Letters from an American - October 17, 2024
Episode Date: October 18, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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October 17th, 2024.
In a new rule released yesterday, the Federal Trade Commission requires sellers to make
it as easy to cancel a subscription to a gym or a service as it is to sign up for one.
In a statement, FTC Chair Lina Khan explained the reasoning behind the
click-to-cancel rule. Too often, businesses make people jump through endless hoops just to cancel
a subscription, she said. Nobody should be stuck paying for a service they no longer want.
Although most of the new requirements won't take effect for about six months,
David Dayen of the American Prospect
noted that the stock price of Planet Fitness
fell 8% after the announcement.
When he took office in January 2021,
with democracy under siege
from autocratic governments abroad
and an authoritarian movement at home, President
Joe Biden set out to prove that democracy could deliver for the ordinary people who had lost faith
in it. The click-to-cancel rule is an illustration of an obvious and long overdue protection,
but it is only one of many ways, $35 insulin, new bridges, loan forgiveness, higher wages, good jobs,
in which policies designed to benefit ordinary people have demonstrated that a democratic
government can improve lives. When Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen spoke to the Council
on Foreign Relations yesterday, she noted that the administration has driven a historic economic recovery
with strong growth, very low unemployment rates,
and inflation returning to normal.
Now it is focused on lowering costs for families
and expanding the economy while reducing inequality.
That strong economy at home
is helping to power the global economy, Yellen noted, and the U.S.
has been working to strengthen that economy by reinforcing global policies, investments,
and institutions that reinforce economic stability. Over the past four years, the world has been
through a lot, Yellen said. From a once-in-a-century pandemic to the largest land war in Europe since World War II,
to increasingly frequent and severe climate disasters. This has only underlined that we
are all in it together. America's economic well-being depends on the world's, and America's
economic leadership is key to global prosperity and security. She warned against isolationism
that would undermine such prosperity both at home and abroad. The numbers behind the proven
experience the government protection of ordinary people is good for economic growth got the
blessing of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on Monday when it awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic
Sciences to Darren Asamoglu and Simon Johnson, both of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
and to James Robinson of the University of Chicago. Their research explains why societies
with a poor rule of law and institutions that exploit the population do not generate growth or change for the better, while democracies do.
Although democracy has been delivering for Americans, Donald Trump and MAGAs rose to power by convincing those left behind by 40 years of supply-side economics that their problem was not the people in charge of the government,
but rather the government itself. Trump wants to get rid of the current government so that he can
enrich himself, do whatever he wants to his enemies, and avoid answering to the law. The
Christian nationalists who wrote Project 2025 want to destroy the federal government so they can put
in place an authoritarian who will force Americans to live under religious rule. Tech elites like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel
want to get rid of the federal government so they can control the future without having to worry
about regulations. In place of what they insist is a democratic system that has failed, they are
offering a strongman who they claim will take care of people more efficiently than a democratic system that has failed, they are offering a strongman who they claim will take
care of people more efficiently than a democratic government can. The focus on masculinity and
portrayals of Trump as a muscled hero, much as Russian President Vladimir Putin portrays himself,
fit the mold of an authoritarian leader. But the argument that Americans need a strong man depends on the argument that democracy
does not work. In the last three and a half years, Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris,
and the Democrats have proved that it can, so long as it operates with the best interests of
ordinary people in mind. Trump and Vance's outlandish lies about the federal response to Hurricane Helene
are designed to override the reality of a competent administration addressing a crisis
with all the tools it has. In its place, the lies provide a false narrative of federal officials
ignoring people and trying to steal their property. Their attack on democracy has another
problem as well. In addition to the reality that democracy has been delivering for Americans for
more than three years now, and pretty dramatically, Trump is no longer a strong man. Vice President
Kamala Harris is outperforming him in the theater of political dominance. And as she does so,
his image is crumbling. In an article in U.S. News and World Report yesterday, NBC's former
chief marketer, John D. Miller, apologized to America for helping to create a monster.
Miller led the team that marketed The Apprentice, the reality TV show that made Trump a household name.
To sell the show, Miller wrote,
we created the narrative that Trump was a super successful businessman
who lived like royalty.
But the truth was that he declared bankruptcy six times
and the imposing boardroom where he famously fired contestants was a set because his real
boardroom was too old and shabby for TV, Miller wrote. While Trump loved the attention the show
provided, more successful CEOs were too busy to get involved in reality TV. Miller says they
promoted the show relentlessly, blanketing the country with a highly exaggerated image of Trump as a successful businessman, like a heavy snowstorm.
We did irreparable harm by creating the false image of Trump as a successful leader, Miller wrote.
I deeply regret that, and I regret that it has taken me so long to go public. Speaking as a
born-and-bred Republican, Miller warned, if you believe that Trump will be better for you or
better for the country, that is an illusion, much like The Apprentice was. He strongly urged people
to vote for Kamala Harris. The country will be better off and so will you. A new video shown last night on
Jimmy Kimmel Live even more powerfully illustrated the collapse of Trump's tough guy image.
Written by Jesse Joyce of Comedy Central, the two-minute video featured actor and retired
professional wrestler Dave Bautista dominating his sparring partner in a boxing ring and then telling those
who think Trump is some sort of tough guy that he's not. Working out in a gym, Bautista insults
Trump's heavy makeup, out of shape body, draft dodging, and physical weakness, and notes that
he sells imaginary baseball cards pretending to be a cowboy fireman
when he's barely strong enough to hold an umbrella. Bautista says Trump's two-handed
method of drinking water looks like a little pink chickadee and goes on to make a raunchy
observation about Trump's stage dancing. He's moody. He pouts. He throws tantrums,
Bautista goes on.
He's cattier on social media than a middle school mean girl.
Bautista ends by listing Trump's fears of rain, dogs, windmills, and being laughed at.
And mostly, Bautista concludes, he's terrified that real, red-blooded American men will find
out that he's a weak, tubby,
toddler.
Calling Trump a whiny bitch, Bautista walks away from the camera.
The sketch was billed as comedy, but it was deadly serious in its takedown of the key
element of Trump's political power.
And he seems vulnerable. Forbes and Newsweek
have recently questioned his mental health. Yesterday, the Boston Globe read an op-ed saying,
Trump's decline is too dangerous to ignore. We can see the decline in the former president's
ability to hold a train of thought, speak coherently, or demonstrate a command of the English language,
to say nothing of policy. Trump's Fox News Channel town hall yesterday got 2.9 million viewers.
Harris's interview got 7.1 million. Today, Trump canceled yet another appearance,
this one with the National Rifle Association in Savannah, Georgia, scheduled
for October 22nd, where he was supposed to be the keynote speaker. Meanwhile, Vice President Harris
today held rallies in Milwaukee, Green Bay, and La Crosse, Wisconsin. In La Crosse, Maga Heckler's
tried to interrupt her while she was speaking about the centrality of the three Trump
appointed Supreme Court justices to the overturning of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that recognized
the constitutional right to abortion. Oh, you guys are at the wrong rally, Harris called to
them with a smile and a wave. As the crowd roared with approval, she added, no, I think you meant to go to the smaller one
down the street. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.