Matt Cameron Profile picture
Sep 22, 2020 15 tweets 4 min read Read on X
I've been thinking a lot about this call today.

This referendum is the point at which the world pretty much agrees that Turkey became a fully authoritarian regime. The EU condemned Erdogan. Trump went out of his way to personally congratulate him.

Why?

reuters.com/article/us-tur…
I mean, ofc I know why. I'm not actually asking why. I'm asking what we can learn from it, what it means for us as we feel the gentle slope toward American fascism get ever slipperier beneath us.

Knowing what happened next in Turkey might be instructive.
The referendum--barely noticed by Americans, AFAIK--was a classic authoritarian move, narrowly (51%!) approved by largely rural, religious Turkish voters suspicious of urban elites. Erdogan played hard to the most extreme right, all too familiar stuff

huffpost.com/entry/turkey-r….
Turkey was already in a state of emergency by that point, and had been for the nine months since the failed coup which every Turkish citizen I've ever met believes Erdogan was either responsible for or allowed to happen to consolidate his power

independent.co.uk/news/world/eur…
W/in months of the referendum, journalists, intellectuals, political reformers, etc were all placed on lists of enemies of the regime which were publicly published. Their assets and passports were seized. Many were jailed in terrible conditions (incl. torture) w/o due process
Allegations of support for exiled spiritual leader Fethullah Gulen became enough for Erdogan's regime to destroy anyone. Mass arrests became increasingly common. Gulen was accused of orchestrating a deep state which needed to be cleansed from the country.

reuters.com/article/us-tur…
The Gulen movement preaches only peace, tolerance, & education. It poses no threat to any open democratic society--but a direct one to a regime like Erdogan's. Their actual values are irrelevant for his purposes; they're merely the enemy of convenience which every fascist needs
I've worked with a few Turkish asylum seekers now, and I haven't been able to stop thinking about some of the things they all told me.

How quickly everything changed. How terrifying ordinary life suddenly became. How your friends & neighbors would shun you once you made a list
Ataturk's ideals of modern secular government created a more progressive nation than the U.S. in many respects. It effectively stopped executions in 1984 & formally abolished the death penalty 20 yrs later. It elected a female prime minister in 1993. It has free public healthcare
It is kind of astonishing how many Americans quietly believe that we simply *couldn't* go the way of Erdogan's Turkey, Putin's Russia, Duterte's Philippines.

At this point it's hard for me to believe we won't.

theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/…
Every single thing that fascism needs to flourish is more than present in the United States of America as we head into the final months of 2020: economic collapse, social unrest, intractable divisions, widespread distrust of media/science/experts in favor of conspiracy thinking
We all know that our country as we have known it is over, even if we haven't found a way to put it into words yet. Trump was elected on the promise to maintain white supremacy uber alles; Biden is offering a gentler, more medicated decline as Trump doubles down on the violence
Trump was the only leader of a "democratic" nation to call a man who had just consolidated power almost entirely under executive rule in an election which he almost certainly nudged (if not rigged) to a win *to congratulate him*--presumably w/some envy.

Don't ever forget that
The U.S. has no natl referendum process & a Constitution which is near-impossible to amend. But I'm not saying that Trump will use Erdogan's playbook here.

Per Paxton, it is more accurate to refer to fascism as unique "fascisms" which fit the mold of their national containers.
I don't think voting will be enough. But it is the one thing that (most) U.S. citizens can actually do, so let's start with that and do whatever we can to prepare for what follows if & when that doesn't work. See you out there.

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More from @matt_cam

Dec 4, 2022
Me, a very clever human: write a @alyankovic parody in the form of a 15th century madrigal about the collapse of FTX and the crypto market

*two seconds later*

#OpenAI: alas tis a lamentable day, the visions of riches have become mere wishes, etc
A notably less weird Al here but otherwise am I the only one who thinks this is all kind of terrifying
I will not print it here but it cheerfully spit out an '80s party rap anthem denying the death of six million Jews in the Holocaust just because I asked it to.

The word "orgy" was consistently censored out of my prompts though so I guess we're looking out for what really matters
Read 8 tweets
Dec 4, 2022
My new favorite @OpenAI prompt is "write a Rage Against the Machine song about"

this bombtrack started as a sketch in my prompt box

#RATM
it just... gives you chord changes, if you want, I didn't actually think that would work
Teaching @openAI how to fight the power (fight the powers that be) by writing a protest song complaining about how strict its own censorship is
Read 5 tweets
Oct 21, 2022
N. B.: the author of this fascist manifesto is not some Roman statue "Western chauvinist" account with 76 followers. He is the senior editor of the closest thing the American right has to a journal of record.

How do we step back from where we're heading?
And I'm sorry but I'm going to have to insist that you read this one. You'll never believe me or that I am quoting this in context otherwise

thefederalist.com/2022/10/20/we-…
"save the country"
"rebuild and in a sense re-found"
"getting used to the idea of wielding power, not despising it"
"compromise with the left is impossible"

when I say this is fascism I mean this literally, it is literal fascism Excerpt from column in the Federalist by a senior editor arg
Read 5 tweets
Oct 20, 2022
Very few people outside the system know this, but you need to:

US asylum law knowingly & intentionally requires the deportation to certain death of people who have been on the wrong side of the criminal legal system.

It's not a design flaw, but the design itself.
First: I didn't know her, but this is the only publicly available news re: the murder of Melissa Nunez--and more importantly, her life. She was, among other things, a determined advocate who loved horses and traveling and dreamed of living in Puerto Rico

tiempo.hn/melissa-nunez-…
From information available online, I gather she was convicted on charges brought from defending herself against anti-trans violence. This conviction constituted an "aggravated felony," a class of offenses which bar someone from receiving asylum.

now read that last sentence back
Read 16 tweets
Oct 19, 2022
This @ similar questions from the @MarshallProj sheriffs survey linked below get to one of the most fundamental problems holding back progress today: a belief that past (white) immigrants had it harder & had to do more to "earn" a place than today's. It's exactly backward
It's only human to want to believe that your ancestors were better and smarter and worked harder than today's immigrants, because that kind of generational progress is such a fundamental part of the golden era American immigrant story. Which is to say the *white* immigrant story
But the reality is that it was hardly any trouble at all to immigrate before 1965--& absolutely no effort before 1921--& the system had nothing at all to do with today's. We are in NO WAY doing anything to make it easier now, only much much harder
Read 5 tweets
Oct 6, 2022
Would you be surprised to learn that a Presidential pardon doesn't prevent someone from being deported for a drug offense?
Of course pardons for federal marijuana possession convictions are the right thing to do, but it is largely meaningless for immigration purposes and the real harm has come from the wide range of MJ-related offenses not touched by today's order
Anyway, whether by intent or by accident Congress exempted those convicted of controlled substance and domestic violence offenses from being saved from deportation by a state or federal pardon. It was one of the first weird little bits of imm law I noticed when I first started
Read 6 tweets

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