Letters from an American - September 19, 2024
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September 19, 2024
Yesterday morning, NPR reported that U.S. public health data are showing a dramatic drop in deaths from drug overdoses for the first time in decades.
Between April 2023 and April 2024, deaths from street drugs are down 10.6%, with some researchers saying that when federal surveys are updated, the decline will be even more pronounced.
Such a decline would translate to 20,000 deaths averted.
With more than 70,000 Americans dying of opioid overdoses in 2020 and numbers rising, the Biden-Harris administration prioritized disrupting the supply of illicit fentanyl and other synthetic drugs.
foreign people and agencies engaged in the global trade in illicit drugs, and arrested and prosecuted dozens of high-level Mexican drug traffickers and money launderers. In March 2023, the Biden-Harris
administration made naloxone, a medicine that can prevent fatal opioid overdoses, available over the
counter. The administration invested more than $82 billion in treatment,
and the Department of Health and Human Services worked to get the treatment into the hands of
first responders and family members. Addressing the crisis of opioid deaths meant careful,
coordinated policies. Also today, markets all over the world climbed after the Fed yesterday cut interest rates for the first time in four years.
In the U.S., the S&P 500, which tracks the stock performance of 500 of the biggest companies on the U.S. stock exchanges,
the Nasdaq Composite, which is weighted toward the information technology sector, and the Dow Jones Industrial
Average, an older index that tracks 30 prominent companies listed on U.S. stock exchanges,
all hit new records. The rate cut indicated to traders that the U.S. has, in fact, managed to
pull off the soft landing President Joe Biden and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen worked to achieve.
They have kept job growth steady, normalized economic growth and inflation, and avoided a
recession. As they have done so, the major U.S. stock indices have had what the Guardian's Callum
Jones calls an extraordinary year. Jones notes that the S&P 500 is up more than 20% since the beginning
of 2024, the Nasdaq composite has risen 22%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has gone up 11%.
Bringing the U.S. economy out of the pandemic more successfully than any other major economically
developed country meant clear goals
and principles and careful, informed adjustments. And yet, the big story today is that Republican
North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson frequented porn sites where between 2008 and 2012,
he wrote that he enjoyed watching transgender pornography,
referred to himself as a black Nazi, called for reinstating human enslavement and wrote,
I would certainly buy a few, called the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. a effing commie bastard,
wrote that he preferred Adolf Hitler to former President Barack Obama,
referred to black, Jewish, Muslim, and gay people with slurs, said he doesn't care about abortions,
I don't care, I just want to see the sex tape, he wrote, and recounted that he had secretly
watched women in the showers in a public gym as a 14-year-old. Andrew Kaczynski and M. Stack of CNN, who broke
the story, noted that CNN is reporting only a small portion of Robinson's comments on the website,
given their graphic nature. After the first story broke, Natalie Allison of Politico broke another,
that Robinson was registered on the Ashley
Madison website, which caters to married people seeking affairs. Robinson is running for governor
of North Carolina. He has attacked transgender rights, called for a six-week abortion ban without
exceptions for rape or incest, mocked survivors of school shootings, and, after identifying a
wide range of those he saw as enemies to America and to conservatives, told a church audience that
some folks need killing. That this scandal dropped on the last possible day Robinson could drop out
of the race suggests it was pushed by Republicans themselves
because they recognize that Robinson is dragging Trump and other Republican candidates down in
North Carolina. But here's the thing. Republican voters knew who Robinson was, and they chose him
anyway. Indeed, his behavior is not all that different from that of a number of the Republican candidates in this cycle, including former President Trump, the Republican nominee for president.
Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, welcomed North Carolina's outstanding lieutenant governor to a Republican-led House Judiciary Committee meeting on the importance of election integrity.
He brought the truth with clarity and conviction, and everyone should hear what he had to say,
Johnson posted to social media. Robinson spoke at the Republican National Convention.
The difference between the Democrats and the Republicans in this election is stark,
and it reflects a systemic problem that has been growing in the U.S. since the 1980s.
Democracy depends on at least two healthy political parties that can compete for voters
on a level playing field.
Although the men who wrote the Constitution hated the idea of political parties, they quickly figured out that parties tie voters to the mechanics of Congress and the presidency.
And they do far more than that.
Before political thinkers legitimized the idea of political opposition to the king,
disagreeing with the person in charge usually led to execution or banishment for treason.
Parties allowed for the idea of loyal and legitimate opposition,
which in turn allowed for the peaceful transition of power.
That peaceful exchange enabled the people to choose their leaders,
and leaders to relinquish power safely.
Parties also create a system for criticizing people in power, which helps to weed out corrupt or unfit leaders.
But those benefits of a party system depend on a level political playing field for everyone,
so that a party must constantly compete for voters by testing which policies are most popular
and getting rid of the corrupt or unstable leaders voters would reject.
In the 1980s, radical Republican leaders set out to dismantle the government that regulated business,
provided a basic social safety net, promoted infrastructure, and protected civil rights.
But that system was popular, and to
overcome the majority who favored it, they began to tip the political playing field in their
direction. They began to suppress voting by Democrats by insisting that Democrats were
engaging in voter fraud. At the same time, they worked to delegitimize their opponents by calling
them socialists or communists
and claiming that they were trying to destroy the United States. By the 1990s, extremists in the
party were taking power by purging traditional Republicans from it. And yet, voters still
elected Democrats, and after they put President Barack Obama into the White House in 2008, the Republican
State Leadership Committee in 2010 launched Operation Red Map, or Redistricting Majority
Project. The plan was to take over state legislatures so Republicans would control
the new district maps drawn after the 2010 census, especially in swing states like Florida,
Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. It worked, and Republican legislatures in those
states and elsewhere carved up state maps into dramatically gerrymandered districts.
In those districts, the Republican candidates were virtually guaranteed election,
so they focused not on attracting voters with popular policies,
but on amplifying increasingly extreme talking points to excite the party's base.
That drove the party farther and farther to the right.
By 2012, political scientists Thomas Mann and Norm Ornstein warned that the Republican Party had
become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme, scornful of compromise,
unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence, and science, and dismissive of the
legitimacy of its political opposition. At the same time, the skewed playing
field meant that candidates who were corrupt or bonkers did not get removed from the political
mix after opponents pounced on their misdeeds and misstatements, as they would have been in
a healthy system. Social media poster Scary Lawyer Guy noted that the story about Robinson will divert attention
from the lies about Haitian immigrants eating pets, which diverted attention from Trump's
abysmal debate performance, which diverted attention from Trump's filming a campaign ad
at Arlington National Cemetery. When a political party has so thoroughly walled itself off from the majority, there are two options.
One is to become full-on authoritarian and suppress the majority, often with violence.
Such a plan is in Project 2025, which calls for a strong executive to take control of the military and the judicial system and to use that power to impose his will.
military and the judicial system and to use that power to impose his will. The other option is that enough people in the majority reject the extremists to create a backlash that not only replaces them,
but also establishes a level playing field. The Republican Party is facing the reality that it
has become so extreme it is hemorrhaging former supporters
and mobilizing a range of critics. Today, the Catholic Conference of Ohio rebuked those who
spread lies about Haitian immigrants. Republican presidential candidate Trump and vice presidential
candidate J.D. Vance were the leading culprits. And Teamsters councils have rejected the decision of the union's board
not to make an endorsement this year and have endorsed Democratic presidential candidate
Vice President Kamala Harris. Some white evangelicals are also distancing themselves
from Trump. And then, tonight, Trump told a Jewish group that if he loses, it will be the fault of Jewish Americans.
I will put it to you very simply and gently.
I really haven't been treated right.
But you haven't been treated right because you're putting yourself in great danger.
Mark Robinson has said he will not step aside.
Step aside.