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Give the craziest people you know everything they want and hope they don’t ask for more? Great plan.

It’s easy to sit in safety and prescribe what other people should be doing.

I’d try pessimism, but it probably wouldn’t work.

In my day, never was longer.

When do the post office & the dmv weigh in on the wuhan virus?

Spilling the end game before they can coat it in frankl luntz-approved dogwhistles.

Nothing worth doing is easy.

Roe isn’t about choice, it’s about freedom.

Anyone who bans teaching American history has no right to shape America’s future.

When someone says they “love freedom”, rest assured they don’t mean yours.

I was confident that someone would point it out and thought why not me.

It’s all just conspiracy shit beamed down from the mothership.

I’m sure you banged some questionable people yourself.

“Can i answer the question? No you can not!”

Schmidt just says fuck it, opens a tea shop.

Republicans can’t even be trusted with their own money.

Some judge needs to shut this circus down soon.

Is it negotiation when the other party actually wants to shoot the hostage?

“Why isn’t this Snickers bar only a nickle?”

If you are in line to indict donald trump, stay in line.

I didn’t have alien invasion on my 2023 BINGO card.

… among the most cringeworthy communications in the history of the alphabet!

It’s a doggy dog world.

Whatever happens next week, the fight doesn’t end.

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You are here: Home / Archives for Books / Nixonland

Nixonland

Call the Senate

by David Anderson|  June 14, 20176:50 am| 24 Comments

This post is in: Nixonland, Open Threads

My family finally moved from Pittsburgh to North Carolina. That means I am happy. It also means I am staring at 100+ cardboard boxes to unpack and re-sort.

So blogging will be light.

But even as it is light, continue to call the Senate:

When you call a Senate office, ask to speak to the relevant Health Legislative Assistant. Hey look, a list of staffer names! 18/ pic.twitter.com/UQ0yZNaSxc

— Ben Wikler (@benwikler) June 8, 2017

The ask is simple — no bill that leads to coverage losses.

Call the SenatePost + Comments (24)

Tell me the story please

by David Anderson|  April 13, 20174:02 am| 27 Comments

This post is in: Nixonland, Open Threads, All we want is life beyond the thunderdome, Nobody could have predicted, Not Normal

I’m guilty of my daily schradenfreude as I fire up Twitter every morning before my coffee for tweets like this:

Last 72 hrs:
1 Russian hacker arrested in Spain.
2 Page had FISA warrant on him.
3 Manafort received $1.2M payment from pro-Putin stooge. https://t.co/FlPPhXkr6R

— Michael Ian Black (@michaelianblack) April 12, 2017

Michael Reynolds, in comments at Outside the Beltway, has an interesting take on this:

Drip. . . drip. . . drip. . .

As a story guy this feels on an intuitive level like there’s a story-teller here. The narrative has a rhythm. This source waited until the fauxtaliation news was done and then dropped the next piece of the puzzle on the table. There’s at least one Deep Throat at work, is there an uber-Throat pacing this whole thing, parceling out the minimum necessary to keep the story alive?

It’s hard to war-game this since the Trump administration is hopelessly incompetent. Have they decided on their ‘John Dean’ yet? Do they have a designated patsy? Manafort is probably going down, Mike Flynn as well. They have Carter Page by the balls, but does he know anything or is he, as the FSB evidently decided, just ‘an idiot?’ Who’s going to roll over for the FBI?…

So what’s next?

And is schradenfreude a treatable condition?

Open thread

Tell me the story pleasePost + Comments (27)

A Prediction for the SCOTUS and the next GOP trifecta

by David Anderson|  October 18, 20167:34 am| 153 Comments

This post is in: Election 2016, Nixonland, All we want is life beyond the thunderdome, Blatant Liars and the Lies They Tell, Good News For Conservatives, hoocoodanode, Nobody could have predicted

Let’s assume that Hillary Clinton appoints at least one new net liberal to the Supreme Court during her term in office. In that scenario, the minimal composition would be five center left jurists, one idiosyncratic moderate conservative, one corporate conservative who has a fascination with “sovereign dignitude” and a pair of justices who think Lochner should be good law. The following scenario also works if any of the last four is replaced by another center left judge.

Let us assume that to get to that point it is fairly like that the Senate will go nuclear and abolish the filibuster as McCain indicated (and since walked back) that the Republicans consider a left of center Supreme Court majority to be fundamentally illegitimate even if it resulted from Democrats winning a lot of presidential elections in a generation or more.

Let us assume that at some point in the future there is a GOP trifecta. Let us also assume that a significant chunk of the future GOP’s base will be made up of people who strongly desire either an economically or culturally reactionary court.

With those assumptions, the following prediction is very easy to make.

When there is a GOP trifecta in Washington and a liberal leaning Supreme Court, the Supreme Court will see an increased number of justices equal to the difference between liberal and reactionary justices plus one.

A Prediction for the SCOTUS and the next GOP trifectaPost + Comments (153)

Battle Flag Acquisition Strategies

by Betty Cracker|  June 23, 20156:41 pm| 107 Comments

This post is in: Crazification Factor, Election 2008, Election 2010, Election 2012, Election 2014, Election 2016, Fables Of The Reconstruction, Lindsey Graham's Fee Fees, Nixonland, Organizing & Resistance, Politics, Post-racial America, Republican Stupidity, Republican Venality, War, Women's Rights Are Human Rights, Assholes, Decline and Fall, Fuck Yeah!, General Stupidity, Meth Laboratories of Democracy, Our Failed Political Establishment, Rare Sincerity, Riveted By The Sociological Significance Of It All, Sociopaths, The Decadent Left In Its Enclaves On The Coasts, The Dirty F-ing Hippies Were Right

battle-flags_edited-1

Early this morning, I was doing some research on the endurance of corporate culture, studying how sometimes the spirit of a smaller, acquired firm can permeate the larger, acquiring organization. It’s not unusual for a big behemoth to acquire a scrappy smaller company solely for the purpose of infusing the moribund giant with fresh blood, and when the companies’ interests align, it can create an unstoppable marketplace force…for a while.

With that dynamic still on my mind, I moseyed over to Booman’s place and read a post that hit upon something that has been bothering me about the focus on the rebel flag in the wake of the domestic terrorist massacre in Charleston:

But the focus on the Confederate Flag can have an unfortunate side effect. What, after all, does that flag mean when it doesn’t simply mean white supremacy?

It’s meaning in those cases in nearly identical to the meaning of the modern conservative movement. It’s about disunion, and hostility to the federal government, and state’s rights. It’s anti-East Coast Establishment and anti-immigrant. It’s about an idealized and false past and preserving outworn and intolerant ideas. It’s about a perverse version of a highly provincial and particularized version of (predominantly) Protestant Christianity that has evolved to serve the interests of power elites in the South. It’s about an aggrieved sense of false persecution where white men are playing on the hardest difficulty setting rather than the easiest, and white Christians are as threatened as black Muslims and gays and Jews.

“Those blacks are raping our women and they have to go.”

That’s what the Confederate Flag is all about, but it’s also the basic message of Fox News and the whole Republican Party since the moment that Richard Nixon promised us law and order.

But it’s not black people who have to go.

It’s this whole Last Cause bullshit mentality that fuels our nation’s politics and lines the pockets of Ted Cruz just as surely as it has been lining the pockets of Walmart executives.

Today, maybe the governor down there had an epiphany. Maybe this massacre was the last straw. But, tomorrow, we’ll all be right back where we began with Congress acting like an occupying Confederate Army.

If we solve a symbolic problem and leave the rest untouched, then what will really change?

You can’t bury the Confederate Flag without, at the same time, burying the Conservative Movement.

Let’s get on with it.

He’s right. For many white people, the rebel flag represented moldy old myths about the antebellum South. But think about how nicely that mythology dovetailed with the lies about the pre-Civil Rights era that paleocons like Pat Buchanan tell themselves.

Like a moribund corporation, the GOP acquired Confederate culture with the Southern strategy, harnessing the racism in the South and its echo nationwide to build the present day Republican Party. That’s why Ronald Reagan launched his presidential campaign in Philadelphia, Mississippi. That’s why an always-wrong, New York City-born legacy hire who is relentlessly eager to send other people’s kids off to die in glorious causes is tweeting nonsense that his ancestors would find…puzzling:

The Left’s 21st century agenda: expunging every trace of respect, recognition or acknowledgment of Americans who fought for the Confederacy.

— Bill Kristol (@BillKristol) June 23, 2015

So, the rebel flag should come down in South Carolina and every other state capitol in the former Confederacy, and with surprising (to me) swiftness, it looks like it will. That will be more than a symbolic victory; it will be the partial righting of a very old wrong.

But there’s a danger in “otherizing” the South in this context. It’s not wrong to condemn its blinkered myth-making and prideful backwardness, but there’s a hazard in moral preening within and outside of Dixie, a risk of declaring a tidy victory when the dinosaurs in the state capitols of the former Confederacy finally sink into the tarpit they’ve thrashed in for 150 years.

The risk is that we’ll lose focus on the modern day “Congress acting like an occupying Confederate Army,” as Booman put it. At its core, the Southern strategy was an attempt to roll back progress by hitching the anti-New Dealers’ star to the creaky old Confederate wagon. Its organizers weren’t all or even mostly slack-jawed yokels waving rebel flags. They included a fiery libertarian business man from Phoenix, a glib B-movie pitchman who hailed from Northern Illinois and a twitchy, paranoid Quaker from California.

To achieve true victory, we have to finally drive a stake through the heart of the Southern strategy, not just the Confederacy. So let’s make expunging the rebel flag from the public square the opening salvo in a larger battle to take our country back. Yes, that’s right, TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK. With no lies and decaying myths about what that means. The flag that represents it isn’t spotless. Its founding was rooted in slavery, genocide and the oppression of women. But unlike its dying counterpart, this flag is worth saving.

Battle Flag Acquisition StrategiesPost + Comments (107)

Gas and nuts

by David Anderson|  January 3, 20156:29 pm| 31 Comments

This post is in: Anderson On Health Insurance, C.R.E.A.M., Nixonland, Tax Policy, All we want is life beyond the thunderdome, Nobody could have predicted

The ‘nut’ in a family budget is the bare minimal amount of money that has to go out the door every period to minimize negative consequences.   It is the short term mostly fixed costs.   This concept of the nut is very important in thinking about presidential popularity and gas prices as I don’t think it is gas prices per se that can drive presidential popularity but the gap between the nut and total family income which has a strong influence on presidential popularity.  The post-nut gap is a more restrictive definition of income than disposable personal income.

In my family, the nut is the sum of the mortgage, gas, electric, student loans, car insurance, life insurance payment, food, gas for the cars, daycare, car loan, and bus passes.  If my family was only meeting the nut, life would be tough, and it would only work as long as nothing goes wrong.  It is a stressful life to have very little space between the current nut and total income.

show full post on front page

I am fortunate.  Right now, my family makes significantly more than our current nut.  That means I can trade convenience for cash, it means that if my almost three year old needs a nap and won’t shut his eyes, I can take him for a drive so I can get a cup of coffee and burn $1.50 in gas without concern.  It means that when my six year old brings home the flier from her dance school about a summer ballet camp, the only constraint on her participation is if we have already committed to having her spend that week with Grandma and Grandpa.

Creating space between the nut and income makes life much more enjoyable and easier.  It makes economic growth and success feel real and tangible.

Creating space can occur by bringing in new income, although we are in an economy where wages are moving roughly at the rate of inflation and there is still slack in the labor market so big overtime hour are not available, or cutting back on the quasi-fixed costs.  Loan payments rolling off or taxes being cut is a way to decrease the nut while holding income constant.  Finally, the actual costs of the nut items could be reduced.  The two common reductions are lower interest rates on debt, especially variable rate index debt (although lower interest rates tends to be correlated with worse economic times) or through the reduction of gasoline prices as gas consumption is very inelastic in the short term.

So when gas prices go down and everything else is held roughly equal, gas consumption stays roughly constant for most people, but all of a sudden, they are seeing an extra $20 or $30 per paycheck that is now unclaimed by the nut…. and that money can be spent on the nice little extras of life or a good pizza on Saturday night.

 

Gas and nutsPost + Comments (31)

Water Flowing Underground

by $8 blue check mistermix|  November 14, 20139:18 am| 70 Comments

This post is in: Nixonland

My only quarrel with Rick Perlstein is that he’s 3% high in his estimate:

The reactionary percentage of the electorate in these United States has been relatively constant since McCarthy’s day; I’d estimate it as hovering around 30 percent. A minority, but one never all that enamored of the niceties of democracy—they see themselves as fighting for the survival of civilization, after all. So, generation after generation, they’ve ruthlessly exploited the many points of structural vulnerability in the not-very-democratic American political system to get their way.

The whole thing is worth a read, because Perlstein does his usual good job reviewing wingnut history.

That said, now that we have the diagnosis, doctor, what’s the treatment? This is where we’re all struggling.

Water Flowing UndergroundPost + Comments (70)

Obviously, he needs the long-form vault copy “original” of his birth certificate, certified, with the raised seal

by Kay|  August 22, 201311:45 am| 172 Comments

This post is in: Activist Judges!, Kochsuckers, Nixonland, Readership Capture, #notintendedtobeafactualstatement, Good News For Conservatives, I Can't Believe We're Losing to These People, Meth Laboratories of Democracy

Back to North Carolina again, with new developments in the student voter + candidate story:

Within hours of Gov. Pat McCrory signing a Republican-backed bill this week making sweeping changes to the state’s voting laws, local elections boards in two college towns made moves that could make it harder for students to vote.
The Pasquotank County Board of Elections on Tuesday barred an Elizabeth City State University senior from running for city council, ruling his on-campus address couldn’t be used to establish local residency..

William Skinner, the panel’s lone Democrat, sharply dissented with the other board members. He argued King had clearly shown ECSU was his permanent residence, supported by his right to vote in local elections. He urged the board to dismiss Gilbert’s challenge. “If you are able to vote, you should be able to run for office, barring any restrictions against you, which we have found none,”

The Elizabeth City State University senior who wants to run for city council is Montravias King:

images mk

King said he plans to continue to run for office, and considers Gilbert’s challenge part of a broader Republican effort to discourage student voting. “I don’t see this as personal, I see this as an attack on college students across North Carolina,” he said.

The County Board of Elections made the decision to disqualify Mr. King first as a voter and then as a candidate based on residency. Mr. King has now appealed that decision to the state board of elections:

Ms, Kim Strach
Executive Director, State Board of Elections
Mr. Don Wright
Counsel for State Board of Elections
Dear Ms. Strach and Mr. Wright:
Please find enclosed the appeal by Mr. Montravias King from the August 20th order of the Pasquotank County Board of Elections disqualifying Mr. King as a candidate based on residency. From my telephone conversation with Mr. Wright, it is my understanding that the Pasquotank County Board has been directed to not print ballots for the October election until the State Board decides the merits of this appeal. If my understanding is incorrect or the status of Pasquotank’s ballot printing changes, please let me know immediately so I can file a motion to stay the Pasquotank’s Board’s order pending these proceedings.

Excerpt from appeal:

The North Carolina Constitution Article VI § 1 guarantees that “Every person born in the United States and every person who has been naturalized, 18 years of age, and possessing the qualifications set out in this Article, shall be entitled to vote at any election by the people of the State, except as herein otherwise provided.”
Article VI § 2(1) states: Residence period for State elections. Any person who has resided in the State of North Carolina for one year and in the precinct, ward, or other election district for 30 days next preceding an election, and possesses the other qualifications set out in this Article, shall be entitled to vote at any election held in this State.

Equally fundamental is the right of a qualified voter to run for elected office. Under
North Carolina Constitution Article VI § 6, “[e]very qualified voter in North Carolina who is 21 years of age, except as in this Constitution disqualified, shall be eligible for election by the people to office.”

Candidate Montravias King is a rising senior at Elizabeth City State University who has resided on campus since the fall of2009 and who has been an active member of the college community. Ruling on a challenge to Mr. King’s candidacy based on residency, the Board held that a dormitory address could not be considered a permanent address. Combining the Board’s conclusions of law, the Board’s ruling can be summarized as “We do not know where Mr. King resides because he cannot claim to reside here.” The Board’s conclusions oflaw are illogical. Under their conclusions, any student who abandons their former home and goes to a dormitory would be completely barred from establishing domicile anywhere. The Board’s conclusions of law classifying dormitories as insufficient addresses for voting purposes would effectively disenfranchise every student who attempts to register at his or her college dormitory address, in clear violation of United States Supreme Court precedent and holdings of the North Carolina Supreme Court.

Evidence presented at the August 13th hearing showed that Mr. King established 1704 Weeksville Road as his permanent address by:
• Registering to vote at that address in 2009 and voting in subsequent elections
• Attending classes every semester and during summer school at that address
• Using that address for the place where he does his banking
• Using that address for medical records
• Obtaining employment in Elizabeth City and using that address with his employer
• Changing his driver’s license to that address
• Removing treasured possessions such as photos and mementos from his parents’s home and keeping them with him in Elizabeth City
• Actively engaging in community life by serving as President of the ECSU Chapter of the NAACP
• Testifying that he intends to stay in the Fourth Ward after graduation

via election law blog (pdf)

Obviously, he needs the long-form vault copy “original” of his birth certificate, certified, with the raised sealPost + Comments (172)

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