Monthly Archives: December 2019

Time to Kiss the Toad

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There is nothing wrong with your computer screen. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission. If we wish to make it louder, we will bring up the volume. If we wish to make it softer, we will tune it to a whisper….You are about to participate in a great adventure. You are about to experience the awe and mystery which reaches from the inner mind to… The Outer D.C. Limits.

Anyone familiar with these waters knows that sharks infest them. And their favorite chum is stupidity, so religion and Trump are high on the menu. They’re entrees, not appetizers.

But in keeping with Evidentialism’s core tenet that we celebrate the fact we get more todays than yesterdays (or tomorrows even!), we must acknowledge — today, right now —  that the president (and the federal government writ large) did exactly what the Founding Fathers envisioned: They acted for the good of the people they serve.

This shouldn’t be news. Governments are supposed to act for the betterment of their charges. But, particularly now, the notion seems quaint and antiquated, and has been trampled underfoot by political peacocking. (BTW: Can the GOP please hire a high schooler who can work Microsoft Paint? Those signs make Vegas look understated.)  Image result for gop signs at hearing carton

Still, we have to give credit to the president and both sides of the aisle for actually working on a Friday. Trump signed into law a $1.4 trillion set of spending measures Friday that not only averted another government shutdown, but raised the smoking age to 21 and secured funding for studies on gun violence.

It would be hard to argue against the logic of either measure. Does anyone contend the age should go down? Or that we need to be spending less to examine our gun crisis? (Under the new legislation, the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will receive $25 million to conduct research on gun violence. That came after a more than two-decade block on such research at a federal level.)

We get it. It’s hard to compliment an intellectually incontinent narcissist, particularly one whose sole talent is doing touchdown dances. But even the CNNs and MSNBCs of the world had to give the president — and deeply divided Congress — credit for a flurry of bipartisan bills that averted another Grinchian Christmas gift to “non-essential” federal employees, right? Nope.

Let’s thank Donnie while we’re at it, no matter the gag reflex. The president could have easily upended the system he publicly abhors (but privately milks). He could have insisted the $1.4 billion was just a fraction of the $5 billion he demanded for a wall (which is true) and refused to sign it. He could have told his yokel base: “See what happens when Dems impeach? Your government breaks.”

But he did neither. And Congress passed an enormously consequential bill. Yet, when I flipped to the outlets that are the president’s greatest critics, CNN and MSNBC, this is what I found:

And here’s how MSNBC summed up the day:

This is why we have the reputation we do. Have we gotten so entrenched in our echo chambers that anything outside it resembles a home invasion? Why is good news so difficult for us to hear, let alone repeat?

The position of the 24/7s is particularly disappointing given the tiny amount of work you’d need to exert to have today’s news fit your narrative. Consider this simple story angle: We have now raised to 21 the drinking and smoking ages. Why not gun ownership?! You could still appease your base with a ‘this is a good start’ criticism. But to not acknowledge your opponents getting something right is to diminish when they get it wrong.

Better yet, consider how we would have covered the passage of the bill had it been signed by Hillary Clinton. Dollars to donuts that Anderson Cooper would yodel the praises of a president brave enough to stare down big tobacco and sign into law a study the NRA does not want published, let alone  funded.Image result for anderson cooper

Again, none of this acknowledgment need bother the woke angels of the Left’s nature. Trump is not Lord Voldemort. We won’t be hectored and haunted should we speak President Napalm’s name. If you can call out his errors, call his base hits, too. Image result for trump voldemort

We can do better than what the 24/7s are offering us. Is the bill too bloated? Absolutely. Do we need to eventually pay off the card? No doubt. Do journalists ask themselves question in order to make a story look more substantial? Perhaps.

But there’s a reason “Fake News” has taken off with the masses. Let’s be honest with ourselves, fellow reporters and the curious-minded: You don’t have to offer fabricated details for a story to be fake news. It just need lack context.

 

Nancy, Beware Vicious!

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Dear Rep. Pelosi,

Longtime caller, first-time listener.

First off, as Class President of the high school musical we call Congress, congratulation on a stellar freshman crew. The representatives that won elections in 2018 turned the House Democrat, flipped red states blue and were part of more than 400 bills that passed the House, from climate change to gun control, according to the D.C. publication The Hill. (That the Senate did nothing with most of them is not your cross to bear.) They also coalesced to produce the first Impeachment Inquiry of a first-term president. Bravo!

Now please call them off.

On Wednesday, the House will vote on two articles of impeachment, abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. This is hardly a fitting gift for the holiday season, I understand. And I also realize the impossible position you’re in: You are the parent of a petulant toddler who has disobeyed house rules — in front of dinner guests, no less! To not take action would be to tacitly endorse the little shit’s behavior.

We could see you at the dinner table, trying to keep it together. Through pussy-grabbing, porn mistresses and charity scams, you were as patient as humanly possible. And when you finally did announce the discipline — an Impeachment Inquiry — you were somehow both remarkably reserved and remorseful.

Now please use that skill to talk your underlings off the ledge. Here’s why:

Impeachment will fail. Already, the narrative is forming: a unified GOP vs. divided Dems. Two House Democrats — Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey and Collin Peterson of Minnesota — opposed the resolution formalizing the impeachment inquiry and are expected to vote no on the articles of impeachment. No Republican has strayed, nor will they, despite MSNBC’s quaint hopes. Lindsey Graham and Mitch McConnell have already announced they do not plan to call witnesses during the impeachment and estimate it will take 7-10 days. Just in time, the GOP shall trumpet, for Christmas. At what cost asterisk?Image result for Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey and Collin Peterson of Minnesota

The Democratic winning streak will snap. Around next November. When Trump emerges victorious from the trial, he and his loyal sidekicks will ride the same wave that boosted Bill Clinton’s approval rating after his affair. When it come to jury trials, America loves stories of white men evading justice. Perhaps that’s because it’s America’s story, too. Image result for clinton lewinsky

Justice can still be meted. Trump’s most aggravating personal trait is that he’s never paid for a thing — physically,emotionally, financially — in his life. We used to think Reagan was Teflon. Donnie makes him look like fucking Velcro. But with a little patience, karma may finally pay a visit to Pennsylvania Avenue, which leads us to the good news…Image result for reagan trump teflon

There’s an artful way out of this loss. It’s Trumpian, so I know you’re going to say no. But just hear me out.

Come Wednesday, announce that you are not going to impeach the president. Instead, take back the Xmas present Republicans are trying to make of the impeachment and make it your own. Go vengeful Santa on their asses.

Consider how Americans would take the following press conference, made in the same solemn tone as the inquiry:

“To all Americans, I’d like to announce that the House of Representatives has decided not to move forward on the impeachment of Donald Trump.

“My colleagues and I feel that bringing impeachment charges before a Republican-run Senate would be tantamount to bringing a case before a rigged jury that works at the behest of a judge in on the fix. Despite our 658-page House Judiciary Committee report, which detailed the president’s abuse of power and obstruction of justice, it’s clear that our counterparts across the aisle have divorced themselves from fact as much as the president.

“During the inquiry, we brought a parade of credible, expert witnesses — Bill Taylor, a former Ukraine ambassador; Fiona Hill, former director for Europe and Russia at the NSC; Army Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman; even EU Ambassador Gordon Sondland, a Trump appointee. All testified to abhorrent behavior from the top office of the United States: Do us political favors for military protection. Yet not one Republican believes this action to be unacceptable.Image result for lt. col. vindman testifies

“So, instead, we make our case to you, the American people. You will have the opportunity to be the jury AND judge on November 3. If you found Mr. Trump’s behavior as unacceptable as we did, you can render your verdict at the ballot box.”

“This wasn’t an easy decision, and there was much debate in the House about the appropriate measures to take. Ultimately, we decided to follow the wisdom of the framers of the Constitution. Just as our government is designed to be by, for and of the people, so too should its most important legal decision.

“The American people have been through enough. They have seen the evidence. They have heard the testimony. They, like we, want to move past the endless bickering and get back to work on getting this country back on track.

“Thank you. And happy holidays.”