Colbert defies CBS over interview with Texas Senate candidate - "'FCC you,' Colbert said, calling out FCC chairman Brendan Carr directly." also btw... -Catholic Church emerges as a bulwark of resistance -Fragmenting Latino vote now a wildcard in elections ('white culture') How some Democrats are using scripture to try to reach Christian voters in US midterms - "More than a dozen faith leaders are running as Democrats for federal and state offices this year, far more than in previous cycles, according to Doug Pagitt, a pastor who runs Vote Common Good, a progressive Christian political group."
"It is really important that people of faith speak to issues in the public realm, because faith is about how we live together," Trone Garriott told Reuters. "So is politics." [...] "(Jesus) welcomed the stranger, he fed the hungry, he stood up for the vulnerable, he cared for the poor, and that is our calling as Christians," Trone Garriott said. "And what people are seeing right now in so many ways ... is communities being terrorized, people being treated with great cruelty." Trump administration officials last week told a U.S. Senate committee that the shootings of Pretti and Good would need to be investigated. That represented a departure from the immediate aftermath, when officials including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem labeled both "domestic terrorists," despite video evidence contradicting that claim. Many of the candidates have also focused on economic justice while emphasizing the Bible's call to care for the poor and the afflicted. In that sense, the campaigns are aligned with Democrats' efforts to put affordability at the center of the midterm battle. "I think a person of faith sees these moral problems of the day and already has the lens and the framework with which to deal with it," said U.S. Representative Morgan McGarvey, a Kentucky Democrat who is helping to oversee candidate recruitment for the Democrats' House campaign committee. "Do we have food? Do we have healthcare? Do we have housing? Do we have an ICE agency which is even capable of respecting people's rights?"
- Something is going to give - "The pace at which US wealth concentration is rising is simply staggering. The concentration of AI wealth into the hands of a few tech barons + plutocratic capture ==> unchartered territory."
- The main good that determines whether you think the economy is good or bad is slack - "I think this point is captured in Marx's notion of 'socially necessary' labor cost - that is, the amount of money employers have to spend not just to keep workers alive, but to meet socially constructed expectations about minimally acceptable standards of living."
- Can we please just have fucking healthcare? - "ICE plans to spend $38.3 billion turning warehouses into detention centers."[2]
- Why English-speaking countries do especially badly at housebuilding - "Adversarial and litigious common law systems (Anglo) vs judge-led civil law systems elsewhere."[3,4]
- After the Rent Freeze - "Buildings are a bit like intellectual property, which also lasts longer than the economic horizon of the businesses that produce it. The economic argument for rent regulation is a bit like the argument for limiting patents and copyrights to a finite period."
- How to Fight GOP Corruption: The Empirical Case for Rejecting Mega-Donor Money - "As long as they believe they can 'win' the big-money arms race, the temptation to keep mega-donors on board remains strong. But what does it mean for a pro-democracy party to 'win' a game that's fundamentally corrupting our democracy?" (Could the next AOC emerge from San Francisco?)
- What Democrats can actually learn from the 1992 election - "Clinton's victory in 1992 is the canonical example that supposedly proves Dems win by moving to the center. There's only one problem: The data disagrees. Voters saw Clinton as more liberal than Dukakis, & simulations show even a solid progressive would have won."
- The Median Voter Theorem is a Clarity Trap - "What the Democratic party needs - what it demands - is bold, persistent experimentation." (Kim Lane Scheppele: "Brilliant account of what's wrong with our politics -- which is that everyone is working from a model that ceases to reflect reality but that also hides the reality it is not reflecting.")[5]
- The dual of any meaningful right is a burdensome obligation - "I want to see a return to a liberalism that sees duties and obligations alongside rights."
- Building the liberal order after Trump - "By law we can create an independent US Prosecution Service to replace the POTUS controlled DOJ and abolish and replace ICE and USBP. Reform the pardon power by law and term-limit and expand the size of SCOTUS. Make DC and Puerto Rico states, enfranchising millions of Americans."
- The Constitution is not a bargaining chip for a budget negotiation - "The Dems are demanding that ICE honor the Constitution and the Trump administration is saying that this is out of the question. Think about that. Faithfully executing the law?"[6]
- Our court system is largely working, with the exception of the most important court - "This is a huge glaring issue right now. Courts generally ARE doing fairly well, even including significant number of Trump appointees. The corruption is concentrated in scotus."
- Excising the Cancer in Our Institutions - "Tackling the imponderably difficult task of restoration at DOJ once the cavalry finally arrives and exploring a process akin to the 'denazification' sorting that took place after WWII." (Dom Pates: "Makes sense to start thinking about de-magafication now rather than when opportunity presents itself. If the US is going to recover from this period, it's going to need some root-and-branch change, rather than the usual 'swing of the pendulum, brush the last lot under the carpet' approach.")
This is a long article. It's long because it substantiates a bold claim: that if you are waiting for elections to save this country, you are dangerously wrong. A criminal organization has captured the electoral system, the courts, and the Justice Department itself. The evidence is clear and we will walk through every piece of it. But the ending is not despair. The ending is bad people in handcuffs. State-level prosecutors can investigate and charge corrupt federal officials right now, immune from presidential pardon, and thorough investigation will find plenty to charge. Every state that can do this should start tomorrow. Do not wait for a coalition. Do not wait for permission. Do not wait for someone else to go first. Justice is the path to a healthy democracy. [...] There is an assumption running through almost every conversation about American democracy right now, from cable news panels to kitchen-table arguments to the strategy sessions of the most sophisticated political operatives in the country. The assumption is that elections remain the mechanism through which this crisis gets resolved, that if we organize better, register more voters, raise more money, and file more lawsuits, we can win our way through it. The assumption treats the game as legitimate and the task as playing it better. This article is about what happens when that assumption meets the evidence. Nobody is going to cancel American elections. Elections are too useful; they provide the one thing that raw power cannot generate on its own, which is legitimacy. They let the people in charge say they were chosen, let allies in Congress claim a mandate, let courts defer to the "political process" rather than intervene. Elections, properly managed, are the instrument for consolidating power. The threat is that elections become something else while still looking the same. Political scientists have spent the last two decades studying countries where this has already happened, and they have an ugly name for it: competitive authoritarianism. The term describes a system that holds elections, counts votes in front of observers, and lets the opposition campaign, while structuring the rules so that the outcome is effectively predetermined. Sometimes the opposition even wins, which makes the whole arrangement look more legitimate, but captured courts and corrupted institutions make progress nearly unachievable and regression easy. The elections are real; the competition is not. The dice still roll, but one side loaded them. Hungary is the proof that this works...[8,9,10] This is what a finished machine looks like. The dice still roll. The opposition still plays. But the system converts any governing-party plurality into a supermajority, and a supermajority lets the ruling party keep rewriting the rules that produce supermajorities. After each loss, the opposition tells itself it will work harder next time, and next time it does work harder, and it loses again, and in the years between those losses the regime uses its supermajority to capture another court, buy another television station, redraw another set of districts. By the time "next time" arrives, there is less to win and fewer ways to win it. The volunteers who knocked those doors, who organized those rallies, who believed their effort would be converted into political power through the mechanism of free elections, provided the one thing the regime could not manufacture for itself: the appearance that its dominance was earned. Now watch the same machine getting assembled here, piece by piece, using American parts.
- A Federal Tool to Check Voter Citizenship Keeps Making Mistakes - "Missouri officials directed county election administrators to make voters temporarily unable to vote if they were flagged as potential noncitizens by a federal tool. But in hundreds of cases, the tool's determinations were wrong." (Kim Lane Scheppele: "This is a crucial tool for stealing the election: Misidentify citizens as non-citizens and demand they be struck from the voter rolls. And, of course, if the USG gets state voter data, they will have party ID among other things to more carefully target their mis-identifications.")
- The DHS's centralized voter purge program - "The SAVE act will provide deeply flawed proof-of-citizenship data for the upcoming election. It is a thinly disguised platform for purging voters--and of course, if the DOJ gets voters rolls with all of the data, they don't even have to guess or use demographic proxies to target Dems in particular."
- Jenny Cohn: "Do former DOGE employees have the type of access to SSA's database that wld allow them to make changes? I ask bc there seems to be no transparency, & Trump & Musk now want states to purge voters from the rolls by using the 'SAVE' system to compare data in the rolls to the data in SSA's database." (Ronan Farrow: "For nearly a year, the administration has said that DOGE had no unauthorized access to your Social Security data. A new government filing admits that was false.")
"When Gramsci wrote the Prison Notebooks, he was trying to make sense of why there hadn't been a socialist or communist revolution in Italy before the fascist takeover," said Marzia Maccaferri, a political historian at Queen Mary University in London. "And the key concept to emerge from that thought process is his theory of hegemony: that the ruling class can rule not only through coercion, but also through the intersection of popular and high culture, through intellectual and civil society." [...] "Monsters are something exceptional, an inverted miracle that comes out of nowhere with no real explanation," Thomas said. "It's a metaphor that shuts off the possibility of trying to think through what is occurring. We get outraged or shocked at the monstrosity of these Trumpian figures, rather than trying to work out what produced it."