My former comrades on the right saying that "Because Mitch didn't dump the filibuster in 2017, he never will" are acting as if the past four years didn't happen. So, to use a political science term, let us engage in cutting the shit here for a moment. /1
McConnell and the GOP are without principle; their only principle is power and the expediencies that create power. In 2017, it was not in Mitch's interest to end the filibuster, especially with the risk that the GOP would lose seats in 2018. He knew he might need it. /2
This is the same McConnell whose respect for norms and tradition denied Garland a hearing and rammed through Barrett weeks before an election he knew Trump was likely to lose. He's a master of obstruction and opportunism. So let us cease this nonsense about Mitch's principles. /3
When @MichaelSteele said Mitch wouldn't think twice about "jettisoning the filibuster if it meant getting the GOP's agenda," he was right. Just because he didn't do it in 2017 doesn't mean that he has some sort of respect for tradition. It was about raw power calculations. /4
I have long defended the filibuster because I think there are things that should not be decided 51/49, that should require a greater show of comity. But Barrett's confirmation, in particular, made a mockery of that idea. This is hardball. Mitch plays it. Dems must play it too. /5
As a practical matter, I often advised not doing things the GOP could then adopt and use against the Dems (like dumping the filibuster). But that was from a different time, before the GOP became infested with the kind of mooks and poltroons who acquitted Donald Trump *twice*. /6
This is no longer a civic competition between two political parties. This is a direct competition between a coalition in favor of the rule of law and liberal democracy vs a party that has become Trump's weird cult of personality and an authoritarian political movement. /7
The GOP is using a Senate rule to forestall legislative action against state-level authoritarian measures from a GOP base that is enraged at losing a fair election.
So if it comes down to that one Senate rule or democracy itself, dump the rule and pass the bill.
Mitch would. /8
This isn't going to be the last test of the democracy coalition against the authoritarians. My biggest fear, really, is that the President Biden (himself too much a product of the Senate) and his Democrats - the leaders of this unwieldy coalition - are not up to the challenge. /9
But in any case, please spare me the bad-faith bloviation about how Mitch stood on principle in 2017. He made a smart call about what tools he'd need in the coming four years. He'd change that in a hot second if he reaches a different conclusion - and you know it. /10x

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More from @RadioFreeTom

30 Sep
This is a great piece about why nostalgia about that "better time" is bullshit. (Well, it's about more than that.) A few observations, and h/t @RuleandRuin
Why Is Every Young Person in America Watching ‘The Sopranos’?

/1


nytimes.com/2021/09/29/mag…
First, it's a great reflection on how nostalgia runs in regular and stupid cycles. The young people watching The Sopranos are nostalgic watching someone be nostalgic about the period before The Sopranos; nostalgia watching the 2000s while watching someone hating the 2000s. /2
Second, it's a warning that maybe we're now a lot more like Tony than we want to admit. I've said something like this is my recent book about the bored middle-class looking for meaning. That was Tony: Affluent, bored, somewhat self-hating, adrift and depressed. /3
Read 5 tweets
19 Sep
Let us consider for a moment what one of Breitbart's Big Thinkers is admitting
1. Vaccines work
2. Vax resistance is almost entirely partisan
3. Unvaxed people are dying in large numbers

He then gets from this to: THIS IS THE LEFT'S ENTIRE PLAN!
/1
Now, it is *possible* that this is double-triple-reverse pro-vaccine psychology: "They don't REALLY wants us to get vaccinated, so we better do it!"
No one at Breitbart is that smart, so let us consider an alternative explanation.

/2
The more likely explanation is - as it always is - "Look at what you sneering elites made us do."

That way, when people die, it's STILL not their fault, you see. They were bullied into NOT taking the vaccine because they were disrespected or something. So it's on you lefties. /3
Read 4 tweets
15 Sep
Here's what I think - so far - about the Milley business.
- Calls for him to resign are stupid.
- Calls to fire him are stupid.
- The call to China was a *good* thing
- It's a legit question about whether he was preemptively countermanding possible orders from the CINC.

/1
Bad-faith calls from craven opportunists like Rubio mean nothing. And no CJCS has ever had to deal with a mentally ill president who was actively trying to overthrow the constitutional order. But before we cheer any of this, let's remember that everything becomes precedent.
/2
Milley, I think, was trying to steady the ship in case Trump called in some more junior guy and said "Get me Xi on the phone and bring the football." But you don't want it to become a thing where CJCS can say "ignore POTUS orders unless you clear with me." That's dangerous. /3
Read 5 tweets
12 Sep
Few people can write with the same kind of spiritual awareness and kindness of spirit @DavidAFrench brings here. And yet, I am part of the "empathy crisis" he describes. In fact, I am worse: I am past judgment and anger. I have reached indifference, and this, I know, is a sin. /1
@DavidAFrench I feel this enough that I have discussed it with my clergyman. But I also cannot make myself feel something that I cannot feel. I do not gloat or sneer at the deaths of others. What worries me, now, is that these stories have little impact on me. And I am not alone in this. /2
Months of being told "leave me alone" have led me, finally, to cease arguing. I am respecting other adults and fellow citizens in their choices. Yes, I am angry that their choices produce costs on the rest of us, to be sure. But for their illnesses, I am struggling to feel. /3
Read 5 tweets
31 Aug
So, this is a mini-thread about military professors and that disclaimer that some of you heard from Chris Jansing (thank you, @11thHour) about my views being my own. This is a quirky requirement that occurs because Professional Military Ed professors (PME) are USG employees. /1
I am not representing the policy of the Naval War College or any military school here, and none of this will really matter for me personally when I leave Federal service in the spring, but it's helpful to know when you see my PME colleagues in the public space. /2
PME institutions are accredited schools that give accredited degrees. Their civilian faculty, accordingly, must have academic freedom to speak their mind as part of being faculty at actual educational institutions. (Also, they are citizens who have the right to speak!) /3
Read 13 tweets
30 Aug
I have a piece of advice for Democrats going to the wall for the "Biden did this perfectly" argument.
I know you're concerned that this is going to be used by the GOP as fodder. But listen: Stop worrying about what the GOP thinks.
Be the adults, as much as you might hate it.
/1
Fearing to criticize Biden because you think the GOP will seize on it is playing *their* game and letting them bully you into being as extreme as they are. They *want* you to go full-on defensive, because you'll be stung later in hearings and other revelations. /2
Biden could preside over a Taliban surrender on the deck of a battleship and the GOP and FOX would portray it as some kind of socialist plot. Just ignore them. Act like the governing party you want to be: Tough, committed to your policies, willing to own mistakes, resolute. /3
Read 5 tweets

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