No. 1 was just that — an old piece about the overrated cult of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. No. 2 was current and related — my fact-filled, cult-free obit.
A skeptical leftist's, or post-capitalist's, or eco-socialist's blog, including skepticism about leftism (and related things under other labels), but even more about other issues of politics. Free of duopoly and minor party ties. Also, a skeptical look at Gnu Atheism, religion, social sciences, more.
Note: Labels can help describe people but should never be used to pin them to an anthill.
As seen at Washington Babylon and other fine establishments
October 10, 2020
Top blogging for September — stupidity abounded!
No. 1 was just that — an old piece about the overrated cult of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. No. 2 was current and related — my fact-filled, cult-free obit.
October 09, 2020
WRR: Unconstitutional Sunday programming?
A few weeks ago I blogged about WRR, Dallas' classical radio station, about to enter its centennial year.
Now, many Dallas listeners know that it's required to carry live Dallas City Council meetings as part of its ownership by the city of Dallas.
Many others know that it has Sunday religious services.
Given its ownership by a government, I find this unconstitutional two ways.
It violates the First Amendment both by establishing a religion in general, and by establishing Christianity as the only religion on its airway.
What about it, ACLU? ACLU of Texas?
It would be an interesting suit in which to be a plaintiff. That said, as I'm not a resident of the city of Dallas, I probably would be bounced for lack of standing.
October 08, 2020
Texas Progressives tackle Abbott election issues and more
Off the Kuff covers the two lawsuits filed (so far) over Greg Abbott's order that limited counties to one mail ballot dropoff location. That said, I tackled this showing how Kuff and diehard Democratic tribalists might have have an ethical case but have zero legal chance. Kuff's second piece does note there could be a slim chance it could prevail in state court. BUT? That's not where it was filed. And, by the time it's venue-booted? There will be no more time. Chris Hooks weighs in to note it's a typical Abbott move, and likely focused at retaining the state House as its main focus. That said, the Texas Supremes have shot down Peter Hotze et al and now ruled that the extension of early voting is legal and that the relators filed suit too late.
Therese Odell responds to the suggestion that as someone who writes about reality TV, she has some responsibility for Donald Trump.
October 07, 2020
Fricking frackers shooting themselves in the foot again
Drivers stanning for Uber and a new book
First, the book.
Worked Over: How Round-the-Clock Work Is Killing the American Dream by Jamie McCallum
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Jamie McCallum writes in the vein of David Graeber and James Livingston, with on-the-ground observations as a sociology prof.
One fascinating idea broached by McCallum is “universal basic services.” Think basic income on steroids, including national health care, but also child care, adult social care and more.
McCallum also rightly notes one other power of national health care — employers lose leverage over employees when they can’t use the puppet strings of “benefits.”
The book also made me suspicious of people on Twitter and elsewhere, claiming to be Uber and Lyft drivers, who oppose California law reclassifying them as employees. Per the book, it’s clear that they currently have no real control over their schedule. So, are they that brainwashed, or are they company moles, part of management, or company shills/Oreos, paid to be traitors to their class?
Also of note is the sheer volume and number of times where union management, whether blue collar like the UAW or white-collar like state teachers unions, have been toadies to management on strikes and related issues.
One other thing of note is that McCallum looks at least a bit of how this micromanaging by technology is playing out not just on factory floors or the gray collar/service world of ridesharing and retailers, but is in the white collar world. COVID has only exacerbated companies trying to electronically peer over the shoulder of “creative” freelancers and now, work at home white-collar staff. That’s in addition to the “work more” as a competition that’s invaded the white collar world, too.
View all my reviews.
Speaking of Uber and Lyft, this leads to a new piece at Capital and Main about California's Prop 22 and how many drivers of color are supporting it. (For the unfamiliar, the Cal Assembly said a couple of years ago, by law, rideshare drivers are employees, not contractors. Prop 22 would roll that back.)
I've seen a bunch of drivers stanning for Prop 22, per the book. It's bad enough that White drivers are doing that, but Blacks and other minorities?
Per the Black orgs supporting it, I have no doubt Al Sharpton is being paid off; I just don't know how much. Otherwise? This is one of those big delusional moments, if Black supporters are focusing on racism on racial grounds and as something only governments do. Contra that, this is, per Doug Henwood, one of those times when race and class intersect and indeed largely merge.
October 06, 2020
China-stanners' lies, including those by Green Party thought leaders
The Chinese plan to do all this was leaked. Documented.
Yet, China-stanners, from Rainier Shea of the People's Republic of Humboldt Bay, and I presume, the likes of World Socialists, on one "side," to the allegedly outside-the-box stenos (Blumenthal, Taibbi, Maté, Chariton, Ames, Levine, etc.) on a second "side," continue to lie. As did the late Kevin Zeese and partner Margaret Flowers. (Things like this are part of why I once removed Counterpunch from my blogroll.) Danny Haiphong, the worst thing to happen to Black Agenda Report in the past five years outside of Bruce Dixon's death, is another of the China-stanners. And, I've not forgotten he drinks the Tulsi Kool-Aid.
And, stanners? You might get away with claiming that ButtFeet, ie BuzzFeed, is part of the bipartisan foreign policy establishment? Cory Doctorow? Not so much. International Consortium of Investigative Journalists? Not so much. More from them.
Patrick Cockburn at Counterpunch? CERTAINLY not part of the MSM, but he can note Chinese repression while also noting it's "interesting" that they've suddenly gotten US attention. And, re Tulsi-stanner Haiphong, he can ALSO note it's interesting that Modi's lockdown of Kashmir has gotten about zero attention from Trump. (It's also gotten very little attention from the leftists above, whether they're actually Tulsi-stanners or not.)
And, speaking of media, more reminders that China is not tussling with just the US. Australia, after new rows with Beijing, now has no media there. And, an Aussie journo shoved out two years ago is now telling his, and his family's, story. Shades of Ed Snowden warning Glenn Greenwald et al to have all phones and computers Internet-disconnected, Matthew Carney says that people in Beijing were at one point remotely controlling his phone.
Speaking of Australians? A Down Under think tank now has an interactive map of all the reported sites. On the other hand? ASPI gets US government money, even as NR tries to downplay that.
This is a piece that will likely have occasional follow-ups. And, yes, the "thought leaders" is deliberate.
Are there radical Muslims in Xinjiang? Yes. Might China be worried about them? Yes. Does it need this degree of repression? No. Might the US and the rest of the West be using real claims, as well as claims it may have stirred up, as a wedge issue? Yes.
Can China easily address this? Yes. Has it? No.
To me, one factor that points to this being genuine is former detainees talking about a "points system" for re-education. We already know Xi Jinping is working on doing this with ethnic Han on social media; it only seems rational to assume that he started this, in spades, with the Uyghurs (and Kazakhs and others) detained in Xinjiang.
Per this Atlantic piece, let me ask a rhetorical question: If the U.S. government were doing these things to American Indians (as it DID do in Indian boarding schools a century ago) your response would be?
As for Zeese and Flowers? They have been key advisors to Green Party presidential nominee Howie Hawkins, who has taken huge heat from some Greens and an even bigger number of pseudo-Greens over his comments about Russian interference in the 2016 election. And, sadly, Howie has done a fundraiser with Haiphong's fellow China-stanner at Black Agenda Report, Margaret Kimberly.
Update, Feb. 6, 2021: Flowers has responded to a call-out on Twitter over the latest revelations, contained in this new blog post calling out Max Blumenthal, and I have responded.
https://t.co/ws59vqrUAg
— Dr. Margaret Flowers (@DrMFlowers) February 6, 2021
"While we recognize that there are aspects of PRC policy in Xinjiang to critique, these critiques should be debated and resolved on Chinese terms and in Chinese dialogues, and not be used as crude ammunition in the U.S.-led geopolitical assault on China."
My first response in a two-parter:
There are plenty of people not part of the *bipartisan foreign policy establishment* who do NOT use the Chinese policy toward Xinjiang as "as crude ammunition in the U.S.-led geopolitical assault on China." That includes leftists like me. This isn't "zero-sum." (sigh)
— Your Glenn Greenwald pouty tomato face 🚩🌻 (@AFCC_Esq) February 6, 2021
And my second.
And, since this is not a zero sum game, I can avoid drinking Xi Jinping Thought Kool-Aid AND avoid drinking US bipartisan foreign policy establishment Kool-Aid. I don't have to discuss Xinjiang and Uyghurs on "Chinese terms," Dr. Margaret Flowers.
— Your Glenn Greenwald pouty tomato face 🚩🌻 (@AFCC_Esq) February 7, 2021
Flowers didn't want to stop digging, and offered this:
What's your point then? My sources are people who have been there and know the situation. https://t.co/QoYkEZONQT
— Dr. Margaret Flowers (@DrMFlowers) February 7, 2021
To which I offered the first of a three part thread response:
Well, the leaks of data came from people who "have been there." Patrick Cockburn is among those in Merika who doesn't totally buy the two-siderism angle, either. And, the ICIJ, which includes many non-American journos, has written about it., too.
— Your Glenn Greenwald pouty tomato face 🚩🌻 (@AFCC_Esq) February 7, 2021
AND? The Uyghurs ARE THERE! 1/x
The "Uyghurs were there" response should nail it.
If it doesn't? Since the Stalinist USSR, or before that, Russian Potemkin villages, authoritarian and totalitarian governments that have wanted to deceive those who are ready to be hoodwinked have easily done so.
And, if that's not enough, via the app Clubhouse, which recently briefly broke through the "great firewall of China," I can now tell Flowers the petards are also hoisting on her "Chinese terms" in another way. Diaspora Chinese, and also Taiwanese Chinese, told mainland Chinese that they needed to learn some things about Xinjiang.
(Update, March 12, 2021: I suppose we should discuss freedom of the press in "Chinese terms" as well, if we're going to be all bent over backward?)
What's a mix of funny, sad, ironic and hypocritical is that Flowers, one of the leaders of a third party, is engaging in two-siderism.
What's also a mix of funny, sad, ironic and hypocritical? Flowers' saying we should let Xi Jinping Thought go unchallenged is exactly the type of argument that could be used by the U.S. bipartisan foreign policy establishment.
It's also not the first time Flowers (and partner Kevin Zeese, when still alive) have peddled the Xi Jinping Thought Kool-Aid.
Richard Wolff, to the degree he touches on the issue, also seems to be a Xi-stanner.
What's also disgusting is the attempt of many of these people to both have their cake and eat it, too. They'll first deny that Uyghur camps exist, claiming it's all American propaganda. BUT, many then go on to say that the presence of radical Islamists means that China has to take actions like this — while still not expressly acknowledging China IS taking actions like this.
This is a classic Idries Shah issue of more than two sides. The camps exist. They're not vocational camps. But they may not be as bad as US claims. And US claims are being made in the light of geopolitics. But, that doesn't mean the claims are totally wrong. And, I wrote that all in 30 seconds. Wasn't hard, was it? More than two sides, folks.
While we're here? Let's add lies by omission by the China-stanners.
That would include ignoring Xi Jinping upping tensions with India to the point of warmongering.
Then, there's the ignoring the complaints many developing nations have had over Chinese economic exploitation in Belt and Road Initiative projects. What's the Mandarian equivalent of "Coca-Colonialism"?
Flowers' response confirms why I made the right decision in not voting for president last year. And, should the Georgia GP be "de-accredited," that will confirm I have made the right decision in no longer identifying as a Green.
October 05, 2020
A shitstorm US Senate race in New Mexico
I remember, just over 20 years ago, when Greens were so strong in northern New Mexico that they actually did lead to a Republican, Bill Redmond, being a short-term GOP Congresscritter for the First District. Now, they can't even muster a statewide candidate for this year's Senate race, featuring an inside-player neoliberal House member, Ben Ray Lujan (and a grifter off a New Mexico insider family name) as the Dem candidate. The sadness is even greater when you note that the Libertarian in the race is a climate change denialist, Lujan is a neoliberal minimizer, and the Rethug wouldn't even answer questions. Let's add in that the Libertarian, Walsh, is an ex-Dem.
Yes, I know that the pandemic has hindered third-party registration efforts.
But, at least in the gov's race, Greens haven't run a candidate since 2002. And, they did well, with David Bacon taking 5.5 percent. Since then? Nada? Tom Udall, vacating the Senate seat, had no Green (or Libertarian) opposition in either 2008 or 2014.
It's like the momentum in the Place Different from Nader's 2000 prez run, which had the pre-2000 background in the north, has wasted away.
Texas Progs / coronavirus, wk 27: Truth and lies about Trump
Nothing can stop him from working for the American people. RELENTLESS! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/2ZSat782qe
— Ivanka Trump (@IvankaTrump) October 4, 2020
Then, there's the lies claiming these photos' EXIF were manipulated by AP. Answered that, too:Note the image, the DESPERATION of RELENTLESS sycophancy of #TrumpTrain hacks AND FAMILY w/staged pix.
— The Notorious Roy G. Biv, GSNRF* 🚩🌻 (@AFCC_Esq) October 4, 2020
A White House and Ivanka so desperate for PR that they can't even fix Trump's combover.
Trump was in bed at 5:25 p.m., showing how sick he is.
RELENTLESS DESPERATION
As to whether it's more likely an AP photog wld lie by data manipulation or Trump ld engage in a cheap & stupid PR stunt?
— The Notorious Roy G. Biv, GSNRF* 🚩🌻 (@AFCC_Esq) October 4, 2020
AND? No. 3: A White House & Ivanka so desperate for PR they can't even fix Trump's combover.
No. 4: Trump in bed at 5:25 p.m., showing how sick he is.
I think we need to trust not their words but trust the signals of what drugs they have given Trump. Dexamethasone use clearly puts Trump as now a SERIOUS #COVID19 patient based on WHO guidelines for use of this drug. No way to justify mild to moderate case anymore. https://t.co/MfJ9xlw2Pj pic.twitter.com/HmfuOErAXP
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) October 4, 2020
Coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) is associated with diffuse lung damage. Glucocorticoids may modulate inflammation-mediated lung injury and thereby reduce progression to respiratory failure and death.
SocraticGadfly has semiregularly, for several months, split off coronavirus news from other items in his version of the weekly Texas Progressives Roundup. Last week, he tackled COVID political tribalism coming from MULTIPLE sides and called ALL of it out.