick ideology, like Putin had recently, and devized a plan to exterminate all Jews and acted on that plan, killing 6 million of them while also killing millions of others and starting a world war that killed millions more. The Arabs signed onto that "final solution" for Jews and have never given it up, and the outcome of that is Hamas, which continues to pledge annihilation of all Jews in Israel, to start, and all Jews ultimately.

To equate Bibi's "over the top" response to that Oct 7 attack AND THE CONTINUED ROCKET ATTACKS FROM HAZA INTO ISRAEL, to Hitler's, Putin's, and Hamas's actions may sound poetic, but is naive and wrong.

Bibi needs to be pushed from office, and though Isrealis hate being told to do anything, a 2 state solution needs to be imposed. As well, Hamas does indeed need to be defeated because of those continued rocket attacks and continued threats. But just as the Biden administration is stating, a credible plan to protect civilians needs to be in place.

While on the one hand, Israeli soldiers in Gaza are actually fighting a full scale urban war with well armed and trained Hamas soldiers fighting back and launching rockets to Israel, they do have the means to provide safe passage back north without delaying so much as to give Hamas time to regroup. (That would be giving up control of timing of military operations and against American military philosophy. )

Israel is losing the public opinion war, the civilian toll is horrific, but this is an actual war. Israel is responding to an actual threat, not made up.

Oh, and by the way, Israel is not built on stolen land. That's a whiny argument based on wishful thinking by the losers of a war (a series of wars). That's just like MAGA arising from resentments by losers of the American Civil War. Lessons from that tell us Hamas must be defeated militarily and a 2 state solution must be imposed.

Expand full comment

I should have stated my point better. Every word you say is on target. My point is that after WW2, Jews had the sympathy and the good will of most of the world (from my prospective, anyway.) I know I was in their corner when Vanessa Redgrave was an outspoken advocate for Palestinians. I thought Arafat was a moron and made things worse. That good will is basically gone, and the tribal hatred of the Jewish people is at fever pitch again. Quite a u-turn from Holocaust recognition and sympathy. Of course, the ups and downs are never flatlined it seemed that progress was possible. But this fiasco has put all Jewish people back in the sights of haters of every stripe. I blame Netanyahu and his ego run amok for the effort to kill a viable two state solution and find a solution for his criminal charges all in one fell swoop. He has put all Jewish people in a Catch 22. And all supporters on a tightrope. No, Hitler’s evil is unsurpassed. But Netanyahu’s actions may also reverberate for centuries. BTW, my husband was a WW2 buff and we watched a documentary by Hitchcock on the concentration camps, etc. I asked him if I should tape it. He said no, it’s the worse thing I have ever seen. And he had seen plenty.

Expand full comment

Thank you for clarifying, Jeri. Those documentaries that site footage from the concentration camps are very harrowing to watch. I've also talked to survivors in person. What I couldn't stomach after an hour, they lived with for months. They only survived because they were able bodied and selected to work.

They got to Auswich close enough to the end of the war to avoid starving to death before being rescued.

Expand full comment

We watched some of the interviews with survivors and they are hard to forget. Real people and their pain. There are so many stories of courage, remembrances, and loss that reverberate. More every day as the atrocities pile up.

Expand full comment

Having parents who were Holocaust victims, gave my sister and I generational trauma. We are not alone, of course, but being brought up in the South did not help things for us to achieve the goals our parents set out for us. Neither one of us married a Jewish guy and they weren’t doctors or lawyers as they had wished. My guy was raised Catholic but doesn’t follow his religion. My sister never married and she’s happier than a clam! I have no regrets. Left home at 18 to go to school in DC and then in 1974, left for the San Francisco Bay. I still feel, to this day, I had the best of three worlds.

Expand full comment

I am so very proud of Chuck Schumer sharing his message today. I am certain it wasn’t easy to publicly address the horror of Netanyahu’s stance. It takes courage and compassion to stand up for those who are suffering at the hands of authority. Bravo, Senator. You have millions of Americans who stand with you in calling for an election in Israel now, not two years from now.

Expand full comment

As a Jewish man, his words are far more powerful than even Biden’s. This is such a nuanced argument, and from what I hear, even a mention of Israel’s genocidal actions in Gaza (really Bibi’s actions), is branded anti-Semitic. Protest of this genocide is not anti-Semitic, it is anti-genocide, no matter which entity is trying to implement it. I feel for the Israelis who have to live under this tyrant’s rule, just as I felt for myself and the majority of Americans who had (and may have) to live under Trump’s insanity.

Expand full comment

He is just bloviating

Expand full comment

Schumer doesn't speak out very often like this.

I'm not sure if you know that Schumer got a perfect score on the SATs when he was in high school. How many Republican Senators got where they are with their bloviating and yet we the people have absolutely nothing to show for it.

Without Schumer and Pelosi to shepherd the Democrats and all of the major legislation they got passed during Biden's first two years in office, Biden would have not had the legislative success he's had.

One thing he seems to have learned is not to "bloviate" like TFFG does ad nauseam.

Expand full comment

Thank you for clarifying

Expand full comment

I know genuine pain.

Expand full comment

Biden and Blinken have given Netanyahu every opportunity to cease his administration's war crimes and crimes against humanity. They have been astoundingly diplomatic building an international coalition for sovereign and geographically autonomous Palestinian and Israeli states. Netanyahu has been adamant at best and truculent at worst - buoyed by his Republican, AIPAC, and Evangelical enablers, and hopes of helping reelect Trump. That even Schumer has said 'Enough!' Shows how far Democratic policy has evolved. Now it is time, past time, to pause transfer of military weapons.

Expand full comment

The best kind of friend to have is one who will tell you the truth, not just what you want to hear. Being supportive does not mean going along with whatever an ally wants to do. Schumer and Biden are trying to tell Bibi and Orban the truth, which those men do not want to hear.

Expand full comment

How’s this for “truth?” I hate the nickname “Bibi.” When used for this wretched individual…. It’s too sweet and delicate sounding to my ears.

Expand full comment

“Preventing famine is Israel’s responsibility legally — doing otherwise would be against the norms Israel is pretending to be upholding — ..."

___Eran Etzion, former deputy chief of Israel’s National Security Council)

'On Gaza aid, U.S. seeks complex workarounds to straightforward problem' : from Today's WorldView by Sammy Westfall (WAPO )

'In planning the D-Day invasion of 1944, which helped turn the tide of the Second World War, Allied forces preparing to cross the English Channel faced a near-insurmountable engineering and logistics problem: how to rapidly supply an invading force with thousands of tons of supplies and equipment daily on the beaches of Normandy, France.'

'They devised an innovative solution — Mulberry harbors, two prefabricated concrete and steel harbors floated in sections from Britain to France to serve as deep-water ports.'

'Eighty years later, President Biden’s plan to build a temporary port to supply aid to Gaza recalls the effort at Normandy, my colleague Michael E. Ruane writes.'

'But one key difference stands out: The Gaza Strip is surrounded by existing routes, in the care of staunch U.S. allies, by which a massive increase in aid could feasibly arrive by truck.'

'The United States must carry out an “emergency mission” to get more aid into Gaza as it faces an “intolerable humanitarian crisis,” Biden said in his State of the Union address last week. At least 31,341 people have been killed and 73,134 injured in Gaza since the war began, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, and aid groups warn of a hunger crisis and imminent famine.'

'But in undertaking this resource-heavy endeavor — set to require 1,000 troops and two months, at a cost that remains to be tallied, alongside expensive and inefficient aid airdrops — the United States is not circumventing forbidding geography. It is pursuing a logistically complicated workaround to what analysts say is a fundamentally simple problem: Getting aid into Gaza by land.'

'For months, aid groups have urged Israel to allow more trucks into Gaza. Trucks already packed sit idle on the Egyptian side of the Rafah border crossing but trickle through at a fraction of prewar levels. Before Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on Israel, some 500 trucks entered Gaza daily. February saw seven days where 20 trucks or less crossed the border into the enclave, according to U.N. data.'

'Israel maintains that it places no limits on the amount of aid that it will allow into Gaza, laying blame instead on the United Nations for slow deliveries. But the Rafah crossing from Egypt and the Kerem Shalom crossing from Israel are insufficiently handling the volume of aid required, according humanitarian organizations, my colleague Claire Parker reports. The Israeli inspection process remains cumbersome and opaque, with items rejected on a seemingly “random” basis, Janti Soeripto, chief executive of Save the Children, told The Washington Post.'

'Drawing in part on field research conducted within the region, Refugees International, a U.S.-based humanitarian organization, issued a report this month finding that Israeli restrictions had obstructed humanitarian action at every step of the aid delivery process” 'by seemingly arbitrary denials of legitimate humanitarian goods entering Gaza; a highly complicated and inconsistent inspection process; frequent denials of internal humanitarian movements; and attacks on humanitarian and critical infrastructure, among other policies' “causing a man-made humanitarian crisis.”

'Biden, too, has urged Israel to facilitate the crossing of more trucks. But he has pursued routes to provide aid, critics say, that attempt to surmount by sea and air a political problem more likely to be resolved by diplomatic leverage.'

'The fact that experts who have delivered aid time and again in protracted conflicts, including Syria and Yemen, cannot scale an aid operation inside Gaza is “representative of the impediments in place that are restricting and straining the scaling of the humanitarian operation,” said Jesse Marks, senior advocate for the Middle East for Refugees International, who worked on the report.'

'The Biden administration’s adoption of last-resort options, such as airdrops and maritime corridors, shows' “the severity of the crisis inside of Gaza — and the belief that if there is no aid, that the famine conditions are going to worsen,” 'Marks said.'

'Sixty days of waiting for the construction of a pier — to respond to imminent famine — could mean too little, too late.' “People in Gaza don’t have two months. They’re starving now,” 'Marks said.'

'Just five trucks of the hundreds waiting to cross could be capable of bringing in more than 100 tons of food parcels immediately, according to ReliefWeb.'

“There’s probably somewhere between twenty to fifty times what that first boat is going to bring in, and it is sitting in trucks at the border,” 'Sean Carroll, the president of American Near East Refugee Aid, told the New Yorker.'

“There is kind of a craziness to this: the U.S. is announcing the building of the pier in order to get more aid in, because we’re failing to get stuff in the land crossings, which already exist,” 'he said.'

'No path into Gaza is without major challenges, especially in getting aid to the battered north. Truck delivery comes with logistical dangers, including ongoing Israeli bombardment. Gazans with desperate levels of need have swarmed loaded trucks, including in the Feb. 29 aid convoy tragedy in which more 100 people were killed, Palestinian officials said. Looting has also increased. But aid delivery by other means faces the same issues at higher cost. The U.S. pier plan will have to work out a process of unloading, sorting and distribution under similarly dire conditions.'

'The international community sometimes sees desperation driving violence as an obstacle to aid, when it should be understood' “the other way around,” 'Carroll told the New Yorker.' “If you actually do a surge on food aid, you can tamp down that desperation and that violence.”

'Other aid experts said the pier plan is at best a Band-Aid solution and at worst a distraction.'

“We need unfettered access through land for humanitarian relief. Anything else makes absolutely no sense,” 'said Michael Fakhri, U.N. special rapporteur on the right to food. The maritime plan is' “an insulting performance — and nobody is fooled,” 'he said.'

'It makes' “absolutely no sense” 'from a humanitarian perspective or a human rights perspective, Fakhri said.' “It makes sense in trying to placate and meet domestic pressure that the current U.S. administration is feeling. This is done to show that the United States is doing something.”

'As the source of hundreds of millions of dollars of arms sales during the latest conflict alone, experts suggest that the United States could make a larger impact by exerting more meaningful pressure on Israel to let trucks through, rather than devising alternative routes.'

“It takes a choice,” 'Fakhri said.'

(WAPO;s newsletter Today's WorldView) Copied in full.

Expand full comment

Thank you for posting this WAPO story, Fern. I so appreciate you and your contributions to LFAA.

Expand full comment

Thank you for your attention to these tragic situations, Marcia.

Expand full comment

lin, March 25?

Expand full comment

Holi?

International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade?

Greek Independence Day?

Lunar eclipse?

Expand full comment

Biden deadline for Netinyahu

Expand full comment

Absolutely

Expand full comment

Absolutely

Expand full comment
deletedMar 15
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

Hamas, Houthis, Hezbollah would all love to see Israel fall apart. Iran is supporting all of these groups as are other Arab countries.

Netanyahu has disturbed the balance in the Middle East by letting his guard down. He knew this attack was coming and yet he did nothing.

What should the US have done on October 8th Michele? This is what we learned in the days immediately following October 7th.

The attacks began early on Saturday with a barrage of at least 3,000 rockets launched against Israel and vehicle-transported and powered paraglider incursions into Israel. Hamas fighters breached the Gaza–Israel barrier, attacking military bases and massacring civilians in Israeli communities, including in Be'eri, Kfar Aza, and Nir Oz, and at the Nova music festival. The attackers killed 1,139 people: 695 Israeli civilians (including 36 children), 71 foreign nationals, and 373 members of the security forces. About 250 Israeli civilians and soldiers were taken as hostages to the Gaza Strip, including 30 children, with the stated goal to force Israel to release Palestinian prisoners. There are numerous reports of rape and sexual assault by Hamas fighters.

As HCR points out, Netanyahu is losing the support of the world. And yet you blame the US for supporting Israel after they were brutally attacked?

"Nobody's right if everybody's wrong." Buffalo Springfield.

Expand full comment
deletedMar 15
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

"If you are interested in history you should really do some more research instead of repeating the misinformation and propaganda *against* the israelis. *Palestinians*

are so practiced at...being victims is in their education."

I hope that demonstrates to you the absurdity, futility, and immorality of reflexive partisan boilerplate emotionalism.

Biden is threading the needle between those who cry 'antisemitism' at any critique of Israeli policy and those who cry 'genocide' at any support for Israel. Friends of Israel and of Palestine need to unite with the Israelis and Palestinians who against all odds have struggled together against their own murderous government officials. Those brave and good people whose united struggle is elided by allies of each belligerent. Out of this unconscionable folly and human wreckage, to seize this moment of a seeming international disgust with both belligerents and moment of agreed impetus for negotiating sovereign and geographically autonomous Israeli and Palestinian states. This must end at the negotiating table. With clear minds, rational thought, and a forward looking process.

And yes, the first steps - , deliver of humanitarian aid, negotiate a ceasefire, release the hostages, stop arming the belligerents. Doing the hard work rather than indulging in the easy rants.

Expand full comment
deletedMar 15
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

Here, as it is a comments section, I am questioning your rhetoric. The conversation matters. What is said and how it is said matters. Pushing back against irrational habits of mind and emotionalism.

Expand full comment

"Netanyahu needs to hold his far-right coalition together to escape the corruption trial in which he is currently at risk,"

I sense a pattern here....

Expand full comment

Gee...it does ring a bell. Birds of a feather?

Expand full comment

Other critters come to mind, but yeah.....

Expand full comment

And they all survive by living on their hosts.

Expand full comment

Pattern indeed. Madame DeFarge still knitting

Expand full comment

Yes, pathetic, sad, mean histories under Netanyahu and Orban.

But they relate directly to these paid by U.S. taxpayers. All swore to defend the Constitution. All instead – for theocracy and/or the billionaire classes – have lied, perjured themselves, taken bribes, paraded vulgarity – or combinations thereof.

Q: can anyone getting Heather Cox Richardson’s “Letters from an American” note how the U.S.'s home-grown prove just as evil as those abroad? -- how none has ever referred to any humanities?

The list:

Samuel Alito, Amy Coney Barrett, Andy Biggs, Lauren Boebert, Katie Britt, Mo Brooks, Aileen Cannon, Andrew Clyde, James Comer, Matt Gaetz, Louie Gohmert, Neil Gorsuch, Paul Gosar, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Josh Hawley, Clay Higgins, Robert Hur, Mike Johnson, Jim Jordan, Brett Kavanaugh, Barry Loudermilk, Anna Luna, Nancy Mace, Mitch McConnell, Chip Roy, Steve Scalise, Elise Stefanik, Clarence Thomas, Donald Trump, Tommy Tuberville.

Expand full comment

And let's not forget the terrorism, Phil.

Bar 9/11 it's almost all home-grown evil.

Expand full comment

A case to be made for 9-11 as partly U.S.-responsible, Christopher.

The U.S. subsidized much of the Egyptian government in the years leading up to then. The U.S. funded and equipped the Egyptian military and trained its secret police and terror militia in propping up the most corrupt there.

Same story as the U.S. killing democracy in 1953 Teheran, installing the Shah, funding his thugs.

Young, professional Arabs from many surrounding countries (hello, bin Laden and fellow Saudis) were trying to set up health clinics and other public services for the working classes in Egypt (which included hundreds of thousands of poor Arabs from other regional countries). The needs to prop up the Cairo dictatorial regime meant secret police and terror militia persecution of these erstwhile reformers.

The rest, as they say, is history. But, hey, read of Smedley Butler, major general and commander of the U.S. Marine Corps two generations earlier revulsed at his own doing the same foul bidding from the Philippines to Central America then for U.S. WASPs, bankers, and Ivy League thugs.

Expand full comment

“House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said: ‘We need to be standing with Israel. We need to give our friends and allies our full support.’”

Indeed, Mike Johnson. Indeed.

Ukraine, Mike Johnson, is a friend and an ally.

The State of Israel is a friend and an ally. Bibi Netanyahu is proving to be neither.

Expand full comment

As far as I'm concerned, the Speaker has lost his right to comment. He needs to bring the bill to further support Ukraine to the floor immediately and stop playing games.

Expand full comment

I agree Ralph!!!Johnson needs to pass the bill-wasn’t 🇮🇱 Israel included in that?He doesn’t even know what he’s talking about!!!He says one ☝️ thing and then does another!!He has no right putting down Schumer!!

Expand full comment

Do they not see the blatant hypocricy, or are they beyond caring?

"Yeah, I'm a bald-faced hypocrite. So what."

Expand full comment

I noticed Chuck Schumer pushing against Bebe. That was a strong move ! Thank you for the background info about Orban, Hungary, and NATO. It's been a little complicated for me.

Expand full comment

It is a necessary move lest the Israelis forfeit what good-will they still enjoy and the U.S. gets tagged on the wrong end of reputation risk.

https://nedmcdletters.blogspot.com/2023/10/letter-180-post-107-in-israel-and-time.html

Devoted as I am to Judaism and Israël as a safe-haven for Jews, Netanyahu has taken this attack too far and, sadly, President Biden is complicit.

Expand full comment

I won't put much Blame on Biden. He's in a very tough , no win situation. While he is correct in making sure Israel has our support, I'm sure he wish he was dealing with someone who less Trump like - trying to hang on to the war in order to stay out of trouble.

Expand full comment

What disturbs me, for example, is that the U.S. is sending bunker-busting bombs for use in densely populated urban centers. We all get: those bombs collapse the tunnels. But at what dreadful cost? The saddest part for me is that Israël is transgressing some basic tenets of Judaism, (i.e., Leviticus 19 : 33-34).

🤔

Israël should have an arsenal adequate arsenal to pursue what is really a contentious urban counter-insurgency. Our open call on weapons has enabled Israël to pursue a search and destroy tactic in a situation that calls more for the patience of community policing.

😢

The consequences of Israeli and U.S, actions are, by now, clear and predictable. That makes both countries own those consequences, hence negating the original and necessary intent of destroying Hamas. The civilians of Gaza are tainted innocents. Nevertheless, they are innocents.

Expand full comment

P.S., yes, President Biden is in a fix. Hopefully, Senator Schumer's brave remarks will give President Biden the latitude to push back.

What people like me need to do is NOT to confuse the majority of Jews in Israël with demagogue leading them. Netanyahu may well be using retribution to keep himself out of the court-room. In any case, he has crossed the invisible line -- forewarned by the International Court of Justice -- from collateral carnage into war crimes.

Expand full comment

Mike Johnson (R-LA) said: “We need to give our friends and allies our full support.” Except Ukraine.

Hopefully, someone called him out on that.

But probably not.

Expand full comment

Netanyahoo, Trump, and Orban are ducks of a feather. It's great that Schumer has spoken as strongly as he has. It's too bad that so many folks equate criticism of Netanyahoo and of Israel's poor treatment of Palestinians as opposition to the State of Israel or as anti-Antisemitism. That's no different from those outside our country criticizing Trump, his policies, and our history of racism and slavery and considering it against America. They are right to do so!

I've long viewed Netanyahoo as the worst thing that's happened to Israel in my lifetime. Like Trump, he is an evil man. Spelling is intentional.

Expand full comment

People seem to forget that Bibi slept in Kushner's bed when he visited the corrupt Kushner family. TFFG embrace Bibi until Bibi didn't support his January 6th insurrection.

TFFG equates Israeli with Bibi. It seems most people in the US do.

Expand full comment

TFFG?

Expand full comment

Hungary needs to be shunted aside in NATO till it gets a government worthy of being defended by American lives. Stupid little penny-ante Eastern European "countries" that get too big for their britches need to be reminded where they exist in the food chain.

Expand full comment

"Stupid little penny-ante Eastern European "countries" "

As an EU resident, I'm no fan of Orbán and support the sanctions that the EU is taking against him, but as for Hungary, it is an older country than the United States, united long before Germany or Italy, with a strong and ancient culture. Orbán won't be there forever, but Hungary will always be in Europe, a country - formerly an Empire - that has historically had a stronger influence than its size supposes. Hungary, or its neighbours, can't be wished away and having had Big Brother Soviet Union strong-arming them for 40 years, they don't take kindly to bullying; they have played an important geostrategic role in Europe for more than a millennium. Hence the problems Orbán is causing. Managing him is therefore something both NATO and the EU must do. Turkey's president Erdogan is another problem within NATO, but Turkey is an important part of NATO strategy.

Expand full comment

There is no value in diminishing the importance of any nation. Still, Orban's Hungary is dangerously undermining the unity of Europe. It is possible that its point of weakness is the EU rather than NATO. Hungary is the third largest beneficiary of EU aid and, through its undemocratic behavior, jeopardizes that aid.

Expand full comment

The EU has severely curtailed the aid it gives to Hungary, as you imply. In response, Orbán is working hard to get right-wing populist MEPs elected to the EU Parliament in June, and turning his wrecking tactics on NATO. NATO was literally founded to contain an imperialist Russia, which at the time was operating through the Soviet Union and controlling a good chunk of Europe through the Warsaw Pact; and in 1956, Russian troops invaded Hungary to stop it from liberalising - so Orbán's closeness to Putin is especially egregious.

But my point is that bullying doesn't work in countries formerly in the Soviet orbit, as they have had enough of that already. Carrot-and-stick methods are more useful - the way used currently by both NATO and the EU. And of course, any of us with a vote in the EU elections must vote to keep populist right-wing parties out of the EU Parliament. This is as important to us as the November vote is to US citizens - in fact, both are about defending the same thing - a free, democratic, pluralistic vision of the world.

Expand full comment

Exactly. And Pressman waited until after Sweden joined NATO to press (pun intended) Hungary. The strategic long game has many moving parts, and voting for democracy in every election is essential.

Expand full comment

The US corporatocracy including Hollywood has strong ties with Hungary.

If the US put economic sanctions on Hungary Orban would back down rather quickly. In fact, he backed down with Sweden joining NATO when they made economic threats. Hungary needs NATO way more than NATO needs Hungary.

Expand full comment

More details on the Hollywood - Hungary nexus, please.

Expand full comment

Thanks, Sophie. A quick study of the Holy Roman Empire on both sides of the Danube is salutary.

Expand full comment

Hungary also has a universal health system that we could emulate. Be sure to tell your Republican friends!

Expand full comment

Recently, we have all learned the rules governing the admission of new countries to NATO (Finland & Sweden). What are the rules governing the expulsion of a country from NATO. Wikipedia has an interesting article about WITHDRAWAL from NATO, but there is no comparable article about EXPULSION from NATO.

Expand full comment
Mar 15·edited Mar 15

https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/official_texts_17120.htm

There is no expulsion language per se. There is a provision for talking to improve implementation. My best bet is draft a new agreement with everyone but Turkey and Hungary. As everyone but Turkey and Hungary announces a withdrawal, there is a one-year waiting period. To avoid ultra vires, the new treaty comes into effect only after the twelve months.

😵‍💫

A Memorandum of Agreement will bridge the old to the new Agreement. The members, except for Turkey and Hungary suspend all aid to N.A.T.O. sending normal military expenditures through Brussels (i.e., the E.U.). That arrangement will basically isolate Turkey and Hungary from day-1 to face the soviets solo. How long before those two play nice?

Expand full comment

Interesting suggestion (to this non-scholar of international agreements and politics). I would hope that these two countries would (will) eventually "play nice" and not prevent NATO from adding new countries (Ukraine eventually?) or agreeing about what constitutes a response to aggression requiring defensive action by all the allied NATO countries.

Expand full comment

There are 32 countries in NATO. Comments like this one by TC are what feed the "they are just puppets of the US" brigade.

Reminds me of clips of Trump shoving foreign delegates from jumped up "penny-ante countries" aside on stage in full camera. Don't look good mate.

Sometimes I think there could be a positive side to the USA leaving NATO (a distinct possibility imminently) — it would still be a formidable force, and it would be easier to sell it as a peace-keeping alliance.

Only sometimes I think that, because, well, not enough nukes.

Expand full comment

Until chump returns, god forbid. Go Joe

Expand full comment

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) call[ed Schumer's Netanyahu speech] "grotesque and hypocritical"; kind of like McConnell's endorsement of Trump for president.

Expand full comment

When I was a kid living in Connecticut so many years ago my family hosted a family from Hungary that had fled a Russian invasion! It now appears that invasion was successful.

Expand full comment

1956. Lots of Hungarians arrived in Australia.

Expand full comment

While out collecting nomination signatures for my senator, representative, and state representative (thousands have to be gathered to put them on the next primary ballot) I spoke to a neighbor who surprised me in saying he doesn't sign any petitions - just not willing to be involved. That seemed to be out of character, as he's pretty liberal and opinionated. But that attitude is becoming more common - voters are really tired of all the chaos, both here and abroad - and they're tuning out. I'm hoping that it will pass, and the voters will turn out in droves to re-elect Biden and keep us from going completely off the rails.

That same neighbor told me that a mutual friend, a man I've worked with in our local Scout troop for more than twenty years, is a diehard T**** supporter. Even more surprising, he's a veteran. I've lost a friend, and I am sad.

Expand full comment

The hoodwinked are everywhere

Expand full comment

We’ve all lost friends, whether we know it or not. I hear all the time: “let’s not talk politics,” and I reply, “politics is life; your politics is who you are,” “tell me an area of your life that politics doesn’t touch.” So when I discover that someone who seems “nice” is amenable to the misogyny, racism, xenophobia, lies, and stupidity of Trump enough to vote for him, or worse, to actively endorse him, I disengage from them. Luckily, so far, only one family member has joined the cult. And I know, should Trump become the dictator he so yearns to be, those people would gleefully watch as his jackboots rounded up all of us “libtards” for a camp somewhere in the Dakotas.

Expand full comment

“We need to be standing with Israel. We need to give our friends and allies our full support.”

Israel yes, Likud no.

Expand full comment

That comment cements the far-right's perspective to a T - associating the country with their dictator as one and the same. This is the perspective that needs to be broken, at home and abroad. The dictator leader needs to be singled out and held personally responsible for working against his country's best interests, and dissociated from the country over which he rules. He is not a king, only representational monarchs are associated with their countries in this way.

Expand full comment

Dear Professor Richardson,

I am probably one of many readers trying to grapple with the bind that is restraining President Biden from making military aid to Israel conditional. Although there is a rule that countries that receive U.S. military aid must report that they comply with the laws of war, I don’t think that is enough.

I wonder if President Biden is cornered by the upcoming election and the need to attract conservative and independent voters. He is also facing lobbying by AIPAC that can turn his political allies against him with campaign contributions. Meanwhile, the President has been ratcheting up his pressure on Israel. But the military aid combined with the U.S. vetoing U.N. resolutions calling for a permanent ceasefire is associating the U.S. with the increasingly toxic far-right Israeli government. The President’s incremental approach has already lost him much liberal support as seen by non-committed votes in the primaries.

I know that President Biden has been a long-time supporter of Israel. But the Israel of the past is not the same as that nation today. How do you see him breaking out of that bind and gaining back the voters he needs to hold off Trump, who is our Netanyahu but worse?

Yes, on October 7, 2023, Hamas ignited this conflagration but the combustible material was amassed during Israel’s swing rightward under the guidance of Netanyahu, among others. I read Tom Friedman and wonder about your assessment of the forces at play.

Expand full comment

Thank you, Gary. I too wish HCR would address this issue. Biden’s bind is real— you’ve described it as I see it too. She can’t be oblivious to it. Her uncritical support of Biden, given the political and strategic constraints and complexities he faces, isn’t helping us to understand what’s going on. Nor does it help Biden’s re-election bid or public image. His dilemma needs to be openly expressed and explored in an historical context as well as in terms of current real politik. HCR’s avoidance of this reality is puzzling and not helpful to us, her readers, or to our President and his administration. I hope she’ll address the situation openly and soon.

Expand full comment
deletedMar 15
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

Is anybody there “not the oppressor”. Only innocents are children, and they are taught very well, from very young.

Expand full comment

And trump would be?????

Expand full comment

Response was to Michele Miller.

Expand full comment

You have a twisted view of cause and effect.

Expand full comment