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Balloon Juice

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

Do we throw up our hands or do we roll up our sleeves? (hint, door #2)

Yeah, with this crowd one never knows.

The cruelty is the point; the law be damned.

Within six months Twitter will be fully self-driving.

Some judge needs to shut this circus down soon.

A norm that restrains only one side really is not a norm – it is a trap.

Republicans do not pay their debts.

Republicans want to make it harder to vote and easier for them to cheat.

Stand up, dammit!

Authoritarian republicans are opposed to freedom for the rest of us.

Wake up. Grow up. Get in the fight.

Their freedom requires your slavery.

How stupid are these people?

Anne Laurie is a fucking hero in so many ways. ~ Betty Cracker

I’d hate to be the candidate who lost to this guy.

… gradually, and then suddenly.

We are aware of all internet traditions.

“Everybody’s entitled to be an idiot.”

Only Democrats have agency, apparently.

Let’s not be the monsters we hate.

We need to vote them all out and restore sane Democratic government.

Fight them, without becoming them!

If America since Jan 2025 hasn’t broken your heart, you haven’t loved her enough.

Shallow, uninformed, and lacking identity

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Respite: Writing That Makes You Go “Damn….”

by Tom Levenson|  February 12, 20267:23 pm| 7 Comments

This post is in: Books, Open Threads, Respite

NB: This is a crosspost from Inverse Square–yesterday evening, in fact. (The world kinda collapsed in around me and I didn’t have the time to close the loop then.)

This has been a bad news day, at least for my particular obsessions. I’ll post in a bit about Trump’s King Cnut moment–today’s declaration that climate change ain’t a problem, and hence all US regulation that presumes it is will die. The decision to reverse the EPA’s endangerment finding about greenhouse gasses will be tested in court and may fail there (though the Corrupt Six on the SC are not, to put it mildly, jurists that inspire confidence in the rule of law). But the potential for truly awful consequences is there and I ain’t happy.

But…one of the things about being human is that other humans have lit candles against the night, and we can take joy in that light even though the darkness is there. So as I was thinking about this week’s respite essay it struck me that I imagined myself into being a writer long before I ever seriously applied ass to chair and took on the actual work required. And that imagining sustained me as I encountered the various ways the search for words becomes a tangled labyrinth in  which one struggles to find a path through.

What launched that imagining? Reading, of course, which is hardly a revelation–but in particular sudden moments in reading when the raw power of language suddenly manifested itself. So I offer this up in the hopes that y’all might use a break from present horrors and dwell in a moment when some aesthetic experience knocked the legs from under you.

Enough preamble…here’s the post:

————————————————-

I knew I had to be a writer long before I actually did the work…laying words down on the page and moving them about until I truly knew what I thought, felt, meant.

How did I know this?

Because of the way my body responded when I came across a passage that regardless of its content—the plot—would ring out, vibrating in my gut as much as my head.

I can remember a few of those moments now, half a century and more on. There was the time I was deep in the dumps at the end of my second year of college and for some reason picked up Middlemarch. School was over; this wasn’t for a course; I wasn’t a literature student. Just happened across a copy and for no reason I can remember decided that the thing I needed to do while feeling completely at right angles to myself was read a gazillion page nineteenth century novel.

Respite: Writing That Makes You Go "Damn...."

The passage that knocked me off my feet came when Eliot broke the fourth wall to demand the reader’s sympathy for Causabon as a person whose self-preserving myths were crumbling just as he needs them most. That short moment was brilliantly written and smart, emotionally and intellectually. My depression lifted—really, just about in the moment of my reading that page and a half. Why? Because I suddenly recognized that it was possible to use words as lenses through which to see the world in previously unsuspected ways.

Then there was that brief exchange in the middle of Rudyard Kipling’s Captain’s Courageous that, again, was only minimally involved in the plot, but still stopped me dead the first time I read that book as an adult. Here it is:

Boylike, Harvey imitated all the men by turns, till he had combined Disko’s peculiar stoop at the wheel, Long Jack’s swinging overhand when the lines were hauled, Manuel’s round-shouldered but effective stroke in a dory, and Tom Platt’s generous Ohio stride along the deck.

“’Tis beautiful to see how he takes to ut,” said Long Jack, when Harvey was looking out by the windlass one thick noon. “I’ll lay my wage an’ share ‘tis more’n half play-actin’ to him, an’ he consates himself he’s a bowld mariner. Watch his little bit av a back now!”

“That’s the way we all begin,” said Tom Platt. “The boys they make believe all the time till they’ve cheated ‘emselves into bein’ men, an’ so till they die—pretendin’ an’ pretendin’. I done it on the old Ohio, I know. Stood my first watch—harbor-watch—feelin’ finer’n Farragut. Dan’s full o’ the same kind o’ notions. See ‘em now, actin’ to be genewine moss-backs—very hair a rope-yarn an’ blood Stockholm tar.”

There we all are: cheating ourselves into our grown selves—and so until we die, pretending…

Image upon image and a moment of insight that makes this book something very much more than just a Boy’s Own tale. Early on I didn’t take any lessons from it; all it did was make make me want to put pen to paper (keys to screen?). It was just so good it made my fingers itch with desire make anything even remotely as explosive.

One more. This is what I read when I was trying to write for my college newspaper a remembrance of my father on the tenth anniversary of his death. I was stuck. What to say about someone I’d last known when I was ten?

Then I read this:

Indirectly, though, he [my brother] was present in many of our conversations. Once, for instance, my father asked me a series of questions that suddenly made me wonder whether I understood even my father whom I felt closer to than any man I have ever known. “You like to tell true stories, don’t you?” he asked, and I answered, “Yes, I like to tell stories that are true.”

Then he asked, “After you have finished your true stories sometime, why don’t you make up a story and the people to go with it.”

“Only then will you understand what happened and why.

“It is those we live with and love and should know who elude us.”

Respite: Writing That Makes You Go "Damn...." 1

That’s almost the end of Norman Maclean’s novella, “A River Runs Through It.” I read the whole story in one sitting. I literally could not put it down. It’s a beautiful piece of course, tightly written, plenty of incident, more than a little humor to leaven the foreshadowed tragedy. And what it says in lines quoted above was clearly relevant to the task I had found impossible before I played hooky with a little fiction, and an almost unbelievable straight shot afterwards.

But looking back, what that brief excerpt did to or in me was to see in the act of writing the most extraordinary power I could ever desire: the ability to make worlds, explore them, and in doing so, understand what happens and why.

So that’s it from me. How about you?

What encounters with art—any art, words, sound, image, movement, all of the above—have taken you out of yourself? Where do you go when you need a moment of joy, or a sense that we do have the power we need so desparately at the current moment in this vale of tears?

And yeah, this thread is open, as usual.

Images: John Singer Sargent, Man Reading, undated.

Edma Morisot (yup…Berthe’s sister), Fisherman by a river, undated.

Respite: Writing That Makes You Go “Damn….”Post + Comments (7)

Media Open Thread: Jack Ketch Lost the King’s Favour

by Anne Laurie|  February 12, 20266:15 pm| 42 Comments

This post is in: C.R.E.A.M., Media

… And he seemed like such a nice man, as long as you were on the right side of his axe!

According to the Financial Times, it was the Super Bowl photos.

[image or embed]

— Philip Bump (@pbump.com) February 7, 2026 at 7:09 PM

Looks like Will Lewis, the recently ousted WaPo publisher who couldn’t be bothered to attend the zoom meeting to fire a third of his staff, was being paid $3m open.substack.com/pub/genewein…

[image or embed]

— Catherine Rampell (@crampell.bsky.social) February 11, 2026 at 8:48 PM

Gene Weingarten, formerly at the WaPo, on “Three Million Reasons to Facepalm”:

… I just was shown a government document listing the 2025 salaries of Washington Post employees who were immigrants temporarily admitted to the United States under H1B visas. Their skills are considered “special.” It lists their base yearly incomes, before bonuses, overtime, golden parachutes, or what have you.

I scanned the list. The base salaries ranged from $60,000 for a designer to $223,000 for a vice president.

Then I hit the outlier. It was $ 3 million. It went to a “CEO.”…

That would be Will Lewis, the man whose two years of incompetent stewardship, editorial cowardice and less than ethical conduct brought The Washington Post to where it is today, a dreadfully diminished, professionally humiliated institution, drained overnight of nearly a third of its staff.

Three million dollars could have paid roughly 27 of the 300 reporters, photographers and editors who were sacked by Lewis before he took his own professional life and resigned under pressure. His resignation came in a particularly shabby fashion, after he was caught on camera hobnobbing with the swells at a red-carpet pre-Super Bowl event just hours after cold-bloodedly annihilating his entire sports department.

When he axed them, Lewis didn’t have the guts to face his employees. That job he designated to his executive editor. As the time of the Zoom meeting approached, Lewis ghosted his entire staff in a spectacular burst of shame and/or fear. He shambled away to a different office. He didn’t even answer the phone.

Who could have predicted such a graceless fall from grace? Surely no one would expect that of the man who was Rupert Murdoch’s toady, credibly accused of having directed the coverup of the phone hacking scandal that brought down The News of The World, in London.

But Jeff Bezos gave this guy $3 million a year, plus whatever sweet separation clause he might have. If you add the the $75 million Bezos flushed away to finance the “Melania” movie in order to suck Donald Trump’s ample posterior — why, you wouldn’t have had to fire anyone and destroy the newspaper, at all!…

(Click through, if only to see the header cartoon in full.)

show full post on front page

He had a mandate to get the Post a different readership & both the incumbent & the prospective readerships vetoed it. The moves he made didn't work, sure, but if there were an established news leadership paradigm that did work, they'd be best practice already

[image or embed]

— Chatham Harrison dba TRUMP DELENDUS EST (@chathamharrison.bsky.social) February 9, 2026 at 12:50 PM


Jack Ketch Has Lost the King's Favour

Newspaper biz is unforgiving at best & Bezos couldn't bear to lose money on a paper that made him feel bad, I don't think it's more complicated than that

— Chatham Harrison dba TRUMP DELENDUS EST (@chathamharrison.bsky.social) February 9, 2026 at 12:51 PM

A lot of people said Bezos sent him to blow it up but that doesn't capture it IMHO. Bezos didn't want to kill WaPo, he wanted it to work correctly (by agreeing with his correct opinions) but he couldn't figure out how to make it do that so they ended up hitting stuff with hammers to see what happens

— Chatham Harrison dba TRUMP DELENDUS EST (@chathamharrison.bsky.social) February 9, 2026 at 1:02 PM

The Washington Post layoffs were a bigger bloodbath than you thought. New figures reveal 44 to 47.5 percent of the paper's newsroom was eliminated during last week's cuts.

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— Washingtonian (@washingtonian.com) February 9, 2026 at 2:37 PM

Will Lewis, the stubbled bumbler brought in by Jeff Bezos to lay waste to the Washington Post, is gone. Lewis announced over the weekend that he was resigning as the newspaper’s CEO and publisher. But mission accomplished! Not since King George III razed the White House has a Brit so fucked up our nation’s capital…

Lewis flees the Post the same week that executive editor Matt Murray disclosed that 300 or so employees, estimated to be a third of the staff, were canned. The sports and books sections were euthanized, and local and international reporting desks were severely gutted. Previous moves had already left the opinion page without rationality. (This dumbass editorial on Billie Eilish at the Grammys captures the sad state of Post commentary.) There really is no clear path forward for the Post to maintain relevancy even in its home market, let alone recapturing past glories. But what glories they were!…

Bezos did nothing in June 2024 when it came out that Lewis, who’d worked for Rupert Murdoch before taking the Post gig, had tried to quash the Post’s reporting on his role in covering up alleged criminal behavior at Murdoch-owned tabloids. But the Financial Times reported that Bezos found Lewis’s post-firings socializing at the Super Bowl “callous.” And now he’s gone…

Media Open Thread: Jack Ketch Lost the King’s FavourPost + Comments (42)

Jon Ossoff – Please Take Time to Watch This Fantastic Speech

by WaterGirl|  February 12, 20266:00 pm| 27 Comments

This post is in: 2026 Elections, Democratic Politics, Dems Fighting Back, Elections, Politics

Jon Ossoff is one of the candidates we’ll be supporting this cycle with our fundraising.  This speech is a great example of why.

Months ago, we talked with Jon Ossoff’s campaign about making an arrangement for all of our BJ fundraising to go toward field work and not advertising, consultants, etc.

Not ready to start our fundraising for him just yet, but if some of you guys are wanting to start donating now, I can put up a link to our thermometer so anything you give will go toward field work.  Let me know in the comments?

It will be a tough fight in Georgia this year – even though I can’t think of any senator who is better than he is.  There are a few who are tied for “damn, we are so lucky to have this person in the senate”.

We don’t normally fundraise any more for candidates who are well-funded, but Ossoff is their big Senate target to knock off in 2026, so it seems worth it to me if our funds can go to organizing and boots on the ground.

Feel free to share you thoughts in the comments!

Jon Ossoff – Please Take Time to Watch This Fantastic SpeechPost + Comments (27)

Open Thread: Judge Rules Mark Kelly > Pete Hegseth

by Anne Laurie|  February 12, 20263:55 pm| 47 Comments

This post is in: Activist Judges!, Military, Open Threads, Trump Crime Cartel, Voting Rights

There we go:
Judge blocks Pentagon chief Hegseth’s censure of Sen. Kelly over troops video, for now
www.cnbc.com/2026/02/12/k…

[image or embed]

— FreedomFighter (@thirty06.bsky.social) February 12, 2026 at 1:14 PM

Judge says Hegseth is unlawfully retaliating against Sen. Mark Kelly over ‘illegal orders’ video and holds his action against the senator, including reducing his last military rank, which would lower the pay he receives as a retired Navy captain.
www.cnn.com/2026/02/12/p…

[image or embed]

— The Bishop 🇬🇧🇪🇺🇺🇦🇨🇦🏴‍☠️💙 (@fritzbischoff.bsky.social) February 12, 2026 at 2:14 PM

So rightly humiliating for Hegseth.
“Rather than trying to shrink First Amendment liberties… Hegseth and his fellow Defendants might reflect and be grateful for the wisdom and expertise that retired service members have brought our Nation over the past 250 years” www.nytimes.com/2026/02/12/u…

[image or embed]

— Mark Follman (@markfollman.bsky.social) February 12, 2026 at 2:00 PM


Gift link: “Judge Temporarily Blocks Hegseth from Punishing Kelly for Video”:

… Judge Richard J. Leon of the District Court for the District of Columbia wrote in a 29-page opinion that the Defense Department’s move to discipline Mr. Kelly, a retired Navy captain and former astronaut, ran roughshod over his freedom of speech. Judge Leon barred Mr. Hegseth and the Pentagon from taking any steps to reduce the senator’s retirement rank and pay, or using the findings against Mr. Kelly in a criminal proceeding.

“Rather than trying to shrink the First Amendment liberties of retired service members, Secretary Hegseth and his fellow Defendants might reflect and be grateful for the wisdom and expertise that retired service members have brought to public discussions and debate on military matters in our Nation over the past 250 years,” he wrote. “If so, they will more fully appreciate why the Founding Fathers made free speech the first Amendment in the Bill of Rights!”

The blunt ruling came after a grand jury in Washington rejected an extraordinary attempt by federal prosecutors in Washington to secure a criminal indictment against Mr. Kelly and five other Democratic lawmakers who together released a video in November directed at members of the military and intelligence community.

show full post on front page

The message enraged President Trump, who accused the Democrats of “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!”

The decision on Thursday came after Mr. Kelly sued Mr. Hegseth and the Defense Department for censuring him and initiating a military review of the senator’s public statements that could result in a reduction of his retirement rank and pension…

… Judge Leon, a nominee of President George W. Bush, wrote that Mr. Kelly was acting within his role as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, exercising oversight authority over the defense secretary, and that attempts to penalize him through military channels appeared to be a tactic to skirt review by the courts…

Hegseth has radicalized Richard Leon, the most conservative partisanly Republican judge not appointed by Trump I've ever met.

[image or embed]

— National Security Counselors 🕵 (@nationalsecuritylaw.org) February 12, 2026 at 1:50 PM

In addition to ripping Hegseth to shreds and ruling for Sen Kelly, Judge Leon communicates a sort of direct popular outrage with different unusual stylistic passages in his opinion, including the line from Subterranean Homesick Blues "you dont need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows."

— Harry Litman (@harrylitman.bsky.social) February 12, 2026 at 2:02 PM

Yesterday:

Sen. Slotkin: "At the direction of President Trump, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro attempted to persuade a grand jury to indict us on criminal charges. If things had gone a different way, we'd be preparing for arrest. Fortunately, her attempt failed."

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— Home of the Brave (@ofthebraveusa.bsky.social) February 11, 2026 at 1:38 PM

Sen. Slotkin: " I appreciate Sen. Tillis saying something. He's gone further than anybody else. But it's a sad moment when anonymous grand jurors, citizens called at random in Washington, D.C., have more bravery to uphold basic rule of law than some of our Senate colleagues."

[image or embed]

— Home of the Brave (@ofthebraveusa.bsky.social) February 11, 2026 at 3:20 PM

I expect Sen. Slotkin will have more to say about today’s ruling, but she’s a little busy right now…

SLOTKIN: So the fact we have ICE agents saying out loud to people they're trying to arrest that 'we're gonna put you in a database,' they are making that up?
LYONS: We do not do that

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) February 12, 2026 at 1:16 PM

Sen. Slotkin: If the President of the United States gets you on the phone, and says 'I need you to physically deploy around polling stations,' you will say no?
ICE Director: There is no reason for us to deploy now
Slotkin: Then you should say no, right?

[image or embed]

— Headquarters (@headquartersnews.bsky.social) February 12, 2026 at 2:43 PM

Open Thread: Judge Rules Mark Kelly > Pete HegsethPost + Comments (47)

CatGPT Open Thread

by Rose Judson|  February 12, 20262:12 pm| 44 Comments

This post is in: Cat Blogging, Open Threads, Pet Blogging

The Horrors come thicker and faster. In my personal corner of the world, the pressing issue is AI and the big chunk it took out of my income over the last six months. Contra the advice from this AI startup founder* (written with LLM assistance, natch), I am planning to go all-in on the other AI: Animal Intelligence.

behold, Monty the oracle

I guess I could also call him Clawed, or Purrplexity (Gemeowni is right out). Unlike your sycophantic chatbots, when I ask him to do a task for me, he baps me in the face. He also doesn’t burn a small city’s worth of power when executing tasks. Figured you all would want to know about this important breakthrough.

Open thread.

 

*If you want, you can read an annotated version of this piece by professional AI scold Ed Zitron, here.

CatGPT Open ThreadPost + Comments (44)

Fighting Global Authoritarianism, Inc.

by Betty Cracker|  February 12, 202611:09 am| 163 Comments

This post is in: C.R.E.A.M., Domestic Politics, Foreign Affairs, Open Threads, Politics, Republican Venality, All we want is life beyond the thunderdome, Decline and Fall

In comments the other day, we were laughing about John’s recent misinterpretation of a BREAKING NEWS ALERT during the Olympics and musing about the personal joy we will individually experience and the spontaneous street parties, etc., that will eventually occur When It Happens.

That sort of daydreaming is harmless enough. But as we all know, the rancid orange fart cloud is merely an avatar for a much larger constellation of problems, and those problems won’t dissipate when their current mascot joins the Choir Invisible.

Josh Marshall at TPM published a piece yesterday about the global authoritarian movement that Trump is arguably leading right now but that will persist when Piggy hoofs it to hell. It includes Gulf princelings like Jared Kushner’s bone saw pal, European revanchist governments, post-Soviet autocracies and U.S.-based far-right tech and media oligarchs who control major communication channels.

The whole thing is worth reading, so here’s a gift link. Below is an excerpt:

I’ve discussed this concept in the past. So I don’t want to belabor the point of its existence. I want to point out how its forces are arrayed against civic democracy in the U.S. — quite apart from Donald Trump. This wasn’t always the case. There didn’t use to be so many U.S. billionaires. And they characteristically had economic views which aimed to preserve their wealth. But they were not clearly on the right in the way they are now. They have moved an increasingly anti-civic democratic direction as the scale of their wealth and their identity as a class has exploded. They also weren’t so increasingly allied with primitive economy petro-states of the Gulf.

The point is that they will exist no matter what happens to Trump. They command vast economic resources; they run the governments in many countries where the government never changes; they have deep tentacles into the U.S. political system and many of its key players are from the U.S. Trump didn’t create this movement precisely. But his role in global politics over the last decade solidified it as a self-conscious group and congealed it together. Any movement of civic democratic revival in the U.S. will be menaced by its continued existence. Now is the time to think about how a revived and revitalized civic democratic movement in the U.S. could combat it and avoid being destroyed by it.

Emphasis mine.

Piggy is flailing politically and deteriorating physically. He’s grasping at a “legacy” by gilding White House surfaces, slapping his accursed name on edifices and overseeing the construction of a garish ballroom.

But his real legacy is a more consolidated global authoritarian movement that assembled under his banner. Marshall asks how a revitalized civic democratic movement might combat it, but I think the answer is implied in the bolded sentence above, which is to end its existence as a threat.

Figuring out how to do that is above my paygrade, but taxing billionaires out of existence seems like an essential component, along with reestablishing a global democratic movement, hopefully with less cynicism and a more sincere commitment to human rights. I have no idea if that’s possible, but defining the opponent and understanding their weak points is a good start.

Whether deliberately or not Trump strengthened that alliance, but it’s possible his buffoonish flailing might provide opportunities to undermine it. I think Senator Ossoff is onto something here:

Ossoff: We were told that MAGA was for working-class Americans. But this is a government of, by, and for the ultra-rich. It’s the wealthiest Cabinet ever. This is the Epstein class. They are the elites they pretend to hate.

[image or embed]

— Acyn (@acyn.bsky.social) February 7, 2026 at 2:57 PM

What Ossoff says has the advantage of being true, but I have no idea if the message will break through. We’ll learn more as we live through these interesting times.

Open thread.

Fighting Global Authoritarianism, Inc.Post + Comments (163)

Do We Have a Real Shot at the KY Senate Seat?

by WaterGirl|  February 12, 202610:05 am| 71 Comments

This post is in: 2026 Elections, Elections, Open Threads

youtube.com/watch?v=cSiD…Here's Andy Barr with his embarrassing racist ad drop.Keep in mind, the Republican primary includes Daniel Cameron, the black McConnell protégé.Andy playing the Klan angle. @eddsmitty.bsky.social: get a load of this.

— PaulaEquine (@paulaequine.bsky.social) 2026-02-08T11:49:27.913Z

 

*****

BJ peeps, I have two questions for you.

Do we, in this cycle,  have a real shot at the Kentucky Senate seat?

What kind of paper is the Kentuck Lantern?  (I am impressed by this article.)

In a 30-second ad released over the weekend, U.S. Rep. Andy Barr — running for Sen. Mitch McConnell’s Senate seat — is pictured on a farm. The sun is shining. There is a barn and an American flag behind him. “You know what DEI really stands for?” he says, smiling. “Dumb, evil, indoctrination.”

The scene shifts and we see a black man in a crowd. He is wearing a Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. t-shirt and holding up a sign that reads “Stay woke America.”

“Woke liberals spew it,” Barr says, “corporate losers fall for it, but thanks to Trump, America is rejecting that trash.”

An interesting choice for the Barr campaign to release the ad on the heels of President Donald Trump’s racist social media post…

[the article goes on about the racist post bout the Obamas, and then it continues]

The Barr ad was likely already scheduled for release, but ads can be pulled. The ad ran and continues to run. The YouTube version already has 297,000 views as of this writing, and it must be noted that we are now a decade deep into Trumpism and Trump himself, whose presidential aspirations were initially fueled by his insistence that Obama did not have an American birth certificate and was, therefore, not American.

It was a lie. It was racist hogwash. It also launched Trump from elderly white billionaire New York City playboy reality show host, known for his bankruptcies and stiffing of contractors, straight into the White House.

The high spark of low standards and even lower morality.

[talks more about T’s lies about Obama and his birth certificate, etc, and then it continues]

Watching Barr’s most recent ad inflaming white hysteria, we see that we are still there: stuck in the past, stuck in racist tropes, stuck in an immoral morass of bold bigotry. The last words of his 30-second ad for a U.S. Senate seat are, “I’m Andy Barr. It’s not a sin to be white, it’s not against the law to be male, and it shouldn’t be disqualifying to be a Christian. I’m Andy Barr, and I approve this message to give woke liberals something else to cry about.”

I am white and have never heard that it is a sin for me to be white. I have yet to see anyone crying. Is there a law somewhere against being male? Funny, I can’t seem to locate it. And when did it become disqualifying to be Christian? The answer is … drumroll, please … never. What a fantastical farce.

I watched Barr’s ad more than a dozen times, and the central message seems to be: I am a white Christian man who will make liberals cry.

That’s it?

Is this a winning message for Kentucky Republican primary voters? Because it sure looks like this — not the economy or grocery prices, not the cost of health insurance, not education, not public safety or taxes or conservatism — is what Barr is banking on.

We often hear that, just because someone voted for Donald Trump, it does not mean that they are racist, that they are simply willing to ignore that the president is openly racist because he is a conservative doing conservative things. But this is also a lie. Conservatives, by name and nature, conserve things, and what we have witnessed over the last year of the Trump presidency with the destruction of everything from the East Wing of the White House to the U.S. Agency for International Development and other American institutions via DOGE, there is nothing conservative about him. There is only the power to destroy. And the racism. Always the racism.

In this great article, this is my favorite part.

It is 2026. Barr runs an ad in which he appears to believe simply being white and male qualifies him to be a United States senator.

The president posts a video about voting machines depicting the Obamas as apes.

In our statehouse, we are now years into fights by our mostly white, mostly male GOP supermajority to rid our institutions of any whiff of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI).

The racist spigot is wide open.

The moral rot is deep.

So, same question down here that I posed above.

Do we, in this cycle,  have a real shot at the Kentucky Senate seat?

Open thread.

Do We Have a Real Shot at the KY Senate Seat?Post + Comments (71)

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