The clear and present danger of Trump’s enduring ‘Big Lie’

https://www.npr.org/2021/12/23/1065277246/trump-big-lie-jan-6-election

 

Pro-Trump rioters storm the U.S. Capitol following a rally with President Donald Trump on Jan. 6. His supporters gathered in the nation’s capital to protest the ratification of Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images
 
It’s been nearly a year since the United States suffered an unprecedented attack on constitutional democracy.

When a violent mob stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, the goal was to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and install Donald Trump to a second term.

Call it an insurrection or a coup attempt, it was fueled by what’s known as the “Big Lie”: the verifiably false assertion that Trump won. Joe Biden won 306 votes in the Electoral College, while Trump received 232. In the popular vote, Biden won by more than 7 million votes.

Many are warning that over the past year, that “big lie” of a stolen election has grown more entrenched and more dangerous.

“I’ve never been more scared about American democracy than I am right now, because of the metastasizing of the ‘big lie,’ ” says election law expert Rick Hasen, co-director of the Fair Elections and Free Speech Center at the University of California, Irvine.

“This is not the kind of thing I expected to ever worry about in the United States,” Hasen says. “I kind of feel like a climate scientist from five years ago or [an] expert on viruses a couple of years ago, sounding the alarm and just hoping that we’re not too late already.”

A “big lie” with roots in history

In rallies across the country, Trump continues to hammer on the fiction that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

Speaking at a rally in Georgia in September, Trump trumpeted his familiar, baseless claim that the election was “corrupt” and “rigged.”

“I have no doubt that we won, and we won big,” Trump said. “The headlines claiming that Biden won are fake news — and a very big lie.”

A couple of weeks later, he repeated the fiction at a rally in Iowa. “We didn’t lose,” he insisted to a crowd that rewarded him with chants of “Trump won!”

By inverting the narrative, attempting to slough off the “big lie” and pin it instead on his opponents, Trump exploited an age-old tactic, says Yale University history professor Timothy Snyder.

Former President Donald Trump repeated his lies about a “totally corrupt” election at a rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds on Oct. 9. “We didn’t lose,” he told the crowd, which rewarded him with chants of “Trump won!”

Scott Olson/Getty Images

“Part of the character of the ‘big lie’ is that it turns the powerful person into the victim,” he says. “And then that allows the powerful person to actually exact revenge, like it’s a promise for the future.”

Snyder, author of the books The Road to Unfreedom and On Tyranny, has spent years studying the ways tyrants skewer truth. Snyder points to Hitler’s original definition of the “big lie” in his manifesto, Mein Kampf and the ways he used it to blame Jews for all of Germany’s woes.

“The lie is so big that it reorders the world,” Snyder says. “And so part of telling the big lie is that you immediately say it’s the other side that tells the big lie. Sadly, but it’s just a matter of record, all of that is in Mein Kampf.

A lie that’s become embedded in public opinion

Over the past year, Trump’s lie that election fraud cost him the White House has become firmly anchored in public opinion.

According to a CNN poll conducted this summer, fully 36% of Americans do not believe that President Biden legitimately won the election. Among Republicans, that number leaps to 78%.

In an NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll conducted in October, just 34% of Republicans say they trust that elections are fair, while 75% of Republicans say Trump has a legitimate claim that there were “real cases of fraud that changed the results.” Just 2% of Democrats agreed with that statement.

What’s more, says Timothy Snyder, “the ‘big lie’ is not just in people’s minds. It’s also now in the law books.”

Snyder points to the raft of new laws passed in Republican-led states that restrict voting. Over the past year, at least 19 states have passed laws limiting ballot access.

Thousands came to Washington for the March On For Voting Rights on Aug. 28. Martin Luther King III, the Rev. Al Sharpton and Texas Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee are among those pictured.

Tyrone Turner for NPR

In addition, Trump loyalists in battleground states are running for powerful offices that control elections. These are candidates who are endorsed by Trump, because they’ve embraced his lie that he won the 2020 election.

And some Republican-controlled state legislatures have moved to seize power over elections, opening a path where they could overrule voters and substitute their own slate of electors to choose the winner.

All of it, Snyder says, is a direct outcome of Trump’s “big lie” and is deeply troubling for the future.

“All of those things set us up for a scenario where the candidate who loses by every measure, not just by the popular vote, but by the Electoral College, the candidate who loses by every measure will nevertheless be installed as president of the United States,” Snyder says. “I think that is probably the most likely scenario in 2024 as things stand now.”

That scenario needs to be confronted immediately, Snyder says: “It’s right in front of our eyes. The most interesting and the most distressing thing about American news coverage right now is that we don’t treat the end of democracy in America as the story. That is the story.”

We delude ourselves, Snyder says, if we think we’re immune from an anti-democratic turn. “We imagine that there’s somehow this immovable American democratic background, which doesn’t really exist,” he says. “We can lose democracy just like anybody else can, just like most people have in the history of democracy. We can lose it, and we’re losing it right now.”

“The fierce urgency of now”

As of yet, the Democratic-led Congress has been unable to pass legislation to protect voting rights, a fact that Carol Anderson, professor of African-American Studies at Emory University, finds appalling.

She argues that passing voting rights laws would “short-circuit the damage that the ‘big lie’ is doing and will do.”

Anderson sees “a Democratic Party that does not understand that American democracy is hanging by a thread, and does not grapple with the fierce urgency of now.”

We have been, in her words, “baptized in American exceptionalism” — the naive belief that the demise of democracy can’t happen here.

“Even after you have had the insurrection,” Anderson says, “even after you have had these legislatures write these laws figuring out not only how to stop Black people, brown people, indigenous people from voting, but also how to lower the guardrails of democracy that prevented Trump from being able to overturn the results in these states; so even after seeing this, to not move and do what needs to be done to protect this nation?” Anderson sighs. “It’s unconscionable.”

Guests arrive for a rally with former President Donald Trump at the Iowa State Fairgrounds. Like Trump, his fans continue to perpetuate the “big lie.”

Scott Olson/Getty Images

For Anderson, author of the books White Rage and One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppression Is Destroying Our DemocracyTrump’s lie about the election sprouts from the same twisted roots as his birtherism lie, which is the conspiracy theory Trump peddled, falsely claiming that Barack Obama was born outside the U.S. and therefore ineligible to serve as president.

Linking both, she says, is a clear racist throughline.

“Foundational to that is the devaluation and the dismissing of American citizenship for Black people,” Anderson says. “This is about, ‘My nation is about the real Americans. And all of those folks aren’t real Americans.’ It is so vile. It is so racist. And it works. That’s the thing, it works.”

After all, Anderson says, if you repeat the lie enough times, it starts to sound like the truth.

A failed coup is practice for a successful one

In Congress, the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol has interviewed hundreds of witnesses to establish the truth of what happened that day.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., is one of just two Republicans on the committee. An outspoken Trump critic, he has announced he won’t run for reelection.

Kinzinger compares conspiracy theories to a cancer eating away at the Republican Party, and feeding that cancer, he says, is the “big lie.”

“The thing that’s most concerning is that it has endured in the face of all evidence,” he says. “And I’ve gotten to wonder if there is actually any evidence that would ever change certain people’s minds.”

Beyond his committee’s mission of uncovering what happened on Jan. 6 itself, Kinzinger has broader questions.

“More importantly in my mind, what is the rot in the system that led up to Jan. 6? And where have we come since? And how do we stop anything like this from happening again?” he asks. ” ‘Cause even though Jan. 6 technically failed, there’s a lot of areas where you can learn from, if your goal is to overthrow a legitimate election and potentially do it successfully next time.”

And that is precisely the lesson from history, says Yale professor Timothy Snyder.

“It wasn’t enough, but next time, it could well be enough. And the fact that it’s been rehearsed makes me worry,” he says. “This is what historians and political scientists who study coups d’etat say. They say a failed coup is practice for a successful one.”

Virginia National Guard soldiers march across the east side of the U.S. Capitol on their way to their guard posts on Jan. 16. After the riots at the U.S. Capitol Building, the FBI warned of additional threats in the nation’s capital and in all 50 states.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

What we’re potentially looking at, Snyder warns, is nothing less than the end of the democratic United States as we’ve come to know it.

“That’s just the reality,” he says. “And in order to prevent things from being frightening, you have to look right at them and say, ‘OK, that’s the monster. How can I disassemble it? How can I take it to pieces? How can I make sure that that story isn’t our only story?’ But it will be unless we tell it to ourselves straight.”

We have to confront that reality, Snyder says, if we are to find the courage and conviction to do something about it.

 

Tell the truth, Gov. DeSantis. Florida doesn’t need an election-crime investigation office | Editorial

https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/editorials/article256735862.html

File photo of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on May 6 in West Palm Beach after he signed a sweeping elections bill into law that he and other Republicans said would place guardrails against fraud, even though there were no signs of voter irregularities in the November presidential election.

File photo of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on May 6 in West Palm Beach after he signed a sweeping elections bill into law that he and other Republicans said would place guardrails against fraud, even though there were no signs of voter irregularities in the November presidential election.  AP

No one is “for” election fraud, but Florida lawmakers returning to Tallahassee next month should still reject Gov. Ron DeSantis’ unnecessary, expensive — and potentially mischief-making — proposition that the state needs a 52-person, $5.7 million Office of Election Crime and Security.

The immediate outcry from prosecutors — and the lukewarm reaction of even some Republicans — should be a clue: This is an attempt to exploit the fears of the public while allowing DeSantis to cast himself as the superhero of election integrity. And it’s no coincidence that this effort also dovetails with the false narrative that Donald Trump — DeSantis’ mentor — only lost the 2020 election because of fraud.

The state already has the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, counties already have states attorney and there are federal prosecutors to boot. This new office would have the power to take control over any investigation conducted by local police or prosecutors. That’s unwise and unnecessary. And don’t forget, Florida is already in court defending another DeSantis-driven law supposedly aimed at election security by making it more difficult to vote by mail.

 

VOTING FRAUD RARE

The main issue, though, is that election fraud in Florida is relatively rare and — here’s the cynical part — the governor knows it. He even bragged about the wonderful success of the 2020 election under his stellar leadership.

Let’s hear it from DeSantis himself, back on Nov. 4, 2020:

“People are actually looking at Florida and asking the question, ‘Why can’t the states be more like Florida? Florida was able to handle 11 million ballots,’” he said then, fresh off the election that delivered Florida to President Trump, though Trump lost the White House. “The way Florida did it, I think, inspires confidence. I think that’s how elections should be run.”

He went on: “Perhaps 2020 was the year that we finally vanquished the ghosts of Bush vs. Gore.”

That doesn’t sound like a man who is so wracked with worries about election integrity in Florida that he needs to create an entirely new office with more staffers than most police departments to combat the problem.

His own secretary of state jumped in as well. “Florida’s election in 2020 was accurate, transparent and conducted in compliance with Florida law,” Republican Laurel Lee said, as quoted in the Orlando Sentinel. “Florida has already conducted both pre- and post-elections audits, and we are confident in the security and integrity of our 2020 election results. . . . The post-election audit confirmed that Florida’s 2020 election was secure and accurate.”

 
 

And yet, take a wild guess at who would get to oversee this vast new office that is suddenly required to root out election fraud. Lee, of course.

2020 ELECTION WAS ‘GOOD’

DeSantis has said the office is needed because local prosecutors and police aren’t always pursuing election problems with the vigor that he apparently thinks is required — even though he said he also believes the most recent election went well. As recently as Oct. 12, he tried to split the difference, telling the media at a St. Petersburg press conference that the 2020 election had been “good” but then adding: “I think the issue is, Do you want to make sure you continue doing that, going forward?”

That sounds an awful lot like he wants to create a $5.7 million, 52-person office purely on spec. But of course, it’s not his money paying for it.

His spokeswoman, Christina Pushaw, continued to sound the “curbing future crime” theme, telling the Herald Editorial Board that, “Having a dedicated team responsible for investigating alleged election-related crimes will function as a powerful deterrent to would-be perpetrators of election fraud. Alongside other election-integrity reforms, this measure will go a long way toward strengthening public trust in elections.”

 

In 2018, as Pushaw noted, Palm Beach County ran into trouble completing state-mandated recounts for the November election. DeSantis replaced the elections supervisor there shortly after he got into office.

Certainly, some election-law violation cases are being prosecuted right now — but that is happening with existing law-enforcement resources. Three residents of The Villages in Central Florida were arrested this month on charges they cast more than one ballot in the 2020 election. (Two were Republicans and the other had had no party affiliation.) There’s also the ongoing case of former GOP state senator Frank Artiles, who has been accused of recruiting and paying a no-party candidate, Alexis Pedro Rodriguez, to sway the outcome of a Miami-Dade state Senate race.

No doubt, there are some cases that should be pursued, but aren’t. The Miami Herald noted that local prosecutors have a “mixed track record” on going after election-related allegations.

DEMANDING FLORIDA AUDIT

And yet, there is little evidence that vote fraud is rampant, despite the GOP’s focus on this issue nationally. A recent Associated Press review of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by Trump found fewer than 475 cases. They didn’t look at Florida because its results weren’t disputed. In other words, even Trump’s camp believed the election here went fine.

 

That hasn’t stopped a small number of Florida Republicans from loudly demanding that the state conduct an audit of the 2020 election results, an obvious nod to Trump. DeSantis has resisted — hard to do anything else after he proclaimed that Florida’s handling of elections “inspires confidence” — but he’s also under fire from Trump’s pal, Roger Stone. Stone has threatened to challenge the governor in the gubernatorial primary next year as a way to siphon off votes unless DeSantis says he won’t run for president, especially against Trump.

What’s a governor-slash-potential-presidential-candidate to do? Create a diversion, in the form of a new state office with unprecedented authority to investigate claims of vote fraud — even if it’s overkill. This would have been the perfect time for the governor to stand up to a bully, to make clear that he will base his career on doing what’s right, not what’s politically advantageous. Unfortunately, that has never been DeSantis’ M.O. So, he knuckled under, to Floridians’ detriment.

If the governor truly wants bolster confidence in Florida’s election system, we have a radical idea: Just tell the truth — that we all can be proud that there’s little election crime in Florida, and that his election-crimes office is totally unnecessary, after all.

But don’t hold your breath for that one.

Fresh turmoil hits Wisconsin vote ‘audit’ after top ‘investigator’ calls on GOP senator to resign

https://www.rawstory.com/wisconsin-audit-2656111857/

Fresh turmoil hits Wisconsin vote 'audit' after top 'investigator' calls on GOP senator to resign

On Thursday, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that Michael Gableman, the former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice turned pro-Trump elections “investigator,” is calling for the resignation of a Republican state senator who criticized his purported probe into election security.

 

“Republican state Sen. Kathleen Bernier of Lake Hallie this month referred to Gableman’s work as a charade and said he should wrap up his review quickly,” reported Patrick Marley and Katelyn Ferral. “Bernier said she would bring a concealed weapons permit with her if she went to see Gableman address a crowd because his work ‘keeps jazzing up’ people who don’t know what they’re talking about.”

According to the report, Gableman fired back with a speech posted to the Facebook page of the Chippewa County Republican Party, where Bernier lives.

 

“He noted Bernier had said she would bring her concealed weapons permit with her but added he did not believe she had any intention of shooting him,” said the report. “‘It’s just that she had been so afraid of her own constituents that she wanted to be armed,’ Gableman said. ‘And I guess I had several reactions to that, one of which was, geez, if you’re an elected official and you’re so afraid of your constituents that you think you have to bring a firearm to see them, you should take a long hard look at what you’ve been doing. And then, frankly, resign.'”

 

Gableman, who was charged with finding fraud in the 2020 presidential election by state Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, has swiftly become controversial.

Local papers have described his probe as a “fraud” and a “train wreck.” He has tried to order the Waukesha County Sheriff’s Office to arrest the mayors of Green Bay and Madison for allegedly defying his “subpoenas,” even though the information requests went to the city governments’ spam filters under a false name and even though they already provided the documents he was demanding.

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Daily cartoon / meme roundup: Under 18 is either a kid with all that means or we get real and lower the age of adulthood. The idea that they are kids for everything until we want revenge / vengeance / punish is bullshit to the max

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Scottie’s world today

merry christmas to all

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Ted Rall Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

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People are slowly starting to see what progressives have been saying all along.

Our language has developed to describe capitalism’s massive shortcomings and failures.

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But where are the progressive liberals orgs that help fine people run for congress & advocate our policy? There aren’t many. Most of the liberal media is for profit & both parties paid off. Help real change. Act blue https://ift.tt/3FYPlPu

Is Santa an oligarch? 🤔

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#cancelstudentdebt

Shoe Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

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Hurting children and parents are pro-life bona fides.

#buildbackbetter

BS

Nick Anderson Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

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Aunty Acid Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Joel Pett Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

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tRump boosted and gets booed

not a good idea guns and poltical

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Reminder for the soulless gun enablers in church.

Jeff Danziger Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

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This is yet another warning: our biggest threat is right wing terror. The cult have no guard rails.

two sides of the same system

Tom the Dancing Bug Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

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right winger guide to life cells

Their hypocrisy knows no bounds

#wearyourmask #getvaccinated

#getvaccinated #getboosted #wearyourmask

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Certain Americans fall for Russian propaganda. They call it ‘research’.

Lalo Alcaraz Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

mask so tight guide my sleigh

Matt Davies Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Prickly City Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Andy Marlette for Dec 23, 2021

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Gary Markstein Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Joe Heller Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Steve Kelley Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

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Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

Lisa Benson Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Even with the Q-publicans doing all they can to obstruct and defeat any attempt to make things better, I don’t think that Biden’s pols are as low as Trump reached.  

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And now some for fun

Speed Bump Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Peanuts Begins Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

The Flying McCoys Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Lola Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

The Middletons Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Rose is Rose Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

Police Tackle Bicyclist For The DUMBEST Reason (VIDEO)

TX Gov Taking Hands-Off Approach To COVID Surge

You should try that hands-off approach with abortion rights. “Hands off approach”? TX Gov. Abbott continues to ignore and do jack-shit for his state’s health. Bullshit. Every time a local Texas government tries to impose mask or vaccination requirements of ANY kind, this blood-gargling motherfucker is first up to issue executive orders banning their action.
That’s the opposite of “hands-off.” It’s actively pro-pandemic.

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: What most corporations demand and the struggling to survive workers must do.   That is why the wealthy fight so hard against the government doing anything to help the public.  

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Scottie’s world today

Christmas shopping yet

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Working It Out Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

What most corporations demand and the struggling to survive workers must do.   That is why the wealthy fight so hard against the government doing anything to help the public.  

Matt Wuerker Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Workers / the people / the public are the real economic engine.   The real economy is not the stock market or the wealthy, it is the flow of money.  Money only flows when people have it to spend and to buy.     That gives others the need to produce and sell.   The US has been made to accept the myth that the best things happen when all the money is concentrated in the hands of a few very wealthy people.   Ever wonder who is behind that lie and why?    Scottie

 

Drew Sheneman Comic Strip for December 22, 2021

Monty Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Candorville Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

The Duplex Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

a christmas carol with manchin

Jack Ohman Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Lalo Alcaraz Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

jesus would trade them for drugs

https://twitter.com/LeftJaddi/status/1471194283919265807?s=20

Rob Rogers Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Clay Jones Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

santa fact checkers

https://twitter.com/Rschooley/status/1467259656615522305?s=20

Steve Benson Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

home from christmas

ViewsAsia Comic Strip for December 22, 2021

Lisa Benson Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Matt Davies Comic Strip for December 22, 2021

John Deering Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

it is not a church

by switching to jesus

Bloom County Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Bloom County Comic Strip for December 21, 2021

I love this Krampus  dress up.    So much for religious freedom to worship or not as we choose.   Some people still want to tell other they must do as we do, follow the tradition we demand, because only we and are feelings are important.  

newspapers closing

Chris Britt Comic Strip for December 22, 2021

Steve Breen Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Putin warns West

Off the Mark Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

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Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

It is a choice by the unvaxed but it is not a choice on the part of their victims they pass the coronavirus to.   If you want to go to parties get vaccinated.   This is an attempt to have your cake and eat it also.   The unvaxers want the same benefits of having the vaccine without getting it.   Really selfish I think.   

Michael Ramirez Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Incorrect and misleading framing.   It is not free stuff.   It is getting a return for your tax money.   It is a myth that the wealthy push that for some reason they are entitled to taxpayers money by the government serving their wants and needs, but lower incomes are lazy wanting free stuff they don’t deserve to have the government use taxpayer money to work for the public.   Every time the Republicans want to give a tax cut they claim it is our money, it is better in your pocket than the governments.   When it comes to getting anything for the money we are taxed the Republicans scream it is a moral failing of wanting free stuff.    Don’t buy it.   The funny thing is you would think that US taxes would be very low or non-existant since the country doesn’t provide for education and healthcare, but they’re quite high actually, and with none of the benefits.  Scottie

Mats Dahlgren Premium Member about 9 hours ago

Here is some fun facts about Sweden, Michael. We have both the above named wishes (but we do not live with the delusion you so happily slap on it – that it is free) and it works. We even reduced our national debt year by year up until the pandemic. This is mainly true for all Scandinavian countries so why do you keep trying to sell the image of tax financed education and health care as not possible to be successful? Merry Christmas to You and everyone on this forum /Mats

OldCoal  about 2 hours ago

He does it because Ramirez, and all his ilk, fear that workers who actually have mandated vacations and retirement and medical care with low cost or free training for new jobs, will actually feel free and move around to the BEST jobs.

Just a clue, save on the very lowest rungs of the wage ladder, people in the USA usually check out the benefits package before they check out wages.

Meaningful medical care is NOT a given. Most companies now provide several “options”, and if you take the cheapest you’ve got no medical at all as far as “usual” medical care goes.

Paid vacation when you want to take it is NOT a given. Carryover of unused vacation time is NOT a given. Being paid for time not used is NOT a given. Vacation over two weeks in a year is a monster benefit.

Actual job retraining paid for by the company and done on company time is absolutely not a given, and nearly nonexistent.

Company pensions are a thing of the past, it’s all about “matching funds in 401K’s” – often just a means to force employees to buy company stock.

Company contributions are VASTLY important, you may pay half the cost of medical insurance, you may pay 2/3, you may pay it all. Same goes for anything and everything.

My “contribution” for my “benefits package” sucks up about a thousand bucks a month. Maybe a bit more. I hate to look at it, because it makes me mad every time.

If anyone over there is wondering why American workers all sound disgruntled, copy this and send it to them. Doubtless the trolls will be whining, they won’t manage to claim any of it is not accurate, but they’ll whine. It’s what trolls do.

Oh, and please take note that I’m talking about what Americans laughingly call “high quality jobs”. Many jobs in the USA come with a caveat called “32 hours” meaning you work for 32 hours a week and get no benefits at all. None. Nothing. The law doesn’t require it so you get nothing whatsoever.

Henry Payne Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Fauci said that Omicron is spreading much faster but appears to be less virulent than Delta, and exhibits more of a degree of immune escape necessitating a booster. All of which is accurate, none of which is in the least apocalyptic.

Two years into the coronavirus pandemic, the American right is still consumed with hatred for White House adviser Anthony S. Fauci. So much so that not only do they scheme to destroy Fauci, the longtime head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, but their obsession sometimes devolves into violent fantasies.

You might find the right’s venom for Fauci to be inexplicable. He’s not some kind of partisan going around telling people to vote for Democrats. What did he do to make them so angry? He did what any public health official would have done, which is to explain what we know and don’t know about the virus and encourage people to take precautions.

If liberals loved him, that meant conservatives had to hate him. At this moment the Republican Party’s policy agenda is a desiccated husk to which no one in their party pays more than the most perfunctory attention. What animates them is hatred of the left and the ongoing, endlessly renewable need to Own the Libs. Bashing Fauci became one more way to accomplish that goal.

The second source of rage at Fauci is that conservative media needed a villain for the pandemic story. And not just a villain, but a domestic villain, a target for all the loathing they could muster in order to turn the pandemic into another weapon in the endless war against liberals and liberalism.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/12/21/why-the-right-hates-fauci/

Only if you listen too / watch / read misleading right wing media.    The rest of us live in reality but those who want to disbelieve science and evidence then … there is a group waiting in Dallas waiting for the return of JFK and his son while drinking bleach.   Good luck, your going to need it.   This cartoonist rarely has any good cartoons to post as he is always posting about how bad and hard the right has it in the world today.   it is always the left making life bad and the right wing conservatives have to bare with it and fix it all.    Get real.    Scottie

Steve Kelley Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Here are some points that came to me about these smash and grab thefts.   Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk each make more money off the Trump tax breaks than all the smash and grab robbers put together made last year. And the Sessions-Barr DOJ tried to give more to the despicable Sacklers.   While Republicans seek to smash democracy and protect the ultra-rich who are grabbing ever-greater wealth.   Republicans sing in harmony, “The election was stolen from us!” Just because the majority did not vote for them.  

So Kelley is saying that a few incidents of Smash and Grab by gang bangers in California is worse than Billions in subsidies and Trillions in tax breaks gifted to the oligarchs and mega corporations?   Oh that’s right. They are the trickle-down “makers” that (only coincidentally) just happen to be Republican donors. That robbery is just fine.     Those at the bottom are wanting the same entitlements that those at the top have enjoyed for years.. unfortunately they can only afford hammers and don’t have access to lobbyists.    Smash and grab is old as the hills. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING NEW HERE!

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And now some for fun

Just about anything / everything here on my Playtime.   

Mike du Jour Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

tapeworm stomach park

wrong place to yell

Non Sequitur Comic Strip for December 23, 2021 I lift you grab too hard

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 20, 2021

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 21, 2021

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 22, 2021

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Andy Capp Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Peanuts Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Speed Bump Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Breaking Cat News Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Moderately Confused Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Dog Eat Doug Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Marmaduke Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Wizard of Id Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Shoe Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

For Better or For Worse Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

Brevity Comic Strip for December 23, 2021