Letters from an American - September 23, 2024
Episode Date: September 24, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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September 23, 2024.
There's nothing sadder than an aging salesman trying to close one last deal, MSNBC's Ryan Teague Beckwith wrote on September 21.
Beckwith went on to list seven of Trump's most recent campaign promises, most delivered off the cuff at rallies, that are transparent attempts to close the deal with different groups of voters.
Trump is also threatening voters. been treated properly by voters who happen to be Jewish, and that if he doesn't win the 2024
election, the Jewish people would have a lot to do with the loss, adding in that case,
Israel, in my opinion, will cease to exist within two years. Opponents were quick to point out that
these threats echo old anti-Semitic tropes scapegoating Jews. When Jake Tapper asked Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton
to comment on Trump's statement on Sunday, Cotton's answer brought small comfort.
Well, Jake, Donald Trump has been saying things like this for at least 11 months.
Trump's social media posts about women sounded both desperate and delusional. Trump has boasted of overturning the 1973 Roe versus Wade decision
that recognized the constitutional right to abortion,
but that loss is enormously unpopular.
So he is caught between the reality
that his white extremist evangelical base
continues to support banning abortion,
while voters in a general election
are just as adamant
that they want abortion rights
protected. Trump insists that there was a driving popular demand for returning decisions about
abortion to the states, but this is a lie. There was no such popular demand. And now, a two-year
lag in the commissions that study maternal death means that stories of women who died because the new laws deprived them of medical
care are beginning to hit the news. On Friday, news broke that maternal deaths in Texas skyrocketed
after the state's 2021 abortion ban, rising by 56% compared to an 11% increase across the rest
of the nation. Just before midnight, Trump posted a rant that included
his usual lie about afterbirth executions. Women are poorer than they were four years ago, are less
healthy than they were four years ago, are less safe on the streets than they were four years ago,
are more depressed and unhappy than they were four years ago, and are less optimistic and confident in the future than they were four years ago. I will fix all of that and fast, and at long last, this national nightmare will be over.
You will no longer be thinking about abortion because it is now where it always had to be,
with the states and a vote of the people and with powerful exceptions like those that Ronald Reagan insisted on for rape, incest, and the life of the mother, but not allowing for Democrat
demanded late-term abortion in the seventh, eighth, or ninth month, or even execution
of a baby after birth.
I will protect women at a level never seen before.
They will finally be healthy, hopeful, safe, and secure. Their lives will be happy, beautiful,
and great again. In North Carolina, the core members of Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson's
campaign staff resigned yesterday, along with all but three members of the campaign
staff, two spokespeople and a bodyguard, after the CNN report about Robinson's offensive writings on
a pornography website, including his declaration that he considers himself a black Nazi and that
he would like to own slaves. And yet the North Carolina Republican Party is openly defending Robinson.
Today, the Republican Governors Association announced it was not going to buy any more
ad time in North Carolina, a potential disaster for Trump as well as Robinson.
Trump's ability to command the Republicans appears to be waning. House Republican leadership has
apparently accepted a
deal to fund the government through December 20th without the addition of the voter suppression bill
Trump wanted. And today, Nebraska Republican State Senator Mike McDonald said he would not
vote to change the way Nebraska allots its electoral votes so close to the election,
despite great pressure from Trump loyalists to do so.
Meanwhile, MyPillow executive Mike Lindell, a Trump loyalist, is using a neo-Nazi code to advertise his pillows for 1488, a reference to the 14 words, we must secure the existence of
our people and a future for white children, and, since H is the eighth letter of the
alphabet, a reference to Heil Hitler. When the Trump campaign released a photo of the candidate
with his grandchildren near him on a plane, Ron Filipkowski of Midas Touch noted,
when he lets the grandkids near him on the plane for a photo op, that's when you know he's really panicking.
Today, Trump had an event stop at a grocery store in Catanning, Pennsylvania, where he chatted with supporters. He handed a $100 bill to a customer and promised that, we'll do that for you from
the White House, all right? The election is not the only reason Trump might be worried.
Shares of Trump media continue to fall, and his new crypto platform does not appear to be taking off.
On Sunday, he announced,
The launch of our official Trump coins, the only official coin designed by me and proudly minted here in the USA.
But his other meme coins have lately aroused little interest in what seems to be an oversaturated market.
Technology reporter Brian Krassenstein noted that the new coins cost $100, while the one ounce of silver in one costs $30.
Veterans advocate Travis Akers pointed out on social media that less than 24 hours after Trump's advertisement,
the Jacksonville FBI office
warned against collectible coin scams. Trump's wife, Melania Trump, is also looking for cash.
On Wednesday, September 18th, she released a video to advertise her forthcoming book.
In the video, she said she stands proudly behind my nude modeling work.
In the video, she said she stands proudly behind my nude modeling work.
Since her nude photos were 100% not in the public conversation, her statement seemed designed to pump sales by suggesting there are nude photos of her in the book.
Today, Pamela Brown, Jeremy Herb, and Shoshana Dubnow of CNN reported that Trump's most recent financial form reveals that Melania
was paid $237,000 to appear at a campaign event in April, although it is not clear who cut the
check for that appearance. The reporters say that such six-figure payments for her campaign
appearances are not unusual, although payment for a spouse's campaign appearances at all is highly unusual.
On Saturday, Trump said he would not debate Vice President Harris again, saying it was
too late for another debate, although he then suggested he would be interested in doing
one if the Fox News Channel broadcast it.
The Trump campaign is openly vowing to use federal forces against political opponents, but it is not clear the news is coming from Trump himself, so much as from those surrounding him.
Vice presidential candidate Ohio Senator J.D. Vance has doubled down on his insistence that a Trump administration will deport legal as well as undocumented immigrants.
legal as well as undocumented immigrants. His stand has earned him a rebuke from the editorial board of the Dayton, Ohio Daily News, which expressed alarm at Vance's lies about immigration
and his evident belief that the ends justify the means. History, of course, offers no shortage of
atrocities committed when the truth is viewed as an inconvenient obstacle in your way, the board wrote. It called Vance an embarrassment not only to himself, but to Ohio. On Sunday, the Trump team
posted on social media that, as soon as I take office, we will immediately surge law enforcement
to every city that is failing to turn over criminal aliens and bring
down the full weight of the federal government on any jurisdiction that refuses to cooperate with
ICE and Border Patrol. This threat is in keeping with Michael Schmidt's report in the New York
Times yesterday, outlining how Trump used the criminal justice system to retaliate against those he saw as his enemies.
Bipartisan endorsements for Democratic candidates Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota
Governor Tim Walz continue to pile up. Today, three former chairs of the main Republican Party
enthusiastically endorsed Harris. After Teamsters President Sean O'Brien said the 1.3 million member organization
would not endorse either candidate in 2024, making the Teamsters the only one of the nation's 10
major unions not to endorse Harris, joint councils of the Teamsters have endorsed Harris and Walls
on their own. These endorsements matter not only for votes, but also
for get-out-the-vote efforts in crucial Midwestern states. Also crucial to Pennsylvania is today's
endorsement of Harris by members of the state's Polish-American community, who expressed concern
that Trump would enable Russian President Vladimir Putin to invade Poland. There are 800,000 people of Polish descent
in Pennsylvania. On Sunday, a bipartisan group of 741 national security leaders,
some of the biggest names in the field, endorsed Harris. To the American people, they wrote,
we are former public servants who swore an oath to the Constitution.
Many of us risked our lives for it. We are retired generals, admirals, senior non-commissioned
officers, ambassadors, and senior civilian national security leaders. We are Republicans,
Democrats, and independents. We are loyal to the ideals of our nation, like freedom, democracy,
and the rule of law, not to any one individual or party. We do not agree on everything,
but we all adhere to two fundamental principles. First, we believe America's national security
requires a serious and capable commander in chief.
Second, we believe American democracy is invaluable.
Each generation has a responsibility to defend it.
That is why we, the undersigned, proudly endorse Kamala Harris to be the next president of
the United States.
This election is a choice between serious leadership
and vengeful impulsiveness.
It is a choice between democracy and authoritarianism.
Vice President Harris defends America's democratic ideals
while former President Donald Trump endangers them.
We do not make such an assessment lightly.
We are trained to make sober, rational
decisions. That is how we know Vice President Harris would make an excellent commander-in-chief
while Mr. Trump has proven he is not up to the job.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,