When this election is over, win or lose, we Dems need to reckon with something.
We - me included - have spent endless time spotlighting the immoral and corrupt things Trump has done - as if people seeing them is enough to change their minds.
For some people, it is.
1/
We haven’t reckoned with a thornier reality though:
Too many people aren’t swayed by bad things because they don’t think they’re actually bad.
Having a crime on tape isn’t compelling to a jury that doesn’t believe it’s a crime.
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And being blunt, I’m talking about primarily white people here.
The array of comments I’ve seen in the past day from white people who still support Trump has really been something.
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And it isn’t the virulent, summer-toothed MAGAs I’m talking about.
It’s the “nice, polite folks” under posts like Jack Nicklaus’ endorsement of Trump.
People who use “tolerance” to mean “not holding things against shitty people.”
4/
We have a morality and character problem.
We’ve tried to solve it by showcasing Trump’s immorality.
Thankfully, I think there are enough Americans to carry an election that way.
But it shouldn’t be close like this.
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When this election is over, we need to reckon with that and take a good, long look at how we go after the root problem of a selfish electorate that lacks the foundation to see morality, ethics and character as virtues.
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And the irony ringing in my head as I type this is that the problem accelerated dramatically when bad actors said almost the exact same thing.
Newt Gingrich and the right hijacked the language of morality.
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We need to take it back. And we need to root out the moral rot of the past forty years.
There can be no sustained renewal until a community agrees on its social contract.
8/
We’ve been trying desperately to show enough evidence of bad acts to enough good people to win an election.
And we haven’t really reconciled with the fact that the problem isn’t a shortage of bad acts; it is a surplus of shitty people.
That needs addressing.
9/9
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About five or six years ago or so, I was working with a small firm as partners on a long-term client project.
I discovered that the two senior guys from the partner firm were cheating our client.
Basically skimming money by getting a backend cut of inflated vendor bills.
1/
I had helped write our agreement with the client. I considered myself a point of trust. The partners were defrauding the client - and me knowing meant I could be either a tacit accomplice or a whistleblower.
I ain’t no fucking accomplice, so I consulted an attorney...
2/
The partnership and client relationship were important to me.
They were 90% of my income.
I figured I could blow the whistle on the partner firm and the client would likely fire them and possibly hire me back directly.
3/
As COVID flares to its worst levels of the pandemic, Donald Trump’s incompetence is fully coming home to roost.
And Mitch McConnell could have staved off the reckoning with a stimulus bill... but he was too busy penning the fantasy final scene in a biopic that will never be. 1/
McConnell pushed through an illegitimate SCOTUS justice thinking it would be the final championship ring that made him the GOAT.
And now his party is poised for an obliterating wave of losses followed by an obliterating wave of reform.
2/
Trump piloted us headlong into the three peaks of rising COVID, a collapsed economy and plummeting markets because he is a toddler locked in a cockpit sure he is Chuck Yeager.
McConnell though... he chose this.
He punched in a course straight into mountains.
3/
Tonight, the White House is going to rub America’s nose in their successful corruption of the Supreme Court.
Mark my words: The pictures of a corrupt president on the White House lawn politicizing a SCOTUS appointment 8 days before an election will live in infamy.
1/
Trump cannot help but see Coney Barrett being illegitimately pushed through as a victory because his disordered mind sees every time he successfully cheats as proof of his power.
But the public won’t see that.
It won’t see that today and it won’t see it tomorrow.
2/
The public will see it as the distilling image of the reduction of the Supreme Court to an illegitimate political body no longer a coequal branch.
It will see it as the moment SCOTUS became a wholly owned subsidiary of an unpopular president and even less popular Congress.
3/