Letters from an American - August 16, 2024
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August 16th, 2024.
The complaint of Republican vice presidential candidate,
Senator J.D. Vance, a Republican of Ohio,
last weekend on CNN,
that Democrats are bullying him by calling him weird,
has stuck with me.
As I wrote at the time,
Republicans have made punching down
their stock in trade for decades,
and Vance's complaint suggests
that the Democrats are finally pushing back.
It strikes me that behind this shifting power dynamic
is a huge story about American politics.
Since the 1950s,
those determined to get rid of business regulation,
social welfare programs, government infrastructure spending, and federal protection of civil rights have relied on a rhetorical structure that centers real Americans, who allegedly want nothing from government, and warns that un-American forces who want government handouts are undermining the country by bringing socialism or racial,
gender, or religious equality. In 2024, that rhetoric is all the MAGA Republicans have left
to attract voters, as their actual policies are unpopular. Yesterday, Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump told reporters at his Bedminster availability that to win the 2024 election,
all we have to do is define our opponent as being a communist or a socialist or somebody
that's going to destroy our country. But it is not just Trump. A MAGA pundit has called Vice
President Harris, Hitler and Stalin combined, but times 200. And on Wednesday, Republicans in Minnesota
nominated Royce White as their candidate for the U.S. Senate.
We face an enemy that intends to bastardize our citizenship
through an idea called globalism, White has said.
We must begin to understand how the global affects the local
and take a stand for God, family, and country.
White has also said that women have become too mouthy and that Donald Trump could get up on stage, pull his pants down, take a s*** up at the podium, and I would still never vote for you f***ing Democrats again.
up at the podium, and I would still never vote for you Democrats again.
The rhetorical strategy setting up Republicans against a dangerous other was behind Trump's demand that Republicans in Congress kill a bipartisan border bill so that Trump could
continue to demonize immigrants. You could see that demonization of immigrants today
in Vance's straight up lie that Vice President Kamala Harris
wants to give $25,000 to illegal aliens to buy American homes. In fact, Harris today called for
Congress to expand plans already in place in the Biden administration, and none of those plans call
for giving money to undocumented migrants. Also in that vein today was the announcement of
Representative James Comer, a Republican of Kentucky, chair of the House Oversight Committee,
that he is opening an investigation into Minnesota Governor Tim Walz's work in China.
Walz is the Democratic vice presidential nominee. He went to China in 1989 as part of a teach abroad program and went on to coordinate
trips for students in China, becoming a vocal advocate for human rights in that country as
leaders cracked down on opposition. But by suggesting this cultural exchange is nefarious,
Comer conceded the idea that Walls is somehow operating against the interests of the United States.
This long-standing rhetoric that positions Republicans as true Americans defending the
country against those who would destroy it has metastasized into the determination of
MAGA Republicans to replace American democracy with a Christian nationalism that cements the
power of white patriarchy.
Vance has been in hot water for his derogatory remarks about childless cat ladies.
Interviews have resurfaced in the past few days in which he has embraced the idea that the role of the post-menopausal female is to take care of grandchildren.
The New College of Florida is in the news today for illustrating
the logical progression of the idea that Republicans must protect the nation from
those who would destroy it. The new College of Florida was at the center of Republican
Governor Ron DeSantis' program to get rid of traditional academic freedom. He stripped the
new college of its independence and replaced officials with
Christian loyalists who tried to build a school modeled after those that Viktor Orban's loyalists
took over in Hungary. New college officials painted over student murals celebrating diversity,
suppressed student support for civil rights, and voted to eliminate the Diversity, Equity,
and Inclusion Office and the Gender Studies Program.
Faculty fled the new college, and more than a quarter of the students dropped out.
To keep its numbers up, the school dropped its admissions standards.
Yesterday, Stephen Walker of the Sarasota Herald Tribune reported that the school cleared out the Gender and Diversity Center,
throwing the books it had accumulated into a dumpster.
Officials said the books are no longer serving the needs of the college.
Gender studies has been discontinued as an area of concentration at New College,
and the books are not part of any official college collection or inventory.
The image of piles of books in a dumpster in the United States of America
is not easily forgettable. But the dominance rhetoric of the MAGA Republicans was never
just about political power. Political power always went hand in hand with corruption.
A new book by Joe Connison called The Longest Con notes that the modern right-wing movement has its roots in the promise of grifters after World War II to protect America against the communists they insisted were infiltrating the country.
Their promises to defend true Americans against an enemy was always about getting cash out of the deal.
was always about getting cash out of the deal.
Connison emphasizes how drumming up fears of an other was a deliberate grift to put money into the pockets
of those who told small donors that their dollars
were vital for defending the United States.
The biggest prize for the extremists, though,
was the control of government purse strings
that allowed them to turn federal and state largesse
toward their own
cronies. Connison notes that under President Ronald Reagan, Republicans' cuts to government
oversight and reliance on the private sector to regulate itself, along with their belief that
unfettered capitalism was a form of resistance to communism, led to a boom in corruption.
That corruption has continued in the Republican Party,
largely unaddressed, as politicians insisted that those calling it out were simply un-American
malcontents engaging in political hits against good, patriotic Americans. In contrast, as any
corruption on the Democratic side can be expected to be sliced and diced in public, the Democrats have
stayed relatively clean. And this is why Vance's comment about Democrats bullying him jumped out
at me. Republican dominance is cracking as Trump struggles and Vance offends people. And as that
dominance falls away, the many things it covered are starting to get attention, among them stories of Republican corruption
and their doozies. On Sunday, for example, Garrett Shanley of the Independent Florida Alligator,
the student newspaper for the University of Florida, reported that when former Senator Ben
Sasse, a Republican of Nebraska, took over the presidency of the University of Florida, he channeled millions to his Republican allies
and to secretive contracts.
In 17 months, he more than tripled spending from his office,
with most of the money going to his former aides
and political friends,
most of whom continued to live and work outside the state.
Sass was appointed in November 2022
in an opaque hiring process and stepped down
unexpectedly in July, citing family issues, although Vivian Serrett of the Independent
Alligator reported that DeSantis allies on the board of trustees forced him out.
One of the biggest stories in the country these days is the corruption scandal in Ohio,
in which dark money groups led by the First Energy
Utility Company worked with former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder to put into office
politicians who, thanks to about $61 million in bribes, backed a $1.3 billion bailout for First
Energy, paid for with tax dollars. On Monday, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost agreed
to settle the scandal. First Energy will pay a $20 million fine, an amount that Marty Schladen
of the Ohio Capital Journal notes is less than one-third the amount First Energy spent to bribe
legislators, and a fraction of the money payers have had to pay because of the
corrupt legislation the bribes paid for. Nothing better illustrates the grift at the center of
today's MAGA Republicans than Donald Trump's big lie that he actually won the 2020 election and
that it was stolen from him by those dangerous others, the Democrats. The big lie enabled the Trump team to continue soliciting donations in
order to fight for the White House. According to Conison, Trump and his fellow election deniers
pocketed $255.4 million between the 2020 election and the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol
to stop the counting of the electoral votes that would
make Democratic candidate Joe Biden president. On Monday, jurors found former Colorado election
clerk Tina Peters guilty on seven counts in relation to her compromising of her county's
election system. Peters was determined to get voter information to MyPillow chief executive Mike Lindell, a key Trump ally, in order to prove the big lie.
She is facing more than 22 years in prison.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.