Letters from an American - September 16, 2024
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September 16th, 2024.
In the weeks since Trump's disastrous debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, MAGA Republicans
appear to be melting down.
As Republicans commandeer the disaster news, the Democratic presidential nominee appears
to be trying to stay out of their
way. Harris sat for an interview with media host Stephanie Imonides Sedano, known as Sheiky Baby,
of the Spanish-language U.S. Audio Nueva Network, an interview that will air tomorrow on more than
100 radio stations. For the third day in a row, officials today had to evacuate two elementary
schools in Springfield, Ohio, citing threats that have led to safety concerns. The city has also
canceled Culture Fest, its annual celebration of diversity, arts, and culture, and the local
colleges are meeting virtually out of safety concerns. The Bureau of Motor Vehicles has
had to close, as has the Ohio License Bureau. Ohio's Republican governor, Mike DeWine, said
that there have been at least 33 bomb threats against schools and public offices after Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump and his running mate, Ohio Senator J.D. Vance, spread the lie that
Haitian immigrants to Springfield have been eating the pets of their white neighbors.
DeWine reiterated that the immigrants in Springfield are there legally and noted that
he has authorized troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol to provide additional security at the district's 18 school buildings. On CNN yesterday
morning, Vance admitted to Dana Bash that he had created the story of Haitian immigrants eating
pets. He justified the lie that has shut down Springfield and endangered its residents by
claiming such a lie was the only way to get the media to pay attention to what he considers the
crisis of immigration. Once the pet eating story was debunked, Vance said that Haitian immigrants
are spreading HIV and tuberculosis in Ohio. In fact, new diagnoses of HIV dropped from 2018 to
2022, and the director of the Ohio Department of Health says there has been no change in TB rates.
That a politician of any sort would lie to rally supporters against a marginalized population
comes straight out of the authoritarian playbook, which seeks to build a community around the idea
that the people in it are besieged by outsiders. But when that politician is running
for vice president, with the potential to become the president if anything happens to his 78-year-old
running mate, who is the oldest person ever to run for president, it raises a whole factory of red
flags. Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times noted the support of racist ideologue Alfred
Rosenberg of the Nazi party for the anti-Semitic text, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
a text fabricated in the early 20th century by officials in Tsarist Russia. Rosenberg stood by
the inner truth of the text, even though it was fake. Like Rosenberg,
Hitler's chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels, wrote, I believe in the inner, but not the factual,
truth of the protocols. While Democratic Ohio Representative Casey Weinstein has called for
Vance to resign, aside from DeWine, Republican lawmakers have not repudiated vance's lie
astonishingly vance is trying to rise to power on lies about the people of his own state the people
he is supposed to represent not only have democratic politicians demanded that he stop
but also amidst the chaos the republican mayor of Springfield and two Republican county
commissioners would not commit to voting for Trump. The popular backlash against this lie
has been swift and strong. The Ohio-based Red Wine and Blue organization has organized the
Oh No You Don't campaign to reiterate on social media their stance against the division Vance and Trump are stoking.
Trump seemed to try to regain control of the political narrative on Sunday by posting on
social media, I hate Taylor Swift, a comment that looked like an attempt to change the subject
from the backlash to the pet eating lie, the continued disparagement of Trump's debate
performance, and increasing attention of Trump's debate performance,
and increasing attention to Trump's attachment to right-wing provocateur and conspiracy theorist
Laura Loomer. In the days since Trump took Loomer to a commemoration of the terrorist attacks of
September 11th, 2001, which she has suggested were an inside job, the media has paid more
attention to the 31-year-old extremist who
has been Trump's close companion since spring 2023. Loomer has cheered the drowning of 2,000
migrants and called for 2,000 more. In June, she said that Democrats should not just be prosecuted
and jailed, but they should get the death penalty. You know, we actually used
to have the punishment for treason in this country. When some commenters suggested her relationship
with Trump was sexual, she countered with a truly vile statement about Vice President Kamala Harris.
The increasing visibility of Loomer near Trump has made those Republicans trying to run a more traditional campaign beg him to cut her loose.
But Trump seems reluctant to distance himself from her.
Sam Stein of the Bulwark today wrote that those Republicans worried about Trump being surrounded by conspiracy theorists are a decade late.
After listing Trump's many years of conspiracy theories, Stein wrote,
they're not worried that Loomer will turn Trump into a raving lunatic.
They're simply worried that Trump might lose.
As Trump seems increasingly detached from reality,
Vance has become the face of the Republican presidential campaign.
He seems desperate to turn the media cycle from Trump
and the extraordinary unpopularity
of the plans outlined in Project 2025 and toward immigration. It's a hard sell since voters
correctly note that it was Republicans egged on by Trump who killed the strong bipartisan border
bill in the spring. On Thursday, September 12th, Vance said on CNBC that if immigration were the path to
prosperity, America would be the most prosperous country in the world. Outside of the hellscape
in MAGA Republicans' mind, it is. The Federal Reserve recently noted that as of the second quarter in 2024, U.S. household net worth is growing by a strong 7.1%
a year. The stock market is also strong, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising 228 points
today to set an all-time high. On Sunday afternoon, shortly after Trump's Taylor Swift post and another calling the
failing New York Times a threat to democracy, as Trump was golfing at his club in West Palm
Beach, Florida, Secret Service agents noticed and fired on a man holding a rifle with a scope.
Today, Carol Lennig, Josh Dossi, and Isaac Stanley Becker of the Washington Post
reported that authorities have
warned Trump of the risks of golfing at his own courses because of their proximity to public roads,
but Trump insisted they were safe and kept using them. The acting director of the Secret Service,
Ronald Rowe Jr., said today that Trump's plan for golfing on Sunday was unscheduled, so the Secret Service
used an emergency plan for protecting Trump. Roe said the subject, Ryan Wesley Routh, a convicted
felon with a history of apparent mental illness, did not have a line of sight to the former
president and did not shoot. He escaped and was later caught. Cell phone records suggest he was in the vicinity for 12 hours before being flushed out of the bushes.
Democratic leaders again denounced violence and said it has no place in our country.
Observers noted that it was Trump who signed a bill revoking gun checks for people with mental illnesses
put in place by President Barack Obama, and that he promised the National Rifle Association,
or NRA, that he would roll back all the gun safety provisions President Joe Biden has put into place
if he wins in 2024. But the Trump campaign called for donations on a website suggesting,
as MAGA Republicans did after the shooting in Butler, Pennsylvania, that Democrats were
complicit in
the threat to Trump. There are people in this world who will do whatever it takes to stop us,
Trump's campaign said. Unfortunately, two attempts on a president's life in such short order are not
unprecedented. As Tom Nichols pointed out today in The Atlantic, Gerald Ford survived two attempts in 15 days in 1975. But as Nichols also
points out, Ford did not fundraise off the attempts or blame his opponents for them.
Opponents are pointing out that it is Trump and the MAGA Republicans, not the Democrats,
who are stoking violence. Marcy Wheeler of Empty Wheel noted that in July 2023, Trump posted an
address for former President Barack Obama on his social media network, prompting a stalker,
and that in four different jurisdictions, Trump's lawyers have argued that the First Amendment
protects Trump's right to attack the judges, prosecutors, and witnesses in the cases against him, as well as their families.
Others recalled Maga's jokes about the brutal attack on then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's
husband, Paul.
Trump supporter Elon Musk, who owns the social media platform X, wrote, and no one is even
trying to assassinate Biden Kamala, a post he later called a joke after observers asked about the national security implications of a defense contractor who has $15 billion in federal contracts suggesting the assassination of the president and vice president.
Musk's post had more than 39 million impressions before he deleted it.
Musk's post had more than 39 million impressions before he deleted it.
After his own incendiary post, Musk wrote,
The incitement to hatred and violence against President Trump by the media and leading Democrats needs to stop.
Conservative lawyer George Conway retorted, What utter nonsense.
Indeed, the MAGA attempt to tie the shootings near Trump to the Democrats is pretty clearly an attempt to stop Democrats from talking about the issues of the campaign by claiming that any public discussion of Trump's own unpopular policies and hateful words will gin up violence against him.
One of the biggest issues MAGA Republicans would like to stop people from talking about is abortion.
Reproductive healthcare journalist Kavitha Sarana explained in ProPublica today that every state has
a committee of experts that meet to examine women's deaths during or within a year of pregnancy.
Those committees operate with a two-year lag, meaning that we are now learning about women
dying after the Supreme Court overturned
the 1973 Roe versus Wade decision that recognized the constitutional right to abortion. Georgia's
state committee has recently concluded that at least two women have died in Georgia from
preventable causes after hospitals in the state denied them timely reproductive health care.
Amber Nicole Thurman died just weeks
after the Georgia abortion ban went into effect. She went into sepsis from unexpelled fetal tissue
after an abortion she obtained legally in North Carolina. Georgia's law made the routine dilation
and curatage procedure, or DNC, a felony with vague exceptions that make doctors worry about prosecution if they
perform it. Reports show that doctors repeatedly discussed a DNC for Thurman, but put it off,
even as her organs began to fail. By the time they performed the procedure, it was too late.
Serrana notes that Georgia Governor Brian Kemp said he was overjoyed when the law went into effect
and that it would keep women safe, healthy, and informed.
Attorneys for the state of Georgia
accused abortion rights activists
who said the law endangered women
of hyperbolic fear-mongering
just two weeks before Thurman died.
She left behind a six-year-old son. are composed by Michael Moss.