1. One thing last night made clear is that not only doesn't "fact-checking in real time" work on Trump, it's actually JUST WHAT HE WANTS. Allow me to explain...
2. When he says "The election was rigged" or "I did complete the wall," gets corrected and then says the lie again, steamrolling over the journalist, it isn't about which of these competing versions of reality will be judged factually accurate.
3. The conflict, and his bullying of the journalist, is the essence of the performance. It says "We will create our own reality. You have no power over us. And the more frustrated you get, the more we win."
4. The journalist with their petty "facts" is essential to the spectacle. Getting fact-checked then bullying the journalist is WAY better than just repeating his lie on Truth Social for the zillionth time.
5. It shows him defeating his enemy, mocking them, pouring his contempt on them while his fans applaud and cheer. Without that foil there's no drama. When it's over he has proven his mastery over the people he and his fans loathe.
6. That doesn't mean anyone outside of his base is at all persuaded. But for that base, it creates a visceral thrill no other Republican can touch.
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With Nikki Haley entering the presidential race, people are noting that she took the Confederate flag down from the SC statehouse, and that was a good thing. But there are some things to remember about it.../1
This happened after white supremacist Dylann Roof murdered 9 people at Mother Emanuel church in Charleston. Haley said that while the flag had previously stood for "service, sacrifice and heritage" Roof had "hijacked everything that people thought of" about the flag. /2
To which you have to ask, which "people" was she talking about? Probably not the 27% of South Carolinians who are black. /3
False. I argue not that MoCs SHOULDN'T BE ABLE to read the full text of bills, but that it's not necessary because legislative language is highly technical. The member needs to know what the bill does, not whether section 1(a)34(b) is authorized by subsection 54(d)(46)a
If members want to pore over 4,000 pages of that, have at it. But it's not necessary. People who say otherwise either don't understand how legislation works or are trying to fool their audience into getting mad about something the audience doesn't understand. Usually the latter.
As for the idea that the government shouldn't try to balance its budget, I argue that it's not a high priority, certainly not higher than doing the things we want government to do. And guess what, every conservative agrees with me. Want to know how I know?
1. A case study in how journalists allow politicians to lie, ensuring that the more cynical a politician is, the greater the rewards for dishonesty will be, courtesy of Kevin McCarthy and @PunchbowlNews . Come with me...
2. Their newsletter this morning contains this nugget from an interview they did with McCarthy
3. The idea that the DoJ labeled concerned parents who spoke up at school board meetings "terrorists" is not misleading or deceptive or disputed. It's a LIE. Guess who knows this perfectly well: Kevin McCarthy and everyone at Punchbowl.
There's a surreal quality to this whole thing - not this inane TV show, but the entire campaign - that everyone treats Herschel Walker like he's a real candidate and not someone whose grasp of public policy is exceeded by that of the average 5th grader
I mean seriously, it's BONKERS. There are some seriously dumb elected officials in the GOP, people like Louie Gohmert or Ron Johnson, but Walker makes them look like geniuses. And the conventions of journalism...
...mean that reporters have to say "Walker's latest statement raises questions..." which serves to sanitize and normalize him, when the only sane reaction to his appalling candidacy is to scream "ARE YOU FRIGGING KIDDING ME???" every day, which of course you can't do.
1. Received a text with the typo "FeSantis" and I have decided that Ron FeSantis was a guest character in a two-episode story arc on "The White Shadow."
He is, of course, Salami's cousin.*
*Yes, the Italian-American character was named Salami. Just go with it.
2. Ron FeSantis transfers to Carver High, having moved into the neighborhood with his single dad. His life has been a struggle since his mom moved out, and while his aunt and uncle (Salami's parents) try to help, he keeps getting into trouble.
3. Can basketball give FeSantis the structure and community he's been lacking? There are signs of hope. In one practice he makes a behind-the-back feed to Coolidge for an easy layup. "Nice pass, FeSantis," says his teammate. FeSantis smiles. But after practice...
One problem the political media have in talking about Republican figures like Mark Finchem and Kristina Karamo is that we have a language to talk about ideology - "extreme," "out of the mainstream," "radical" - but we're not supposed to say "This person is simply bonkers." But...
...that's really what we're dealing with in many of these cases. These GOP nominees don't have "extreme" ideas. They're utterly untethered to reality. You wouldn't trust them to walk your dog for a weekend. And the GOP wants to put them in charge of elections.
There is simply no equivalent on the left. You can find leftists with radical policy ideas - say, abolishing prisons - but Democrats don't see your idiot cousin who talks about chemtrails all the time and say "Let's nominate Scooter here for governor! He knows the score!"