NEW: A new president enters the White House following a failed, impeached president, amidst unprecedented racial reckoning, and battling white revanchists bent on insurrection.

Here's what Ulysses S. Grant can teach Joe Biden: politico.com/news/magazine/…
The events earlier this month were hardly the first insurrection in U.S. history, and there's a direct through-line between the white terror-backed examples from Reconstruction and the Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol: Image
The overlap between the pro-Trump insurrection and the insurrections during Reconstruction are impossible to miss: "The Red Shirts of South Carolina have been replaced with the Red Hats of MAGA."

And the "Lost Cause" is becoming the "Trump Lost Cause."

politico.com/news/magazine/… Image
What was Grant's response to insurrection(s) across the South? First, the creation of the DOJ—and appointing the right people to head it.

As AG Akerman said, the white supremacist insurrectionists were leading “war, and cannot be effectively crushed on any other theory.” Image
And second, Grant brought the full weight of the federal government down on the heads of the white insurrectionists:

"Grant’s willingness to bring the full legal and military authority of the government to bear [broke] the Klan’s back and produced a dramatic decline in violence" Image
Yet Grant's successes in crushing insurrectionists also contained the seeds of failure:

Grant "realized that however welcome enforcement of Reconstruction would be in the short term, in the long term it was politically suicidal, and no longer enjoyed support of white Americans." Image
So what can Grant teach Biden? Two things.

1. Use the full weight of the federal government, and all—all—resources available. "There are so many more federal laws that can be used now... there are any number of laws on the books now that theoretically could be used." Image
2. Biden and others must make clear that there's no quarter for insurrectionists in the American body politic.

'The quicker you say, ‘There’s a line you can’t cross,’ the better... ‘And if you do, we’ll come down on you like you won’t believe.’” Image
And the lessons of successfully—or unsuccessfully—putting down American insurrectionists can't be implemented soon enough.

As @BrooksDSimpson said, "The stakes are actually bigger this time than during Reconstruction."

politico.com/news/magazine/… Image
"You see a common pattern in the Capitol insurrectionists. They are mainly middle-class to upper-middle-class whites who are worried that, as social changes occur around them, they will see a decline in their status in the future.”
Coverage of the American right circa 2009-11 has aged horribly:

—The Tea Party? Morphed into ethno-nationalist anti-democratic MAGA base
—Militias? Morphed into ethno-nationalist anti-democratic shock troops
—The guy leading the birther movement? Incited an insurrection

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More from @cjcmichel

23 Mar
NEW: For years, U.S. lawyers have played key roles in kleptocratic networks, and yet escaped both scrutiny and regulations.

@CooleyOnEurasia and I looked at what effect this has had—and what can be done: foreignpolicy.com/2021/03/23/u-s…
One way to highlight just how useful U.S. lawyers are for kleptocrats:

Look at how many fewer anti-money laundering regulations U.S. lawyers face compared to European counterparts.

foreignpolicy.com/2021/03/23/u-s…
When it comes to anti-money laundering efforts, lobbyists for the U.S. legal sector constantly cite one solution: self-regulation.

But as one Georgetown paper last year found, there's "no evidence" U.S. lawyers have a good grasp on money laundering vulnerabilities.
Read 5 tweets
12 Mar
NEW: One Texas GOP legislator has proposed an "1836 Project" for "patriotic education"—which is a good chance to revisit just how central cementing slavery was to the Texas Revolution. newrepublic.com/article/161685…
Quick timeline of slavery and the Texas Revolution:

1829: Mexico abolishes slavery.
1830: Anglo lobbyists secure a slavery "exemption" for Texas.
1833: Stephen F. Austin: "Texas must be a slave country."
1835: First shots of the Texas Revolution.
The Texas Revolution: Less a successor to the American Revolution, and far more a precursor to the Confederate slave empire.

newrepublic.com/article/161685…
Read 7 tweets
2 Mar
A few days after the UN's FACTI Panel launch, five big takeaways from what might well be a pivotal moment in the global fight against tax havens and illicit financial flows: financialtransparency.org/five-key-takea…
1. The report helped gather in one place just how *gargantuan* illicit financial flows and tax abuse are:

—Estimated private wealth in secrecy jurisdictions: $7 trillion
—Estimated global GDP in offshore assets: 10%
—Amount annual corporate profit-shifting costs: $650 billion
2. Context. Billions lost, trillions gone—what does that even mean? It means:

—In Gambia, financing for 6,500 wells
—In Chad, financing for 38,000 classrooms
—In South Africa, financing for HIV treatments for 6 million citizens
—In Germany, financing for 8,000 wind turbines
Read 7 tweets
1 Mar
Ulysses S. Grant “was never confused about the fact that, as he wrote in the conclusion to his memoirs, ‘slavery’ was the ‘cause’ of the Civil War.” Image
“Grant understood the meaning of grand strategy, Lee did not.” One “joined the South because he was a Virginian,” the other “threw in his lot with the North because he believed in the United States.” Image
Read 5 tweets
28 Feb
NEW: The events in Texas this month should highlight just how idiotic state-level secession is—but pro-Trump secessionist rhetoric is only going to grow and grow. nbcnews.com/think/opinion/…
Think for a second what an unmitigated disaster secession would be for Texas (or any state).

It's a complete fantasy that the economics, the security, or the population(s) would somehow remain static.

nbcnews.com/think/opinion/…
The recent secession chatter on the Trumpian right can't just be laughed at. It's qualitatively different than anything before—and it continues to gain new adherents.

And it has to be condemned as being little more than calls for armed, authoritarian treason.
Read 6 tweets
1 Jan
THE U.S. JUST BANNED ANONYMOUS SHELL COMPANIES nytimes.com/2021/01/01/us/…
Pardon the all-caps, but the Senate's veto override today means that the U.S. A) just eliminated the primary building block in America's transformation into an offshore haven, and B) passed the most sweeping counter-kleptocracy reforms in decades—potentially ever.
Incredible news, and an incredible way to start 2021. What a moment.
Read 16 tweets

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