Coherent arguments weren’t required. Though Trump’s guilt was as obvious as shattered glass, they knew acquittal was assured. So they lied, whataboutized, Trumpified. Their audience was Trumpists and Trump, figuring, one assumes, that if they didn’t do it his way they’d be joining the fraternity of stiffed contractors. No-lose for them, it was much-lost for the country.
We needn’t recount the evidence or praise the persuasive House managers, as compared to Trump’s overmatched team. Everyone understands that without Trump’s months-long crescendo of incendiary election lies, the insurrection wouldn’t have happened. It’s worth noting, however, that most Republicans who voted to acquit had joined Trump in perpetuating the big lie that led to the murderous violence. To affirm his guilt would be to admit their own. In a courtroom, those senators would have been preemptively rejected as jurors.
Likewise, if courtroom jurors colluded with defense lawyers, as did Graham, Cruz, and Lee, they’d be held in contempt. Which is exactly what they displayed: intentional, smug indifference, as they and others sat, desk-footed, reading magazines, dumb-phoning, ho-humming their oaths and the Constitution. They’d welded their minds shut five years earlier, when they locked in with a dishonest, amoral “businessman” nominee.
Several Congressional Republicans who gave Trump a pass for provoking a bloody insurrection with countless lies, had voted to impeach and/or convict President Clinton for a harmless one. Protecting the future of democracy and, for that matter, their own party, required finding seventeen honest Republicans. Like finding rock candy in a window-well. (Tried, failed, age seven.)
57 – 43 is a historically bipartisan vote for conviction. Senators who did so represent seventy-six-million more Americans than those who let him off. So we ask: do Trump’s treacherous lies about fraud, attempting to discredit fair elections forever, really exemplify what’s left of conservatism in his party? Do his tweets and inaction during the depravity, failing his duty, inflaming the rioters, tossing Pence to his mob like paper towels in Puerto Rico, abandoning everyone in the capitol but the insurrectionists, constitute the Republican presidential ideal? Guess so. Seventy-five-percent still want him, a sedition-provoking sociopath, as their leader.
Are there no future Republican stars as admirable as the Democratic House managers? Will Trump’s successor be the fisting Josh Hawley? Ted Cruz or Lindsey Graham? Marjorie Tantric Greene? Matt Gaetz? Evidently. Cowed by Trump’s deluded, angry cultists, Republicans must, for a very long time, provide only such mendacious embarrassments as those.
One after another, state parties are censuring members who voted against Trump. (Cancel culture!) Said a Pennsylvania GOP chairman, of Senator Toomey, “We did not send him there to do the right thing...” Integrity and conservatism: officially ostracized. We who long for two honorable parties find it dispiriting.
After voting for absolution, McConnell excoriated Trump with words that could have been the prosecutors’, calling his behavior leading to and during the riot unprecedented dereliction of presidential duty, for which he’s fully culpable. Avouching every prosecutorial argument, he then justified voting “not guilty” with the refuted, outvoted claim that it’s unconstitutional to impeach a non-sitting president; not mentioning it was he who prevented a timely trial. We sometime-hypocrites tip our hats, shirts, pants, socks and shoes to the greatest of all time.
As real conservatives repudiate the party, Republicans are increasingly defined by their worst, like those who still believe, or claim, the election was stolen; who say the Capitol riot was “staged,” a hoax, antifa. Rand Paul, who just called senators who wear masks “science deniers.” Thus we understand unwavering support for Trump: asininity. And oleaginous, Grahamic cowardice.
What else can it be? His biggest accomplishment was maintaining the Obama recovery for three-fourths of a quadrennial. His response to Covid-19 was, using his favorite word, a disgrace. Denial, lies, multi-level mismanagement. Silencing scientists, mocking the measures needed to slow the spread. Finally, giving up. He got manhandled by China, Russia, and North Korea; increased the risk of a nuclear Iran; made the US pitied, and the only country in the world not taking climate change seriously. Any Republican would produce tax cuts and deregulation. (And deficits.) Even after his hand-crafted insurrection, though, Trumpidolatry remains.
Finding him guiltless, those non-conservative senators and their no-longer-conservative party announced, in effect, “Trump is the best we’ve got. The Republican party commits to the uninformed, conspiracy-believing, anti-democracy, white-supremacist, insurrectionist mob we spent decades creating. Come, join us.”
He puts out a good schpiel. If only I could believe he was even remotely sincere, i.e., again with the "by 2050", and, again with Anderson Cooper/Vanderbilt.
ReplyDeleteAnd, again with no Warren, or Jeff, or Elon, or Mark, or...
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/bill-gates-texas-tradeoffs-lead-to-deaths/ar-BB1dQZVU?ocid=mailsignout&li=BBnb7Kz
Do you really think Trumpism is where it's at now? I think he died with the dinosaurs. T-he is not even a billionaire according to some, and certainly not a Bill-ionaire.
I know you think you only have 4 years left now, but I think if you started following Bill you might tap into another 20. Hey, Hezekiah got another 15 by praying to...
I think your last paragraph is the one with the real question: Is this the best they've got? I've asked myself that question a lot lately--is Drumpf and the Liars Club the creme de la creme in Republicanism? Perhaps so. Kinzinger and a few others are outspoken about wanting to resurrect their old party, but it seems hollow without a party platform.
ReplyDeleteIn our state, we have one Republican congressperson who seems to be part of that group, Jaime Herrera-Beutler. She voted to impeach and then provided some damning testimony toward the complicity and chaos of her colleagues. I wrote to her and Newhouse after they voted to impeach, thanking them for showing some honesty and spine. Newhouse has been censured, but she has not. And McMorris-Rogers is MIA throughout. There will be very few left unexposed after the Dems get truly busy on their investigations. I think they are holding fire until Joe & Kamala get their Cabinet confirmed. I think it will all be quite delicious in a very Benghazi-Benghazi-Benghazi!!!!! kind of way. At least, I hope so. They need to prove they can govern and participate in a knife fight at the same time.
So, anyway, a quick personal note. I've been nursing a trigger thumb for several weeks and typing has been difficult and a challenge to my spell-checker! It's still bugging me, but my orthopedist recommend the coolest splint I've ever tried! I know Dr. Sid will know of the Oval 8 splints. Even then, quilting comes first--typing comes second. I'll be here whenever I can!
Sorry about your thumbowie, MEH. I do know of those splints.
DeleteIt's hard to see how, except in the most die-hard locales, voting to exonerate will be a positive for those who did. You'd think there'd be a big blue wave next time. But memories are short.
OTOH, most of what Biden is doing has been greeted positively by a big majority of people; and seeing what good governance looks like must be a wake-up for many.
I have always been bewildered why some people enjoy watching cage fighting and other activities that involve punishing others as entertainment.
DeleteIs there a thrill factor in seeing others suffer? Perhaps sadism or vengeance?
"Cage fighting" as you call it is a sport. That sport is MMA (Mixed Martial Arts).
DeleteI'm not into pain and suffering for the sake of seeing blood.(See: Bare knuckle fighting). I think boxing has it's place but...With what we know about head trauma I have to wonder if it will ever simply die off as a "sport".
I'll try to explain the difference...
In boxing...It's 10 rounds of repeated punches to the head. It takes 3 knockdowns in a single round to end the fight. However...Getting knocked down repeatedly 1-2 times a round is possible and common in boxing. Ya get an "8 count" and back you go for more punishment.
In MMA it's different. Once a fighter is unable to defend themselves or the ref has seen enough, the fight is stopped right there. There's no waking up off the canvas to continue rounds.
Tons of permanent injuries and deaths in boxing. Just the head trauma alone is clearly evident in boxing.
Not so in MMA. They have a USADA doping program that's strict as there is. They medically suspend fighters after a tough match until they are cleared.
Nobody has ever died in the MMA cage anywhere on the planet. You don't see punch drunk fighters in MMA. You don't really see permanent injuries in MMA.
Hears a recent fight and this is typical, not an anomaly of how a fight goes until it's stopped.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PGWrITsxPw
Okay, I guess I can't fight the usual off-point deviations. https://www.legitgamblingsites.com/blog/five-most-devastating-injuries-in-mma/
DeleteI saw all those fights except for the Irish kid. I get squeamish. Like when Mir broke his Silvia's arm. I knew it was coming. You can tell after watching a few 100 fights. I look away. Joe Thiemann I saw it live when his leg was broken and never seen it again after that first time because I never look.
DeleteBut yeah, like the article says. Permanent injuries and even career ending injuries are super rare comparatively speaking. I've seen knees torn up playing Men's D league softball. It's a sport and you are gonna get injured.
This is a pretty famous nose job...
https://www.mmafighting.com/2019/8/11/20800593/mike-perry-hospitalized-for-badly-broken-nose-at-ufc-uruguay
"I think your last paragraph is the one with the real question: Is this the best they've got? I've asked myself that question a lot lately--is Drumpf and the Liars Club the creme de la creme in Republicanism?"
DeleteIt's the best they got according to the voting public and that's all that really matters when thinking long term.
What does that say about those 73+ million people? What does that then say about us as Americans?
If we deal with it on those terms, we have a chance. But if we focus too much on one thing we are doomed. Drumpf is a cancer for sure. But with the proper treatment we got a chance to live in spite of that. Then living a better lifestyle keeps the cancer away. "Lifestyle" meaning working to a more perfect union. A better America. A better life for all of us. Invest in the people, for the peoples benefit. Healthcare is a human right and a corporation is not a person for example.
Imagine if we only changed those 2 things. Just those and nothing more. It would be an amazing positive impact on humanity and certainly us Americans. We can think of a million things needing change. But we can easily start there...But nope...Here we are...People dying by the thousands daily for no reason waiting for herd immunity.
We need to start a virtuous cycle and end this destructive cycle we've been in for 50 years.
I just think this myth about "We need 2 strong parties...blah blah blah...." Is all BS. No...We need one body of strong leadership and the rest can deal with it. We need govt. to work on our behalf and it only takes one strong majority...Not a strong minority that rules the strong majority.
I sent a two minute schpeel that Bernie used almost verbatim in Yakima when running the first time for POTUS, then shut up about it till about a couple weeks ago. I tried to find it but I am not sure what I did with the mail I sent. I had made the same arguments here and in the comment section of the paper many many times and told a couple people at the time I was doing it and had it magically manifest itself in a stump speech in Yakima WA.
Now that Bernie is head of the sharp end of the big budgetary stick I have heard in the last couple weeks that 2 minutes resurrected into real talk on the Sunday shows!
We'll see in the next 2 years if we can withstand the assault on our Democracy. It may take another 50 years to undo it all but...We got 73+ million standing in the way of that.
I forgot to pay homage to the most important digit now injured. No more cage fighting for you young lady!
DeleteThe sad part is with fully functioning digits I drag my fingers around the keys like a weekend at Bernie's...and I am Bernie.
What I am hoping for is this...
Drumpf's rage against the GOP being the fire that burns down 1/2 the old party and morphs into a new party of Drumpf. Doing it to simply get back at people by primarying them. Similar to the T-party. Eating their young. Only this time it'll be a train wreck and not a unifying endeavor. So Drumpf wants to move the right into a ditch(moat) where all the creatures lurk.
At the same time have out Feds go after the alt right full force as they did with the KKK. Not a kisses, hugs and make up as they did with Cliven Bundy.
https://thehill.com/homenews/politics-101/539779-almost-half-of-republicans-would-join-trump-party-poll
Appreciate your current column Doc Schwab. Loved oleaginous--does seem to describe the whole Trumpian bunch. I have no other pearls of wisdom or deep thoughts-- about to the point, I can't stand any of the idolitors of the golden calf.
ReplyDelete"I can't stand any of the idolitors of the golden calf."
DeleteOr in Drumpfs case it's a golden toilet
hahaha-- you are right smoothie, can we flush now?
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid Drumpf is a 3-6 courtesy flush kind of problem.
DeleteIt's gonna take a while to freshen the place up after he's been there.
We need a lot more of this for decades to come!
ReplyDeleteThis is a fight for our Democracy and our way of life make no mistake. We are in a Cold Civil War and ya better warm up to that fact if you like American freedom.
"“It's impossible for us to not look at them in a different light,” Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) said of the 139 Republicans who voted to reverse the election results.
"Bad blood reached a new level Tuesday night when Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.) took the highly unusual step of forcing a full floor vote on an uncontroversial bill to name a Mississippi post office because it was authored by a Republican who voted to overturn the election."
"It was equally evident during a Postal Service hearing on Wednesday as a furious Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.) lashed out at a top Trump ally, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who had accused Democrats of attacking Postmaster General Louis DeJoy last year simply to damage Trump’s reelection chances."
“It was all a charade!” Jordan said.
“I didn’t vote to overturn an election. And I will not be lectured by people who did, about partisanship,” Connolly shot back, jabbing his finger at Jordan."
These people and those they represent are evil and traitors to this nation forever...None of this "Let's move on" crap. Unless moving on means eliminating those whose beliefs are a clear and present danger to this nation.
https://thehill.com/homenews/house/540414-democratic-fury-with-gop-explodes-in-house
The fight on minimum wage and how the GOP undermine their own argument. I have heard the same garbage many times before "I worked for 2.75 and appreciated the opportunity of work."...Yeah, in 1979...about $13 and hour in todays dollars.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/gop-senators-accidentally-undercut-their-own-minimum-wage-argument-n1258832?cid=eml_mra_20210225