Profile picture
Deregulate the border @johnastoehr
, 23 tweets, 4 min read Read on Twitter
1. If you had something better to do Monday than watch cable news, consider yourself lucky. The subject of debate was civility, or the lack thereof in today’s Washington. I can’t think of more pointless or more infuriating topic.
2. A restaurant politely refused service to Press Secretary Sanders due to her complicity in the president’s sadist border policy. Sanders tweeted abt the incident, sparking a mind-numbing day of endless pedantry about the need for everyone to get along in these polarized times.
3. It was as if we forgot the administration Sanders speaks for had confiscated babies from immigrant mothers legally seeking political asylum.
4. It was as if the feelings of the powerful were more important than the feelings of kids in detention camps. It was as if the comfort of the comfortable had a privileged place over the affliction of the afflicted.
5. Journalists should care about civility out of professional self-interest. Their job is to inform citizens so they can engage in a democratic process of reasoned debate over the common good.
6. But for civility to have meaning beyond etiquette, parties must recognize the legitimacy of others. Civility presumes that everyone agrees we’re all in this together and that everyone will act in the interest of the common good.
7. That’s the problem. Not everyone sees that we’re all in this together.
8. President Donald Trump proved this point even as pedants clucked their tongues over civility’s nadir. After a video went viral of US Rep. Maxine Waters encouraging people to publicly shame and shun administration officials, Trump said:
9. What is a civil response to the president hinting real hard that a Congresswoman better watch her back? There is none. To be sure, you can insist that it’s wrong to threaten people. To be sure, you can say the president ought to “be best.”
10. But that’s not going to stop him. To Trump, anyone who’s not a Republican is the enemy. Where is civility when one half of Washington wants to annihilate the other half?
11. The last time the political parties agreed to sublimate their respective interests in the name of the common good was the time of the New Deal when the federal government expanded the American franchise to include those previously blocked out of it.
12. But such civility came at a price—as long as everyone was white.
13. That consensus began to break down in the 1960s, with the Voting Rights Act and the end of Jim Crow, but conservatives accepted the New Deal’s basic structure while carving out pieces in the name of state’s rights, limited government and fiscal restraint.
14. All bets were off after Barack Obama became the first African-American president. It was one thing to expand democracy on the backs of white taxpayers. It was another for a black man to reside at the heart of American power. That’s was beyond the pale.
15. When Orin Kerr said the following, he was trying to describe what Democrats are feeling. But he could just as well have been talking about Republicans in 2008.
16. After Obama’s election, Republican voters, fearing the loss of racial status, went all-in behind an agenda that did everything possible to sabotage Obama, even if that meant bringing the country to the brink of fiscal collapse and stealing a US Supreme Court seat.
17. Democrats have had doubts about democracy since the high court violated the people’s sovereignty by deciding the 2000 presidency.
18. That doubt grew deeper as the US went to war with the wrong country, as corruption flourished, as too-big-to-fail banks never faced justice, and as normal working Americans got screwed.
19. Obama’s victory relieved those doubts. But now, given that Trump’s presidency is a repudiation of what appeared to be an expanded democracy for all, those doubts are back.
20. With the implementation of a policy inflicting harm on children for the sake of inflicting harm on children, doubts about democracy may be here to stay.
21. Bloomberg’s Francis Wilkinson argued last week that Democrats are too attached to democracy to give up on it. I trust he’s right. But I believe something else is right. bloomberg.com/view/articles/…
22. The time for civility is over. It’s time to break the rules.
23. I don't know what the say, my friends. Dark, dark times ahead. Please support my work by following me and by signing up for my newsletter. Thank you. stoehr.substack.com/p/democrats-tu…
Missing some Tweet in this thread?
You can try to force a refresh.

Like this thread? Get email updates or save it to PDF!

Subscribe to Deregulate the border
Profile picture

Get real-time email alerts when new unrolls are available from this author!

This content may be removed anytime!

Twitter may remove this content at anytime, convert it as a PDF, save and print for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video

1) Follow Thread Reader App on Twitter so you can easily mention us!

2) Go to a Twitter thread (series of Tweets by the same owner) and mention us with a keyword "unroll" @threadreaderapp unroll

You can practice here first or read more on our help page!

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just three indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member and get exclusive features!

Premium member ($3.00/month or $30.00/year)

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!