Monday, December 31, 2018

A turning point? Maybe so. Meanwhile: Wait with Energy.

Will this be a year that will constitute a turning point in our democracy?

Can you feel that something is about to happen? Or is it that this observer, like so many others, so desperately want something to happen that we're looking past the processes with which we wish to bring it about?

The situation is that urgent. This administration represents not only poor, distorted, and irresponsible governance, but the abrogation and abandonment of it--appointments not made, regulations not observed, humanity ignored. Each day, it gets worse. Each day, there is more ground to be made up to restore the United States of America to its former position in the world.

But an event like a presidential election can't, and shouldn't be, undone in a moment or in any particular future single moment. If we respect the rule of law, then we should respect the accumulation of "official" information through legal means (not just the press, which doesn't get everything right all the time, though the most responsible outlets try very hard all the time).

Heaven knows, this has taken long enough. We would like to think that, with all that time and energy expended, that the Mueller report on the machinations, manipulations, lies and horrible illegalities of 45 and his minions will be a devastating compilation of facts, which together add up to mean that this president has to go, and the sooner the better.

Except that all the horror, exasperation and disdain that we have seen and expressed to this point has meant, so far, exactly nothing. Dave Barry's End of the Year Roundup, written for the Washington Post, pokes endless fun at the MSNBC/CNN wags who constantly express their absolute conclusions that whatever has just happened has been, finally, the final straw that will break 45's back and rush him out of office--the thing that happens before it happens except it's not happening. He'll quit, they say. He'll make a deal before it all hits the fan.

But there's no reason to believe he'll do that. He doesn't have to. He doesn't read, he doesn't think beyond his horrible self, and he doesn't listen to his advisors, but he can count. For him, the magic number is 34--the number of Senators who would have to support any impeachment accusations.

The problem we're having, still, is believing that this is all that matters to someone to whom so much else should matter. It's believing that normal, ethical, caring thinking simply doesn't work with 45, because he's incapable of it.

In the early 1950s, a Harvard professor made a study of teenagers in several countries, the U.S. included, to pose questions from which a scale of moral reasoning was derived. He concluded that moral thinking is done in stages, in which someone who gains a certain stage does not return to the earlier stage from which they evolved (though there is overlap). In other words: Their sense of morality only increases--if it does at all, which sometimes it doesn't. The measuring stick of morality at every stage is the degree to which someone else or some higher cause matters, regardless of oneself. The highest level is a 6, which very few people ever achieve at any time: a Gandhi, an MLK or a Mother Teresa. The lowest is a zero, which is nearly unfathomable--that no matter what happens, someone does whatever they wish to do to anyone else, regardless of pain or pleasure, with absolutely no regard to consequences. None.

45 isn't exactly there. He does care about one thing: His own pleasure or pain. That would put him at Level 1. He avoids doing only those things that would not make him feel good right this very minute, or in the long run, like jail. If he happens to do what others would call the "right" thing, it is only because he understands what he has to gain from it--in this case, political support. That is why, for instance, that his claim that he has a bible study in the White House was stated exactly once, and why he hasn't, and doesn't, follow up by going to church (except at his wife's request, and then not to actively participate at a funeral for a presidential colleague). If it's mentioned at some future date, he'll go to church to demonstrate to others that it might matter to him--or, if it doesn't, a staffer can claim that it does; after all, look at the pictures. But don't watch what he says, watch what he does, including doing nothing.

That's what we're dealing with. It's deeply unconscionable for most of us to consider that the rest of us support someone without a conscience. But they do because they are so taken by his personality that they continue to believe that he cares about them. No: He doesn't care about anyone else. Only when they suffer from sufficient discomfort will they turn on him--and the economy will have to get pretty awful for that to happen.

Maybe that will be the real turning point. Meanwhile, we must wait, as discomfiting as that has been and will be. We are about to enter a time of all kinds of adverse tweeting and acceleration of accusations--even more destabilizing than it has been. Keep your eyes on Nancy Pelosi, Mitch McConnell, Robert Mueller, and the Justice Department. They hold most of the cards. (By the way: Consideration of the Bill of Rights and the rule of law and what they truly mean is operating at a Level 5--near the top of the ladder. That's why they are so challenging to support and maintain, depending upon the situation, but that's a topic for another time.)

But the wild card of power still belongs to 45 as long as he remains in office and remember--it's all about him and what he can get away with. That's a Level 1 practitioner for you.

Waiting smugly with confidence in the final result is inadvisable, for there will be all kinds of legalized pushing back by 45 and his lawyers, and further, deeper attempts to gin-up his all-too-loyal crowds with ad hominem attacks disguised as campaign speeches. If you've been stunned and appalled before, get ready for a new level of disgust.

Instead of panicking, though, let's do something else: Energized waiting. In other words: Organizing. Organize discussions. Go to organized rallies. Keep the awareness going, as distasteful as it is. Keep building the opposition so when it finally gets to the tipping point, 45's applecart will go over quickly, decisively, and finally. On that day, he will no longer matter. We will, though. And so will the Constitution. It will be worth the wait. But it won't happen without the rest of us.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

Friday, December 21, 2018

Impeachment Vote--January 4--First Order of Business

It's time.

I understand Nancy Pelosi's urging for us to be patient with the 17 different investigations concerning 45's ethics, taxes, lies and improprieties that will begin as soon as the new Congress is sworn in on January 3. It's a respect for processes.

When the House of Representatives--or a majority of it, which will be Democratic now--has gone through all the facts that it can procure after all the interviews and testimonies, then a discussion of the possibilities of impeaching the president can take place, the thinking goes. When the House has all of that on paper, without a cabal of nervous Republicans gathering around 45 to protect him, then it can pronounce its indictment, which is what impeachment actually is, and send it along to the Senate for trial.

This would be, of course, outside of whatever Robert Mueller has managed to find, which, based on what we already know and which is probably 20 percent of what he's found, is no doubt devastating in its depravity and illegality. But 45 still has time to fire Mueller, which would just be piled upon the dare-you-to-stop-me acts which have characterized his terrible tenure in office so far--and which have only accelerated in recent days.

If Mueller goes, backed by either an acting attorney general whose status, put on hold, may be drawn out by inaction (wait and see), or by a new attorney general who has already expressed his distaste for Mueller's investigations, 45's new and twisted Justice Department will seek to suppress his findings. Beyond what Mueller has already filed with federal judges (which, perhaps, may be devastating enough), that will delay knowledge of the whole story, the biggest possible picture, as long as possible--hopefully, for 45, beyond his re-election campaign.

When you're in trouble, in other words, you play for time. It worked for Bush-43's 2000 Florida election debacle. Bush's lawyers strung out the process, resulting in the Supreme Court ruling that while yes, it was a good idea to recount all the votes in the state, the state had three hours to complete it, thus rendering it moot and, by that ruling, declaring Bush the president by 537 of the votes that had been counted originally. That led us into 9-11, the war in Iraq, and the waste that No Child Left Behind created, among other mistakes. I'm sorry he lost his dad recently, but he was the wrong person to be elected president, and the attitudes that he unleashed (among other things and people) have led us directly into the hands of 45.

At least 43 knew how to act in a presidential manner, and understood the built-in safeguards so that the political and international cultures would be preserved. 45 knows and cares nothing about these. He knows, too, that all he does will be sifted through the sieves of media hand-wringing of policy wonks who will over-analyze and dissect moves as if they're part of an overall revolution in American government, or some such nonsense like that--that they are based on bold, decisive principles.

They aren't. Every single thing 45 does is about him, about maintaining support among the loud and obnoxious minority that supports him, and hoping to somehow re-create sufficient voting in 2020 to give him another four years of this disaster. Eventually, most commentators will invite someone onto their shows who will say this--but those comments come at the end of larger discussions that are simply irrelevant, and make 45 all the more dangerous because he thinks they're irrelevant, too.

45 has made a complete mess of our foreign and military policies, using troop deployments as a lollypop for his mind-numbed minions, whether to send soldiers on a fool's errand to the border or to dangerously and irresponsibly withdraw them from Syria, in an immediate and inexplicable abandonment of Kurdish allies. He reportedly did so because Turkish president Erdogan shamed him into thinking that it was more important to respect the wishes of Turkey, a NATO ally that opposes the Kurds, than to maintain the promises made to our own allies on the field of battle. Thus buffeted by no more than one other opinion, 45 is withdrawing the troops, leaving the Kurds exposed to the very ISIS forces that he said had been defeated (but haven't).

If you're from other NATO countries and watching this, can it make you more secure, or less? Are you going to believe 45's promises, or not? Will it mean that you're more likely to make a military buildup, or less? Will that stabilize the region, or not?

He is also withdrawing 5,000 of the 14,000 troops assigned to Afghanistan. If this was such a good idea, why didn't he do it six months or a year ago? It's because it constitutes a campaign promise, which he is determined to accomplish whether or not it has been determined to be an effective move or not. If I promise to do something objectionable and then go ahead and do it, does that make me a better person who considers the objections and hesitates? Does it make me stronger? Does it make me more responsibly thoughtful?

These moves are so awful that his most trusted and respected member of his cabinet, Secretary of Defense James Mattis, got right in his face in the Oval Office yesterday and dropped his resignation letter--unique in that a direct explanation of his disdain for 45's policies were actually noted within it; those who resign from the cabinet just don't do that--in his lap and walked out. Nobody does that with such consummate disrespect--but until now we have never had a president who deserves it.

45 has embarrassed the country in countless ways with his terrible, completely personally-based judgment. He reads nothing, listens to no one, and does what he feels like doing when he feels like doing it. With Mattis' departure, he has one less brake upon his seat-of-the-pants policymaking, in which actual governing is something completely foreign to him because it would mean balancing interests and considering the whole country.

Which brings us to the impending shutdown, now hours away as this is being written. This blatant political stunt, in which he thinks people will forget that he's on videotape taking complete responsibility for it during a meeting with Speaker-Designate Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, so he can successfully blame the Democrats for holding back on the border wall that a majority of Americans don't want, will be used as an attempted torture chamber to squeeze screaming Americans into capitulation. It's no crueler than what he's doing to the children of immigrants at the border--which is an abomination that, ironically, might become more exposed because of this gambit.

It will be the last straw, I believe. Let's not wait any longer. On January 4, the day after smiles, genuine or otherwise, will be exchanged among members of the new House of Representatives, let's get on with the business of accountability. Instead of waiting to accumulate the additional facts that will obviously and inevitably result in impeachment, let's impeach 45 first, and use the investigations, interviews and testimonies as piling onto the clear and obvious facts that have already emerged in preparation for the trial which will continue to expose them. The facts will come out one way or another, but waiting for the several months to "officially" gather all of them up will just allow 45 to sow more chaos and make the United States of America far more vulnerable to diminishment, which is what we're experiencing day by day.

Instead of making America great again--a dubious necessity; we weren't that bad to begin with--he has embarrassed us. The only way a weak person like him can continue to govern us is to make us weaker still: to bring us under his wild, increasingly unleashed control. Let's put the pressure where it belongs--on the Republican Party, which has stood by him mindlessly to this point. Let's accumulate what we already have on him, impeach 45 now and then reveal even more reasons as we go, making Republicans face the country and explain how in creation they can keep backing such a monster, step-by-step.

Normally, I would think that jumping this shark would be difficult to maintain and perhaps even suicidal to the hopes of its success. But this situation is highly unusual. We cannot allow process to hide these gangsters while the clock ticks, allowing everything to eventually morph into an election campaign and become woven into a disgusting quilt, the unraveling of which becomes more difficult as we lean into the new campaigns. They'll do it and they're good at it. Remember: They're the party which has chosen to disrupt the normal processes of electoral succession in Wisconsin and Michigan. To believe that they won't try to do so on the national level without a previous calling-out is naive.

Let me ask you this: Since the investigations will take months to run their course, do you honestly think we have those months at our disposal before 45 does even more damage to our reputation, our rule of law, and our very existence? Do you think that, while these efforts reveal far more awful activities, he won't keep trying to distract us with even more outrageous gestures? Or do you think he's just going to sit there and watch without tweeting preposterous non-facts? The ticking of the clock works both ways.

To those concerned about following the rule of law, which means accumulating facts before passing down an indictment: We already have enough of them to justify impeachment. Compile them and make the Senate move. If the vote fails, there is always time to do it again--but then the House will be on record as pursuing it. The stamp of intent, much like the endless attempts of the ex-Republican-controlled House to repeal Obamacare--will have already been made. Members unsure of the move at the particular time can always vote "present," which will bring it perhaps under the majority necessary to pass the bill of impeachment, but allow them to avoid the specter of having committed one way or another until they believe sufficient evidence has been revealed.

One more thing: Do you think the stock market will remain stable? It's already lost ten percent of its value this month. When investors panic, it's already too late. Let the capitalist-addicted Republicans explain that to their constituents back home.

I'm guessing these conversations are happening already. We need to do this right now. It's time. I call for an impeachment vote in the House of Representatives on January 4. Call your Representative or Representative-To-Be.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Pigeon-holing the Ethics of Examining Ethics: The Supreme Court As Safe Haven

Brett Kavanaugh can relax now. He has found his safe haven.

It's the Supreme Court, to which Kavanaugh was appointed by 45 and confirmed only after allegations of sexual misconduct dating back to his college years. Let's be clear here: Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee performed poorly about this tawdry issue, especially ranking member Dianne Feinstein of California. Had she processed Professor Christine Blasey Ford's concerns in a more timely fashion, and made the accusations public while doing so, much of the intervening, crushing, and horribly distracting last-minute drama surrounding the investigation--the official part of which was manipulated into sketchy irrelevance due to time factors arranged by the exasperated, over-the-top furious Republican majority, but for which, considering Democratic dithering, they cannot be held completely responsible (Yes, I know they could have allowed more time for deeper investigation, but the scope was out of their hands, and further delays would have been interpreted as weakness, something even the appearance of which cannot be countenanced by 45, who would have insulted the hell out of them, too)--might have been avoided and allowed to proceed reasonably. In fact, early exposure of the issue may have begun the MeToo outcry far sooner, which might have also been allowed to build momentum for more than the two weeks in which all this came to a head. Who knows: 45 might have even considered getting someone else--except that might easily have been another hyper-conservative with fewer ethics issues.

In hindsight, it now appears to be a desperate measure on the part of Senate Democrats to ward off someone who lied to the same committee upon his appointment to the DC Appellate Circuit, perhaps the most prestigious and the major gateway to Supreme Court consideration, in 2006. There was no question that 2018 Republicans, inured and numbed to 45's constant, non-stop lying about nearly everything else, would be giving Kavanaugh a pass, and accomplish what they have been lusting for for about three decades now: a hyper-conservative majority on the Supreme Court, so they can railroad their major policy bellweathers (i.e. gutting abortion rights, jettisoning gay rights, firming up the status of corporations as people) into immutable law, at least for a generation or two, with all the efficiency of an assembly (or perhaps, disassembly of liberalism) line. Besides, with the earlier appointment of Neil Gorsuch instead of Merrick Garland, the Obama appointee who had been unprecedentedly stonewalled by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's refusal to even hold hearings for him, Senate Democrats were spoiling for a fight.

Much of this appears to be orchestrated a little too well, though. Outgoing Justice Anthony Kennedy's son reportedly did much business with 45's folks in German banks, and Kennedy apparently had discussions with 45 concerning his retirement before doing so. Those 'coincidences' seemed a little too pat. Nonetheless, it gave even the bumbling 45 an opportunity to line up exactly the candidate he wanted and muscle him through.

But not without a temper tantrum on Kavanaugh's part. Insensed that his nomination might be thwarted, he took the clear advice from 45's people and counterattacked with obnoxiously loud exaggerations and invectives, including the very interesting posit that girls' basketball coaching was the true love of his life and that, because of the accusations, he might never do it again (a claim later found to be as ridiculous as the moment he uttered it). It sounded quite like he would rather do that than be on the high court--in which case, I kept thinking, he did have another, very important job, so no one was contemplating throwing him and his family out onto the street.

Nevertheless, he acted in ways completely unlike the manner in which a Supreme Court candidate should. Was it an indication of how he would conduct himself inside the Court's determination discussions? Would he try to yell at the female members to assert himself? Those questions were suddenly quite relevant. For there Kavanaugh was, completely unglued, throwing insults around the room (and the country, watching with both stubbornness and revulsion) demanding instead of asking that all evidence aside, he be put on the Supreme Court with all of the other relevant and qualifying boxes checked.

On he went, having changed no one's mind about anything. Votes by straddlers seemed to be based on solely political terms, their wet index fingers held up to the breezes. The superficial investigation constituted a firewall by which they could hide behind, claiming that they couldn't rely on rumors and needed to decide the issue based on established facts.

The hubbub wasn't quite finished, though. Chief Justice John Roberts received a complaint from a group of lawyers and other professionals that Kavanaugh had acted so unethically that his very status be reviewed by the Court itself. The Judicial Council of the 10th Appellate Circuit--not Kavanaugh's in DC; this one's seat is in Denver--was given the task of going over some eighty-three accusations, including:
  • making false statements during his confirmation hearings;
  • displaying a lack of judicial temperament;
  • making inappropriate partisan statements; and
  • treating members of the Senate Judiciary Committee with disrespect,

the totality of which smothers the impact of a drunken moment of stupidity that--let's face it--many of us had during our college years (but which doesn't excuse it for a minute).

That set up the final firewall of any consideration of Kavanaugh's eligibility for the high court. That council determined that, because Kavanaugh was now on the Supreme Court, it no longer had the authority to even review his conduct, much less rule upon it. So that was that, and we move on.

Roberts had to know--he had to--that the Council would rule that way. He succeeded, then, in pigeon-holing the ethics of examining Kavanaugh's ethics. In issuing his response, Roberts noted that while federal judges, whose positions are created by Congress, adhere to codes of conduct, it is different with members of the Supreme Court, which is created by the original Constitution. He didn't mean to imply that Supreme Court members are inoculated from ethical behavior--quite the opposite--but that they do so voluntarily. Congress simply isn't allowed to impose standards on Supreme Court justices, he said, because that would violate the separation of powers.

I disagree. Our flexible system allows Congress to make adjustments to the president's powers, doesn't it? Wasn't that what the War Powers Act was about in 1973? Granted, succeeding presidents have disputed the constitutionality of the act, but the Supreme Court hasn't thrown it out yet, and we're going on forty-six years now. If Congress can do that to one branch of government, what prevents it from acting reasonably toward the other?

Besides, the Constitution itself says that justices will serve "during good behavior." The specifics of that aren't and never have been spelled out, but the violation of which constitute grounds for impeachment and removal (done four times in our history). Would it be so harmful for Congress to create guidelines for those grounds? Might it be appropriate to clarify actions that are grounded in law and not nearly as much in politics (though politics are unavoidable)? Would that necessarily throw the balance of power too greatly into the lap of Congress?

Granted, it may cause a challenge in the very Supreme Court that Congress would seek to regulate, and the ethics of that would be perpetually unavoidable and debatable. Perhaps it is time to investigate these possibilities, though. While we prefer to believe that the Supreme Court adheres to a higher standard, lacking guidelines to those standards do not and will not insure that the standards be met. Rather that, than an already controversial and narrowly-approved Supreme Court justice be allowed to use the Court itself as a safe haven by which to escape accountability for actions that mar and have the effect of compromising--perhaps not in his mind but in our minds, regardless of his protestations to the contrary--his very membership. If the courts do not believe they can or even should police themselves, the simple logic not of the separation of powers, but of checks and balances, demands that someone do so. Remember: This appointment is for life.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

The One Who Smiles His Way In

My 94-year-old mother watches the Milwaukee Brewers with near religious devotion. Her mind's still great, so she could certainly discuss the team with knowledge and memory as sound as anyone's.

But it would be absurd to ask Mom to pinch-hit for the pitchers during the playoffs. She's not quite suited to do that anymore, if she ever was.

That's about like Scott Walker being considered for 45's cabinet as Secretary of the Interior. Sure, he could discuss public lands and national parks, but to run them? That's a head-scratcher. Two questions would make an effective interview: First, do you think science should be utilized to explain climate change; and second, do you think public lands should be sold off to the highest bidder?

If the first answer is no and the second yes, Walker should be off and running. Oh, and he lies quite often, too. That should seal the deal.

The picture taken with 45 the other day is demonstrative. I've rarely seen Walker with a smile that wide. It looks almost genuine. After all, he's accomplished in defeat what he couldn't in victory: a way into the tent in Washington.

I'm quite surprised that Walker hasn't been tapped to replace the enormously incompetent Betsy DuVos as Secretary of Education, what with his infamous stand against Wisconsin's teachers unions with the notorious Act 10, passed in 2011, which made a mockery of collective bargaining rights and eliminated district contracts; his draining of more than $800 million from public education coffers; and cutting a quarter-billion from one of the nation's great university systems to help pay for a pro basketball arena in Milwaukee. But DuVos' stand against Title IX and her disdain for seeing that minority students avoid the lion's share of disciplinary referrals finally might have struck the right note with 45, who has no time for such complications. Blind squirrels do find an acorn or two before winter hits.

Note that this isn't the first time that a Republican Wisconsin governor vaulted from his position into a cabinet post. In 2001, Tommy Thompson, the imperial, four-term poobah who toyed with running for president himself before a couple of bad stumbles deep-sixed his momentum, was asked to join the cabinet of the ever-so-smarmy, election-stealing George W. Bush, who now almost looks good next to the ridiculous 45. He jumped at the chance, believing that he would be Secretary of Transportation, for which he thought he would be far more qualified. But Bush handed that to Norman Mineta--a Democrat, for heaven's sake--and gave Thompson the post at Health and Human Services. He apparently protested and was made to look quite silly for it.

If appointed, Walker would do no such thing. He would keep that dung-eating grin all the way into the first new cabinet meeting, at which he, too, would sing the praises of his new boss with enormous gratitude. He would echo those who believe 45 who can do no wrong though nobody can tell us what he has done right or well or even appropriately (especially the latter).

Thompson did well enough at HHS, but it buried the remainder of his career. He returned to Wisconsin in 2012 to run for the Senate against Tammy Baldwin, who won handily. Walker, who watched that from the governor's mansion, will not allow that kind of crumbling to happen. If nothing else, Walker is the consummate opportunist.

In that, he equals the Mar-A-Lago minion who's been nominated as ambassador to South Africa, and the Faux News analyst who will hold down the now-token position at the U.N. But he has much better chops as a former governor and a reputation as an ersatz choir boy who know his lines and creates the smiling image of hail-fellow-well-met while he destroys you behind closed doors.

Wisconsin Republicans are good at that. There's the grinning Paul Ryan, who helped ruin chances for all but the top 1% of earners nationally with a tax plan that will have us paying off a debt for decades. His sycophancy will be considered infamous in later analyses of how the country went off the deep end. He says he's finished with public office. Don't believe that for a minute.

Then there's Robin Vos, speaker of the state assembly, also considered something of a smiling assassin. He went out of his way to tell Democrats that he didn't think of them as evil, as they thought he was for piloting the bills which undermine democracy in the state by stripping powers away from incoming governor Tony Evers and attorney general Josh Kaul. To which I would reply, if I were there:
  • You're lying, because if you weren't then why are you performing this awful subterfuge;
  • You must be really scared, since your gerrymandering, which obliterates the meaning of the two-party system in Wisconsin, apparently wasn't enough guarantee of control;
  • Well, then deal with it, but you can't because others of your ilk can no longer feel the need to play nice; and/or
  • Since you're rumored to be planning to run for governor yourself, thanks for the transparency.
The ultimate killer with kindness, though, is Walker. He calmly, with matter-of-fact style, guides people down the primrose path, as if injustice was the way everybody was thinking, anyhow. It isn't the meanness and anger and grouchiness with which 45 deals with everything--ever hear him laugh?--that deceives; actually, we know that cruelty and lies are coming whenever he's nearby. It's Walker's guile and disingenuousness, hidden behind what looks to be an easy-going, I'm-your-next-door-neighbor pose.

If Walker gets to Washington, he'll utilize that to gain higher status; believe that like you believe your own name. Never is the devil more present, it says elsewhere, than when he appears to be an angel of light.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

She Stoops to Conquer--and the Constitution Is Restored (For Now)

No law, no constitution, exists in a vacuum. It takes awareness and responsibility to make things work.

Someone's been trying to bully our way of life into unrecognizable history. As long as he had support from a majority of Congress, he had the best chance of doing so. He lost that support, but the opposition must re-declare its determination to set things right, to get things back into rough balance, which is where democracy works best. Otherwise, it's all for naught.

Yesterday, Nancy Pelosi did so. She dealt with the wooly, dizzy, clueless, bully-mongering 45 with disdain and backbone. He tried to undermine her position as Speaker-Designate by stating, not without cause, that her actual installment as Speaker wasn't a done deal yet. But she deflected that attempt to diminish her by saying that the Democrats would now be in control of the House of Representatives, and that was the main point--which, of course, it is (and may have, in fact, solidified her re-selection as Speaker).

At that moment, the Constitution was being restored. This president can't get away with single-handedly humiliating those standing in his way any longer through tweets and carefully arranged rallies of sycophants. Power exists only in its utilization, and Pelosi reminded 45 that his wall didn't have the votes (Though he denied that, except if that was true, why hasn't the outgoing Speaker, Paul Ryan, hold a vote on it?). He threatened to shut down the government if the Democrats wouldn't cooperate--thus putting himself into a corner that he will probably try to ease himself out of (as he has before, when he realized his bluster was only mindless posturing). And if he tries to follow through, his party will suffer the consequences. Again.

Two things have become evident:

  • First, a woman has stooped to conquer a bumbling male president by simply showing up and reminding him that his control has been significantly reduced; and
  • Second, the fact that it is a woman will catapult female candidates (including those for president) forward in ways we cannot exactly determine--but will bring a woman to the White House for the first time far faster than any other event could have done. (And it could be a Republican; watch Nikki Haley very carefully. Like Sarah Palin, she's an ex-governor; unlike Palin, she has brains and savvy.)
Hillary Clinton deserved to be president on her chops and background, but she didn't realize that one of the major hurdles she needed to leap was standing right behind her on the debate stage, stalking her and succeeding in reducing her effectiveness by appearing to be the alpha male. She admitted in her follow-up book What Happened that she didn't know what to do about it.

Nancy Pelosi did. Granted, already having been in the Oval Office with 45 prepared her for whatever shock factor she might be walking into yesterday, and that experience undoubtedly gave her ballast for pushing back at him. But alpha males tend not to easily adjust to females who stand up to them, and she walked away by reducing him to a shell of a man trying to be a man through his main prop--the wall he now realizes he can't have, in addition to the power that has receded, whether he understands it or not.

When she did so (and insulted him right back in later comments), she restored what the Constitution is supposed to mean: a balancing of power by checking the irresponsible use of it. Whether this means that a compromise is coming on border security is anybody's guess, as well as whether 45 would be so reckless as to attempt an actual government shutdown. He may yell and scream and throw papers, but what is left of his staff may yet manage his childishness and avoid yet another debacle. It's happened before, and Bob Woodward's Fear documents some of those instances.

We are still in a time of relative instability, because 45 is still there in the worst possible place he can be, and Robert Mueller's report continues to seep out of his office, one awful fact at a time, one indictment at a time. 45 may go back out on the campaign trail, stirring up the thoughtless, chanting masses who will always believe, whether based on twisted religion or not, that he has been put there supernaturally to save our society from bad people who are no worse than them. Meanwhile, legal processes slowly grind on and the rule of law, too, is restored. That reckoning now draws near.

Nancy Pelosi has renewed what the Constitution means by standing up to a reckless, horribly irresponsible, corrupt president with power that will be wielded properly and responsibly. It will have to be maintained in 2020 as well, but now people see (hopefully!) that involvement (a.k.a. voting) beats standing and watching.

For now, it will have to do. But something shifted yesterday, and a whole lot of people feel a whole lot better. Hope isn't just a thought; it is a product and result of action. We have proven it to ourselves. Again. For now.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

Friday, December 7, 2018

A Direct Line to Banality: A Synagogue and a Statehouse

A shooting in a synagogue and the ambushing of one political party in spoiling what would otherwise be the well-deserved benefits of regaining elected offices. They sound like two unrelated phenomena.

They aren't. The same mentalities jolt through both. The difference is that they are now becoming everyday, happenstance, banal--again, through the cold-blooded thinking that so deeply belongs to 45. Others of his party are copying it, operating within implied permission that they may do so. This wasn't happening before. It's happening now.

But it's the same thing, though not as violent of course, as the assassin who wandered into that synagogue and opened fire: The bad things in our world are their fault. They must be stopped. We are the ones who need to stop it because we can. We do what we have to do and God will stand as the judge of our actions. The ends justify the means--just this one time.

Yes, I know. Nobody's voiced the idea of infusing religion into the Wisconsin legislature's current debacle, in which the Republicans, still in control of the assembly and senate, will be removing the powers they have given outgoing and defeated governor Scott Walker and keep incoming and winning governor-elect Tony Evers from getting them. In doing so, they officially pronounce that they are against peaceful, relenting transitions of government; against what the people of Wisconsin said they wanted; and against anything less than a complete seizure of power.

It's not governing they care about in the least. It's power and its maintenance. Democracy functions best when the losers relent and live on until the next election. The Republicans won't. They can't. It's now foreign to them.

Robin Vos, Wisconsin assembly speaker, sounded the vapid and pointless attempt at normalizing the ambush. First, he said that after all, the liberals (Gasp! What a smear!) would seize control--implying that that would mean the destruction of life as we knew it in this state--and where he was from, people didn't want the Democrats to take control. He also said that governor-elect Evers was being manipulated by the teachers' unions, implying that the real state of Wisconsin needed to be protected from them.

He knows as well as anyone that:

  • first, elections are the will of the people and Tony Evers won that election and the respect for that win was legally earned; 
  • second, Wisconsin is a bit larger than his assembly district, one of 99, however gerrymandered by those of his own ilk (this election proving once again the undemocratic, power-grabbing nature of Republican gerrymandering, since that party retains a strong 63-36 advantage in the assembly despite being outvoted by some 200,000 in total); and 
  • third, having been a very gleeful participant in the passage of Act 10 in 2011, the law that gutted collective bargaining for only a select few unions in the state--including those same teachers' unions--the influence of those unions on the electoral process has only diminished since. (And, if Evers was supported by them, what of it? Vos and the Republicans have long ago succumbed to the very deep pockets of the Wisconsin Manufacturers' Association and that country club of business lobbying, the American Legislative Exchange Council. The last I saw, neither had the corner on justice or ethics--except for themselves.)


He, and all of us, also know that this power grab is unprecedented, which brings the last quick retort from Republicans to its knees: The idea that the Democrats would have done the same thing. Wisconsin has been a state since 1848. If Democrats would have wanted to, they would have done it by now as well. There's nothing so brilliant in this underhanded, conniving bushwhacking that needed deep plotting.

The Republicans in the state legislature, though, have assured us of one thing: When given the chance, the Democrats will respond in kind. Whenever that happens--and it won't happen soon--the Republicans will whine that they had to do it back then when things were really bad, so they should be given a one-off and the Democrats, well, you know: We expect that from them. They'll act like victims. They always do.

Does this demonization sound a bit familiar? Does this exceptionalism kind of get under your skin? Know anybody else who does this incessantly?

Scott Fitzgerald, majority leader of the state senate, has been quoted as saying that the Republicans don't trust the Democrats. Oh, really? And this will replace that loss of trust--how? This will restore confidence in government--how? And this will inspire more people to get out and vote--how?

Within that last question is the not-so-hidden agenda: Discourage voting, even beyond the excessively strangling voting requirements that Republicans have foisted on this state, without which Walker would surely have lost by more. Deal with it as a necessary evil, as another means to an end.

When an assassin walks into a synagogue and opens fire, he discourages participation, too, in something else decent to which he objected. He's alive and will stand trial; he has pled not guilty. Wait and see his sneering. It will be self-justifying. It will ignore basic concepts of right and wrong. It will declare himself as the sole arbiter of justice and, by doing so, encourage others to do the same. He will lust after the opportunity to take the stand and declare his moral rectitude in slaughtering defenseless people as old as 97.

He will, in his mind, stand above the law. Somewhere in there, he will invoke God. His God. The right God. Can't everybody see? The laws aren't good enough. They aren't sufficient to make things right. Once in a while, you just have to take things into your own hands. Otherwise, things will get out of control.

The result? Common courtesy, basic human respect, the understanding of the give-and-take of a society like ours come to a screeching halt. It doesn't happen all at once. It happens with the banality of repetition, like mass shootings, until we become so numb and overwhelmed by it that it settles into a bottomless acceptability, seeing the wanton forces arrayed against the resistance of it as impossibly suffused. The NRA is weakened at the moment, but its damage lives on. So will the consequences of this power grab. If this continues, things really will get out of control.

The Republicans in the Wisconsin state legislature have taken one giant step toward that reality. It's happening in Michigan as well. North Carolina went first, but the courts overturned that attempt. No one knows if that band-aid on a gushing wound of propriety might work this time. But they have declared themselves to be the sole arbiters of justice, not the people of the state who want to put the brakes on their utter contempt for the kind of democracy that doesn't feel good right here and now--a partial repudiation of what they would call limited government: limited to themselves and their power-mad enclave.

There are no limits to the awful effects of this assault, though--unless a response unequalled in our history takes place. We are at that moment.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Knight and 45: Two Peas in A Pod, Two Replaceable Icons of the Past

The other night, ESPN, as part of its series "30-for-30" (excellent sports journalism, by the way) created a show called "The Last Days of Knight," depicting the events leading to the departure of head men's basketball coach Bob Knight from Indiana University.

It was not pleasant. Knight went kicking and screaming, but that's part of the way he coached, too. About the game of basketball, his expertise and strategizing always will be among the best that the college game has ever had to offer (Reveal: I learned the intricacies of his motion offense and man-to-man defense and taught it with intensity, which pleased some and distressed others. I didn't like some of the results interpersonally, but I'm not sure that in a competitive sport one can do otherwise. That has always been the give-and-take of coaching.). But his handling of personalities to fit his style of attacking opponents, and making the mastery of the game as the goal, led to moments of genuine abuse.

Because of Knight's reputation and overbearing, intimidating presence which warned people away from getting on his bad side, much of what others would regard as unacceptable behavior was washed over--especially since, during his career at Indiana, the Hoosiers won three national championships and were nearly always in the conversation during other campaigns. His powerful voice, usually filled with expletives, was always bracing in support, obnoxious and offensive in opposition. His physical presence intimidated, and if it didn't, he intimidated by throwing chairs and grabbing people.

He was a forerunner of 45: He took pride in his polarization. Hate me if you want, but I'll beat you in the end. Winning is the only point, after all. I was not surprised whatsoever that Knight came out in support of 45's candidacy.

Like about 35-40 percent of the country at present, Indiana University overlooked and even held its nose about Knight's antics because he kept winning. It remained powerfully loyal--until film led it unmistakably to question his tactics.

Up until then, it was one person's word against the other. Knight, like 45, used exaggeration and deflecting (usually about the greater good of either teaching young men about life or his overall success) to ride out controversies until they subsided. But like 45, too, they just kept coming. Journalists who looked the other way were forced to confront the evidence that had just too much weight.

Much of the journalism concerning 45, and more of the commentary, still comprises speculation: If this, then that will be inevitable. It has built nearly from the time of his inauguration. The lies and hucksterist exaggerations began then with the size of the inaugural crowd, nothing remotely close to that of President Obama's first inauguration (of which I was a part). With one and then another revelation of misdoing and misappropriation of funds and cover-ups and skulduggery, we have come to expect emotionally strong but factually empty efforts to counteract the fact-findings.

Like 45, Knight spent much of his final days at Indiana condemning the press and trying to make it look like a bunch of hacks. Slowly, the press circled around him with facts, which included the way he looked in defending himself--inadequate, more vapid with each day, and self-centered. Like 45, it became all about him.

Unlike 45, though, once the higher-ups at Indiana understood the real situation, its actions were quick and decisive, without appellate delay or red tape. Knight's departure was not the end of him: He went on to a moderately successful stay at Texas Tech, and a turn in the broadcast booth. The game of basketball went on: some of Knight's disciples, most notably Mike Kryszewski at Duke, continued runs of tremendous success by using some of his tactics but rarely his style. Within one or two seasons, Knight was a flawed icon of the past.

45's money has bought, and will continue to buy, him time and an all-out effort to smudge and fog every and all violations of norms and laws so that he hopes people will, inevitably, wear out and let him be. But the mid-term elections have given his opponents renewed energy and hope, and now nothing will deter them from getting to the bottom line of his wrongdoings and inappropriateness. The press has continually knifed through his fog, too, and their written and visual records cannot now be erased.

His process of removal may come from two paths, and neither may ultimately succeed. But it will be attempted now, of that one can be sure. Those forces have now gathered and he must stand accountable.

Then what will happen? In all likelihood, 45 will (If he doesn't spend the rest of his life in jail, which may mean he may have to pardon himself, which it says here will result in a constitutional amendment specifically prohibiting it, a discussion of which will be done in this space whether it develops as an option or not) develop, or try to develop, that media empire he keeps discussing that the government itself should have. He will flood it with his own propaganda and try to claim that that's just what the major media outlets have been doing all along. (What he'll do against or with Fox will be all that more interesting.). Lacking that, he'll try to buy up everything he possibly can so that his children will take over the major portion of his grifting (having done a considerable amount themselves) and expand it. Unlike Knight, 45's awful influence may just be starting.

If he doesn't commit a major mistake and ruin much of this country first. There's plenty of time for that, if only in resisting removal by whatever constitutional avenues that will be invoked. Knight called upon his public, but after a while, it faded. 45's public may make removal very, very ugly.

Regardless, like Bob Knight, 45 cannot help himself. With every attempt to cover tracks, he reveals more. His lights, too, are fading. His voice, too, is becoming less and less relevant. Like Knight, he will soon become a tragic icon of the past, just one more replaceable person who believed he was the opposite.

Be well. I'll see you down the road.


Mister Mark