Monday, January 24, 2022

If You’re Not Afraid, We Aren’t Doing Our Jobs

Question:  Assume voters are not en masse glued to Twitter (because they aren’t). Are they more likely to vote for abstractions like “saving democracy,” or on concrete concerns like inflation and drug prices? Show your work. Winning friends and influencing people for 2024. Nothing succeeds like the thing that got you booted out of office the last time. Worked pretty well for them in Georgia. I hear Arizona is solidly red still, too. I pause here to note “political violence” was “mainstreamed” in American politics in Chicago ‘68. By Kent State in 1970, when four people were shot because other people were expressing a political position on the Vietnam War, and nobody held the shooters accountable. By the Klan opposing voting rights after the Civil War. By the Civil War itself. Political violence was so assumed in American politics Jules Verne could mock it when Phineas Fogg passed through small-town middle America and found a riot was actually just an election for the town dog catcher. His audience got the joke. “Mainstream violence”? Violence is as American as cherry pie. I swear, if I read one more reference to the “Overton window,” I’m going to take a hostage. Clichés are just substitutes for thinking. Finally we get back to what Newt said, but still without explanation of the mechanisms that make arrests happen. Are we to believe control of Congress is control of the legal system? That what Donald Trump couldn’t do as President, the GOP Speaker can do? Or is Wilson just saying: “Oh, yeah, that crazy thing Newt said? That’s gonna happen, too.”

Because none of this makes any damned sense except as fear-mongering. Which is also a tool of the autocrat.

No comments:

Post a Comment