Short thread.
1. In a piece yesterday morning -- thebulwark.com/american-conse… -- I suggested American conservatism might not be salvageable. The excerpts from Bob Woodward's book yesterday provided a new opportunity for conservatives to liberate themselves from Trump and Trumpism.
2. After all, better late than never!
Well, Never seems to be winning hands down. For when another moment of judgment presented itself, American conservatives once again chose not to rise to the occasion.
3. I won't go through the tiresome litany of sophistry, excuse-making, and misdirection we've seen since the Woodward excerpts--based on tape recordings of the president (!)--have appeared. Suffice it to say that conservative elected officials have ducked comment...
4. ...and that conservative commentators seem more upset about the mistake of talking with Woodward than about what Trump said to Woodward. The most cynical preachers on the right assured us real people don't care about any of Woodward's reporting (or anyone else's, apparently).
5. So much for any hopes that today's conservatism might rouse itself from its Trump-acquiescent stupor in light of the latest outrages.
6. I wrote yesterday that Trump's "authoritarianism is as far from Burke as from Hayek. As far from a concern for liberty as for virtue. As far from American greatness as from decency. And 'conservatism' now rides along with this authoritarianism in a nicely cushioned sidecar."
7. What we've seen in the hours since the Woodward excerpts is that just as today's conservatism rides along with authoritarianism, so today's conservatives now ride along with Trump, also in a nicely cushioned sidecar.
8. It turns out, unsurprisingly, that the collapse of conservative ideas goes hand in hand with the collapse of conservative character. So what that's worthwhile is left to conserve?

END

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More from @BillKristol

1 Sep
1. A short thread, following up on a theme of this piece--that on September 1, 2020 we face dangers to freedom and democracy less terrible and dramatic than those of September 1, 1939--but by no means insignificant. As always, Lincoln provides guidance:
thebulwark.com/trumps-new-con…
2. From Lincoln's 1838 Lyceum address:
"At what point shall we expect the approach of danger? By what means shall we fortify against it?-- Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant, to step the Ocean, and crush us at a blow? Never!"
3. "At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us...If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.
Read 5 tweets
28 Aug
Don't watch Trump. Read Lincoln.
A short thread.
1. Just over 156 years ago, on August 22, 1864, another president spoke at the White House. Lincoln spoke not to a political party but to the One Hundred Sixty-sixth Ohio Regiment. Here's what he said.
2. "I suppose you are going home to see your families and friends. For the service you have done in this great struggle in which we are engaged I present you sincere thanks for myself and the country.
Read 8 tweets
15 Aug
Thread
1. The following email I received suggests both why the Post Office scandal is real and why it could be so devastating politically.
"I am a retired teacher (62 years old and retired because of the pandemic).
2. "I am at high risk because of high blood pressure and mild cerebral palsy. Consequently, I have arranged for my blood pressure meds to be delivered by USPS so that I don't have to leave my house. The meds are now late.
3. "I have been on the phone with [insurance company] reps for 2 hours yesterday and 3 hours today. I have arranged to get 5 days worth of meds (for which I will have to pay full price) at a local CVS. (Someone else will need to pick up my meds.)
Read 6 tweets
3 Jul
Short thread.
There are, I think, three ways Trump could win.
In order of likelihood:
1. Trump uses the powers of the the executive branch in unprecedented ways (Nixon or Ukraine on steroids), combined with his demagoguery and GOP voter suppression, to win an unfair election.
2. In a somewhat close election, with some uncertainty on Election Night, Trump over the next weeks uses the powers of the executive branch, combined with demagoguery, Fox and Facebook, and compliant GOP governors, state legislators and members of Congress, to steal the election.
3. Trump actually persuades a plurality of voters in states adding up to 270 electoral college votes to vote for him.
Read 4 tweets
16 Jun
1. For me (not a lawyer, but someone who served in government and signed an SF-312 and SF-4414, and have had many friends and associates go through the clearance process for post-employment articles and books): The passage in the legal complaint that jumped out was paragraph 46:
2. "On or around April 27, 2000, Ms. Knight had completed her review and was of the judgment that the manuscript draft did not contain classified information."
Ms. Knight is Ellen Knight, the career employee who had spent four months working painstakingly with Bolton...
3. ...to remove or rewrite countless passages to ensure no classified information was even inadvertently revealed in the book. The process sounds as if it was even more painstaking than usual. I'll also say, knowing Bolton, that whatever criticisms one might have of him...
Read 7 tweets
1 May
1. A short thread on a rainy end-of-April evening.

Tomorrow's May. According to poets and lyricists through the ages, things should start to look up. And pundits in 2020 share the sentiment: That first third of 2020 was rough. But we made it through. The skies will brighten.
2. But will they? What if the first four months of 2020 turn out not to have been the worst third of the year, but the best? What if the pandemic not only doesn't go away but flares up again? What if the economy goes into something more like a depression than recession?
3. And what if Trump makes everything far, far worse--from self-defeating but audience-pleasing moves in foreign policy to attempts to win re-election that threaten the integrity of our democratic process, lead to real civil unrest, and even endanger a fair election in November?
Read 4 tweets

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