Showing posts with label . Show all posts
Showing posts with label . Show all posts

Friday, March 4, 2022

Lindsey Graham Calls for the Assassination of Vladimir Putin

My Op Ed: Killing Putin should have happened when he slithered out of his mother's fuck hole and killing him now is probably our best option but I suspect Lindsey Graham's call for the assassination of Putin is because Putin and Trump have been blackmailing him. Regardless of Graham's reasons for wanting Putin dead, the Putin needs to be killed along with every Russian general and oligarch.


Justin Baragona

Anna Moneymaker
Anna Moneymaker

A sitting United States senator thought it was a good idea on Thursday night to explicitly call for the assassination of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

During an appearance on Fox News host Sean Hannity’s primetime program, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) declared that the only way to end the escalating crisis caused by Russia’s violent invasion of Ukraine is if Putin's political allies killed the Russian dictator.

“What happens is that Putin looks at Biden, he sized him up, he thinks he can get away with it, and he’s going to keep going and going and going, and nobody in the West is going to stop him,” Graham exclaimed.

The South Carolina lawmaker then referenced both the betrayal of Julius Ceaser and the failed German attempt to kill Adolf Hitler in 1944.

“How does this end? Somebody in Russia has to step up to the plate,” Graham told Hannity, who had also pondered a Putin assassination plot night before. “Is there a Brutus in Russia? Is there more successful Col. Stauffenberg in the Russian military? The only way this ends, my friend, is for somebody in Russia to take this guy out! You would be doing your country a great service and the world a great service.”

Notably, Graham’s eyebrow-raising remarks came as Fox News rolled footage of the fire set at a huge Ukrainian nuclear plant following shelling by an armored Russian column. The station’s director, thankfully, later said that the facility’s radiation safety had been secured and there was currently no threat of nuclear disaster.

Moments after his appearance on Hannity’s show, Graham decided to tweet out the same demands for someone in Russia to kill Putin, once again claiming this was the best way to stop the war.

“The only people who can fix this are the Russian people,” the pro-Trump senator added in a subsequent tweet. “Easy to say, hard to do. Unless you want to live in darkness for the rest of your life, be isolated from the rest of the world in abject poverty, and live in darkness you need to step up to the plate.’

Graham’s remarks were quickly met with criticism that spanned the political spectrum. For News host Laura Ingraham, while noting that she “likes Lindsey Graham,” said on Thursday night that “it seems really dangerous and stupid” for the senator to tweet out an assassination threat.

A Twitter spokesperson has yet to respond when The Daily Beast asked whether Graham’s tweets violated the platform’s rules against violent threats and the incitement of physical harm.

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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Thursday, December 2, 2021

The US Is NOT A Democracy. Stop Saying That It is!

 

The United States Is Not a Democracy. Stop Telling Students That It Is.

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By Ursula Wolfe-Rocca

When U.S. voters cast their votes in the 2020 November election, an unchecked pandemic raged through the nation, uprisings against racism and police violence stretched into their eighth month, and new climate change-intensified storms formed in the Atlantic. The reactionary and undemocratic system by which we select our president was an insult to the urgency of the moment. Although the most recent tallies show more than 5 million more people voted for Joe Biden than for Donald Trump, thanks to the Electoral College, it took several days to learn who won. To the relief of many, it appears that this time — unlike 2000 or 2016 — the candidate who got the most votes nationwide also won the election.

When our students only learn about this exceptionally strange system from their corporate-produced history and government textbooks, they have no clue why this is how we choose our president. More importantly, they develop a stunted sense of their own power — and little reason to believe they might have the potential to create something better.

To review: A voter in Montana gets 31 times the electoral bang for their presidential vote than a voter in New York. A voter in Wyoming has 70 times the representation in the Senate as a voter in California, while citizens in Puerto Rico or Washington D.C. have none. The Republican Senate majority that recently confirmed Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, was elected by 14 million fewer votes than the 47 senators who voted against her confirmation.

Source: Michael Fleshman via Flickr.

Yet politicians and pundits regularly pronounce the United States a “democracy,” as if that designation is self-evident and incontrovertible. Textbooks and mainstream civics curricula make the same mistake, treating democracy as a fact rather than an enduring struggle — in which our students can play a critical role.

The standard iteration of “civics” in schools stipulates the brilliance of the framers, the democratic nature of the U.S. system, the infallibility of the Constitution (it was built to be amended!), so that our institutions seem outside of history and beyond politics. As the Koch Brothers-funded Bill of Rights (BRI) Institute states,

The founding documents are the true primary sources of America. Writings such as the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and others written from 1764 to 1791, showcase the philosophical, traditional, and political foundations on which our nation was built and that continue to shape our free society.

“Our free society.” One danger of a curriculum that declares the United States “free” is that it casts all U.S. institutions, by definition, as also free. The district-adopted textbook I was assigned last year in my Portland, Oregon, suburb, America Through the Lens (National Geographic, 2019), says about the 2016 presidential election, “…Trump won a narrow majority of voters in a number of swing states, or states where the election might go to either party. Even though almost 3 million more Americans cast their votes for Clinton, Trump won the electoral vote 306 to 232.” Since freedom is assumed, this textbook sees no need to offer any elaboration of a system in which “swing states” are decisive, and in which the person selected by the majority of voters does not win the presidency.

Perhaps the editors of America Through the Lens assume students have read a previous section of the text on the Electoral College? No. Paging back to the chapter on the Constitution, one finds only this anemic paragraph:

But how should the president be chosen? Some delegates thought the president should be directly elected by the voters. Others wanted Congress or the state legislatures to make the choice. The delegates finally arrived at a solution: an electoral college made up of electors from each state would cast official votes for the president and vice president. The number of electors from each state would be the same as the state’s number of representatives in Congress, and each state could decide how to choose its electors.

Students deserve an explanation for the origins of the Electoral College. Instead, the textbook offers mere description, dry as dust. We learn that the Electoral College emerged from a disagreement among delegates, but nothing about the actual substance of that disagreement or the interests at stake. Shouldn’t the authors explain to students why our founders rejected direct election of the president by the people, the most democratic option? With no sense of the problem, textbook writers assure students that the Electoral College was a “solution” and send them on their merry way.

But for whom was the Electoral College a solution? Many of the 55 White men at the Constitutional Convention worried about giving too much power to the people. Alexander Hamilton said the masses were prone to passion and might use their vote unwisely. Of course, both passion and wisdom are highly subjective terms. James Madison listed the “wicked schemes” inflaming the people to act so unwisely: “A rage for paper money, for an abolition of debts, for an equal division of property. . .” Madison called voters advancing their own economic interests wicked, but referred to his brethren — insulating their own wealth and power in Philadelphia — as “enlightened statesmen.” The Electoral College was a “solution” to the bankers and plantation owners in 1787 but looked like exclusion if you were a poor indebted veteran in western Massachusetts, an enslaved person in Virginia, or a Hitchiti person fleeing land-thieving White settlers in Georgia.

It’s Constitution Day! Time to Teach Obedience or History? (Article) - Shays’ Rebellion | Zinn Education Project: Teaching People's History

Soldiers fire on protesters during Shays’ Rebellion. Led by Daniel Shays, a group of poor farmers and Revolutionary War veterans attempted to shut down Massachusetts courts in protest against debt collections against veterans and the heavy tax burden borne by the colony’s farmers.

Madison expressed another set of concerns about the direct election of the president. He pointed out that a popular vote would deprive the White South of “influence in the election on the score of the Negroes.” He was, of course, referring to the 40 percent of the southern U.S. population made up of enslaved people. Since the men at the Constitutional Convention had already adopted the Three-Fifths Compromise, establishing that enslaved people would bolster enslavers’ representation in Congress, the Electoral College was a “solution” because it meant the humans they violently exploited would inflate their influence in presidential elections too.

When my textbook matter-of-factly declares that the Electoral College was a “solution,” but makes no mention of the elite and white supremacist interests for whom that was true, nor the exploited and disenfranchised peoples for whom it was a disaster, it does not educate students, but lies to them. The very same textbooks that paint the Three-Fifths Compromise as a shameful relic of slavery, treat the Electoral College as an unremarkable feature of our system, as if they were not borne of the same white supremacist original sin.

This feigned neutrality covers up the classist and racist origins of our institutions. It is not only bad history but signals to students in 2020, “Nothing to see here.” The mock elections and legislative simulations common in U.S. civics classrooms encourage students to investigate the swirl of issues inside the container of U.S. “democracy,” but rarely the container itself. Students are commanded to vote, but not to judge the fundamental questions of governance not on the ballot — like the legitimacy of an electoral college devised by enslavers. What if our civics invited students not just to become occupants of an already-built U.S. government, but engineers and architects able to redesign, reframe, and rebuild the whole structure? What if our civics repurposed the word “framer” to mean all of us today — including our students?

One way to cultivate this activist sensibility in our students is to offer them a curriculum rich with an alternative pantheon of “framers” and “founding parents” in the ongoing struggle for democracy. Central to this project is the rejection of the singular, miraculous, and exceptional founding peddled by the Bill of Rights Institute and others. As Eric Foner’s newest book, The Second Founding — about the Reconstruction Amendments that finally made multiracial democracy possible — suggests, building freedom is a work in progress.

Black men line up to vote during the Reconstruction Era.

Similarly, many scholars and activists, notably the Rev. William Barber II, have embraced the idea of a multiplicity of Reconstructions: the first Reconstruction, following the Civil War in which freedpeople and their allies reimagined citizenship, social relationships, and politics; the second Reconstruction in the 20th century, when Black activists and their allies dismantled 100 years of Jim Crow, championed and popularized “one person, one vote,” and transformed U.S. law and society; and the third Reconstruction, happening now, exemplified by Black Lives Matter, the Dream Defenders, United We Dream, and others to address the ongoing manifestations of systemic racism in everything from housing to immigration, policing to education. In this telling, the United States has been constructed by many framers, not just those White elites in Philadelphia, but also the millions of unsung heroes who have never stopped seeking to transform the United States and the meaning of freedom.

Source: Geoff Livingston via Flickr

Angela Davis writes that “freedom is a constant struggle.” When, for example, we teach students about the fight for the 15th Amendment, alongside the movement 100 years later for the Voting Rights Act, alongside the efforts now to combat voter suppression, we not only provide evidence of Davis’s words, but invite students into that struggle. By rejecting both the textbook’s boring and evasive approach to our anti-democratic institutions, and BRI’s glorification of a U.S. founding that meant — and continues to mean — oppression for so many, we affirm our students’ reality and provide models of activism through which they might reimagine and revise it.

On November 2, 2020, one day before the general election that would deny him a second term, Donald J. Trump issued an executive order establishing the 1776 Commission. The commission’s mandate? A “restoration of American education” to emphasize the “clear historical record of an exceptional Nation dedicated to the ideas and ideals of its founding.” President Trump has been defeated, but this commitment to institutionalize the teaching of American exceptionalism has not. We educators must fight for a curriculum that teaches our students facts not fables. The United States has never been a democracy, defined by freedom and equality for all. But nor has there ever been a time when people did not struggle toward a democratic future, dreaming of freedom, risking life and limb to make those dreams manifest, and creating a more just society along the way. Let’s teach civics and history that affirms for our students there is nothing sacrosanct in the political and economic status quo, that freedom fighters, past and present, are founders too, and we all have a right to be framers — to redesign this structurally unsound house to better shelter our lives, safety, comfort, and full humanity.

A shorter version of this article, TEACHER VOICE: The United States is not a democracy. Stop telling students that it is, was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education.

Ursula Wolfe-Rocca

Ursula Wolfe-Rocca has taught high school social studies since 2000. She is on the editorial board of Rethinking Schools and is a Zinn Education Project Writer and Organizer. 

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Wednesday, October 7, 2020

As Trump fell ill, Treasonous Republican report praised his leadership on pandemic response

 WASHINGTON — The timing could not have been worse. As the nation awoke on Friday morning to news that President Trump had contracted the coronavirus, House Republicans released a report praising his “steadfast leadership through an unprecedented crisis.” 

The rosy report contrasted sharply with the reality of a White House in turmoil, not to mention of a nation that widely disapproved of Trump’s coronavirus response even before he himself fell ill.

The report, titled “President Trump’s Plan: A Whole of America Response,” was authored by House Republicans who sit on a coronavirus subcommittee of the House Oversight Committee. The principal author was the subcommittee’s ranking member, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., a member of the chamber’s Republican leadership and a staunch supporter of the president. 

President Trump in a conference room at Walter Reed hospital on Sunday. (Tia Dufour/White House via Getty Images)
President Trump in a conference room at Walter Reed hospital on Sunday. (Tia Dufour/White House via Getty Images)

The task of defending the president’s response became immeasurably harder after it was revealed that Trump had contracted COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, sometime last week. As he received care at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center over the weekend, the coronavirus spread through the West Wing and among Trump allies in the Senate.

A poll taken shortly after the announcement of Trump’s illness found that 56 percent of Americans disapprove of how he has handled the pandemic. 

The report is, for the most part, a dutiful recounting of White House talking points about limiting travel, providing states with personal protective equipment, the coronavirus economic relief package and attempts to reopen schools and restart the economy. While some of the efforts have been successful, critics say they have not been enough. What’s more, those efforts have not been part of a single concerted plan, a lack that Democrats on the coronavirus subcommittee have previously highlighted

A staffer for committee Republicans said the report was necessary to dispel the Democrats’ “partisan narrative” about the president’s pandemic response. “The facts show that President Trump created and implemented numerous national plans tailored to specific situations that provided operational flexibility and rapid responses to ever-changing situations,” the staffer said.

Democrats on the House Oversight coronavirus subcommittee were appalled by both the timing and conclusions of the report, calling it “the height of irresponsibility” to release such a document as Trump fell ill. “Instead of gaslighting the American public,” a Democratic aide told Yahoo News, Republicans “should be working urgently with the White House on a national plan to contain and control the spread of this deadly virus.”

A GOP staffer, who could speak only under the condition of anonymity, said the committee’s Republicans had planned to release the report on Friday long before that morning’s diagnosis. 

Scalise did not respond to a request for comment.

Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., ranking member of the coronavirus subcommittee of the House Oversight Committee. (J. Scott Applewhite/Pool/Getty Images)
Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., ranking member of the coronavirus subcommittee of the House Oversight Committee. (J. Scott Applewhite/Pool/Getty Images)

Republicans, including Scalise, have argued that Trump’s plan to address the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 210,000 Americans, has been effective and coherent. Scalise’s report praises Trump for “following the science” and “working with experts” on issues like school reopenings and vaccine development.

“President Trump has a plan,” Scalise and his fellow Republicans wrote in their committee report. “It is an unparalleled Whole of America response to this pandemic.”

But in the hours after those words saw the light of day, events in Washington provided a stark counterargument. The Trump administration was heavily criticized for keeping secret the scope of the outbreak that struck the West Wing. Over the weekend, there appeared to be little effort at contact tracing. And details of Trump’s own treatment were, at various points, troubling, contradictory or flat-out untrue. 

That has made efforts, like those of Scalise, to defend Trump’s handling of the response an even heavier lift than they might otherwise have been — though that did not stop Republicans from trying. “President Trump is steadfast in his commitment to deliver a safe and effective vaccine to the American people, rebuild our economy, and defeat the virus — the facts show no less,” a Republican committee staffer said. 

An appendix to the Scalise report contains a list of about 150 different guidances, memoranda and notices on aspects of the pandemic response, from advice for pet stores to resources for Native American communities. None of those documents, however, is a national plan.

Democracies Worldwide Should Execute Trump Trolls and Putin Trolls

 Trump trolls and Putin trolls are committing espionage and therefore they can be treated as spies and executed under the law. When the spre...