Matthew Chapman Profile picture
Game programmer, reporter @RawStory, author, elections nerd, devoted husband. Proudly on the spectrum. All opinions are my own.
eDo Profile picture Jodi Smart Profile picture bmusing Profile picture Acadian Liberal🇺🇸 #Resist #FBR⚜️🇺🇦🐅 Profile picture Modafalla Profile picture 12 subscribed
Feb 20 4 tweets 1 min read
Sigh... every year I have to explain this. THIS PART OF THE TAX CODE HAS A VERY GOOD REASON FOR EXISTING.

Of course the IRS doesn't expect criminals to follow it. The idea is that when they DON'T follow it, they can then get charged with tax evasion on top of their other crimes. Organized crime bosses are hard to prosecute because they can kill, threaten, or intimidate any witnesses to their crimes.

But it's MUCH harder for them to beat tax evasion. Because they clearly have the money, and clearly didn't file a tax return and declare how they earned it.
Feb 13 4 tweets 1 min read
Neither side wants "a secular binational one state solution for Jews AND Palestinians" because both sides are (rightly) terrified of what would happen if the other elected a majority to rule over that combined country.

The *only* path to peace is both of them getting a state. When either side says "one state solution," they mean the other side being ethnically cleansed.

They do not mean a heterodox secular state where everyone enjoys full and equal rights.

Even *if* such a state were created, it would only last a few years and plunge into civil war.
Dec 20, 2023 8 tweets 2 min read
What's maddening about the whole Colorado decision is that tons of people aren't even trying to argue the court erred — they're just saying, "we should ignore what the plain text of the Constitution says and let Trump run anyway for the sake of avoiding political controversy." If you want to argue Trump didn't really participate in an insurrection, go for it — the trial court found mountains of evidence that he did, and even Trump's *own lawyers* have called January 6 an insurrection, but you're welcome to argue why the trial court is wrong.
Dec 7, 2023 4 tweets 2 min read
Caroline, Hamas *filmed themselves* committing rape. They are literally boasting about doing it. And many of the recovered bodies of women from 10/7 show clear sexual trauma.

I don't know what to say if you're going to deny this. nbcnews.com/news/rcna122564
Okay but... "a terrorist organization well-established to have committed mass rape violated its ceasefire agreement to return all the women in its captivity" is in fact already reason enough to continue war operations against them. We don't need "proof" they're still being raped.
Jul 23, 2023 7 tweets 2 min read
In summary: at least half the people Florida's new education standards cite as slaves who learned useful skills in slavery weren't even slaves, and most of the rest didn't learn their skills from slavery.

What a surprise. Also, as I pointed out yesterday, even if some slaves DID learn skills from slavery, this whole framing misses the point: Skills or no, Black people had little freedom in labor in the South post-Emancipation, and many effectively were kept in slave-like states by the Black Codes.
Jul 21, 2023 5 tweets 2 min read
Let me simplify this:

DeSantis is saying any corporation that does anything Republicans don't like, will now be investigated by the state for supposedly breaching responsibility to shareholders, because of potential revenue loss from Republicans not buying their products. This is a psychotically authoritarian attack on free enterprise.

And it also doesn't have any basis in law. Companies are not liable for breach of fiduciary responsibility for literally any single thing they do that fails to turn a profit. That's not how it works.
Jul 2, 2023 15 tweets 3 min read
So how DID it become so expensive to go to college in America?

How did a degree go from being a few-thousand dollar commitment you could pay off with a part-time job on days you didn't have class, to something you need to take out tens of thousands of dollars for?

Well... It turns out there is not one single problem or bad guy behind this. Higher education and the economy and culture around it have changed in a LOT of ways in the last 50 years, that each individually contributed to making it more expensive to go to college.
Jun 25, 2023 7 tweets 2 min read
True non-violent mass civil disobedience is *much* more effective at paralyzing oppressors than violence.

However, the catch is that this is only true in a country that has some semblance of a rule of law that the oppressors themselves stand to suffer from losing. Democracies simply produce much more wealth than dictatorships. Violence on a large scale would destroy that wealth for everyone.

Therefore in democracies, oppressors lose when peaceful resistance is so widespread the violence necessary to stop it would destroy their own power.
Jun 22, 2023 8 tweets 2 min read
I keep seeing people post this graph, but nobody seems to understand what it actually means.

It doesn't indicate workers are paid too little, or corporations are getting greedier.

It actually indicates something else bad about the economy. The key thing to understand about this graph is that these two trends are indexed to different ways of calculating inflation.

Hourly compensation is indexed to the Consumer Price Index, which is a measure of the inflation of goods a typical household buys.
Jun 21, 2023 4 tweets 2 min read
We actually do know who paid off Kavanaugh's credit card debt: at least some of it was his parents.

He was pretty opaque about it with the Senate Judiciary Committee, but the financial paper trail makes it pretty clear that's what happened. https://t.co/huDnRPFgqQmotherjones.com/politics/2021/…
One thing that isn't talked about enough, though, is Kavanaugh was such a bad financial planner he put a six-figure home reno on his *credit cards*.

Why didn't he just take out a HELOC or something? There are a million ways he could have financed that and paid less interest?
Jun 18, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
USPS is a state monopoly for a good reason: it's simply not profitable to deliver to many remote rural areas. Even private couriers like FedEx and UPS rely on USPS for last-mile delivery in these areas. Without a nationalized USPS, people would be essentially unable to live in many remote places, including places with land that's vital for farming and ranching.

Or at least, we'd need an extremely strict regulatory scheme on private couriers that basically makes them utilities.
Jun 17, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
Hi Ian, please tell me of these other countries where paying taxes is optional. I'd love to learn more about this. There are certainly some countries out there that have huge loopholes in their tax codes that let millionaires around the world hide money there. But as far as I'm aware, every country has some kind of tax code for residents and will prosecute people who don't pay it.
Jun 17, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
One big underlying problem is, there is no national standard for rehab treatment, and many programs calling themselves "rehab" have no evidence-based medical care at all. Some are religious programs. Some are nature retreats. Of course these won't cure drug addiction. Compound that with the fact that in many states, there are barely any rules on who's even allowed to open a rehab facility!
Jun 11, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
I wish Biden would spend more time trying to unionize growing sectors with no collective bargaining, and less time upholding bad make-work policies demanded by incumbent unions in stagnating industries. I know that would not help Biden politically — obviously an incumbent union has more power with voters than a union that has yet to be organized. But Biden's auto industry policy is stunningly bad due to fear of pissing off UAW, and now his policy on shipping is bad too.
Jun 10, 2023 6 tweets 2 min read
I'm going to say exactly the same thing I said when Hillary Clinton's email server was investigated. The Espionage Act entirely turns on intent. It's not for people who accidentally let a few classified documents slip into their belongings and give them back when they realize it. Rather, it's for people who deliberately take classified documents for their own personal use, knowing this information would compromise national defense if it leaked, and take steps to conceal that they have them.

This fits the pattern of what Trump did perfectly.
Jun 9, 2023 6 tweets 4 min read
Fact check!

Compared to 1950, the average American today...

-Is more likely to own their own home: census.gov/data/tables/ti…

-And at least one car: energy.gov/eere/vehicles/…

-Work fewer hours a week: eh.net/encyclopedia/h…

-Can afford food more easily: theatlantic.com/business/archi… It's true the average American today holds way more debt than in 1950: listwithclever.com/research/histo….

BUT, that's because Americans have way more access to credit: econlowdown.org/v3/public/cred…

And more legal rights against abusive creditors: ftc.gov/legal-library/… en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bankruptc…
Jun 8, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
The myth every family in the 50s/60s/70s could support a whole family with a three bedroom home and car on a single job with a high school diploma has to be one of the most wrong and toxic ideas in public discourse today. In fact, a VASTLY higher percent of Americans today than 50 years ago own their own home, own at least one car, support their family on a single salary, are food-secure, can afford to take regular vacations — by almost any measure we are better off now than back then.
Jun 8, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
I am astonished at the number of people who think the guy filming this was the protagonist.

No, you don't have the right to tell your neighbors to get out of your neighborhood, no matter what race you are. From what I can see in the video, a bunch of neighbors decided to hold a block party, and the guy is having a complete nativist meltdown over it.

Like, yes, if they didn't have a permit, they should have got one. But this reaction is just insane.
Jun 8, 2023 9 tweets 3 min read
This might be one of the dumbest takes I'll read all week.

Let's go over everything wrong with this cynical effort to weaponize disability in defense of forced car dependence that is literally killing us. First, invoking disabled people as beneficiaries of personal driving is completely backward. Disabled people are LESS likely to drive or be able to afford a car, and MORE likely to take public transportation.

Car dependent infrastructure hurts them most! bts.gov/travel-pattern…
Jun 8, 2023 5 tweets 2 min read
I really thought we had learned our lesson about pseudoscientific Malthusian overpopulation panics in the 1970s. Just a reminder that 1) worldwide fertility rates are *falling*, and 2) we absolutely have the technology and resources to sustain every person on this planet, we are just not using it efficiently or equitably.
Jun 7, 2023 4 tweets 1 min read
If Tyrannosaurs were living in the present day, they probably wouldn't be that dangerous to humans for one simple reason: most humans could outrun them.

They probably only had a top speed of 10mph, and only for short bursts. Actually, come to think of it, *most* mammals large enough for Tyrannosaurs to consider a worthwhile snack could outrun it.