Tag Archives: the big lie

The Right Side of History

What do we know? And what can we do about it. Since 2015 we’ve heard louder and louder voices, new names to us regular Americans, like Trump, Gaetz, Taylor-Greene and Boebert shouting hateful rhetoric from the rooftops and basically threatening anyone who’s not, well, them.

Now the House Republicans are getting smarter, and scarier, as they’ve just elected An Architect Of. In this instance, it happens to be a lawyer who architected a quasi-legal means to allow Congress to keep Donald Trump president even though he had lost the “most secure” election in history as stated by his top legal advisor (Bill Barr, Attorney General who quit) and top cybersecurity guy (Chris Krebs, who Trump immediately fired).

If you want to know the world view of our latest Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, “grab a bible.” Routine mass shootings? Don’t legislate, pray. Guns the problem? No, it’s people’s hearts. Social Security getting low on funds? Force women to have babies against their will to provide an economic safety net.

Speaker Mike Johnson is Jim Jordan with a brain, a suit jacket and spectacles. The game’s the same, and the ante’s been upped. Perhaps the Crazy Eight will toss him to the curb in a month, after he signs on to a clean CR to fund the government until 2024, simply because they can’t understand him.

I believe that the puritans who fled England to found the US of A came in part for religious freedom. I believe that the separation of Church and State was intended to keep the Church out of State business and to prohibit the State from demanding that all Americans be of the same Christian faith or denomination. Speaker Johnson believes that the Church is all-encompassing and rules our State.

Overall, it appears as if the House has signed on to an effort to install an autocratic presidency with a thin shiny veneer of faux Christian theocracy as the icing on the cake, or the cake itself according to Johnson.

“MAGA is ascending.” said Florida’s own Nostradamus, Matt Gaetz, last week. Dear Leader Trump may have sent his missive tanking non-election denier Emmer from the courtroom where he is trying to use his menacing presence to cow the judge into preserving his NYC real estate fiefdom. Three of Trump’s co-conspirators pleaded guilty of helping him overturn the presidential election, and will testify to that effect. And his head staffer, Mark Meadows has received immunity for his testimony, and he knows everything. Ascending? I beg to differ, Mr. Gaetz.

I’ll become a pensioner next week so I’ll pretend to be one now and say that if I were on a fixed income and sent numerous small checks to Trump’s Stop the Steal campaign that raised $250 million after the 2020 election, I’d be gathering up my AARP buddies right about now and filing a class action suit to get my money back, plus punitive damages for his thinking that I’m stupid and thus worth defrauding.

Some of these trials will be televised, and conservative news media can only mess with that so much (sorry, AI). Their viewers are going to find out that they were used, all this time, as rubes in the grand GOP grift scheme, the greatest Big Lie of all time.

The GOP no longer wants to govern. That’s our money at work, all so they can fund raise off of lies and see how many hits they get on social media. They’ve forgotten the oath they took to the Constitution, and their promise to represent us, the people.

Lies have consequences, and The Big Lie will have many. The wheels of justice turn slowly, but if they’re allowed to do what the Constitution planned, they do mete out justice in the end. Sadly, we’re all in the belly of the beast right now. Battle stations! I mean pen and paper, brains and wit, a show of strength to demonstrate that the middle will hold and we’ll still have a democracy after 2024. History will prove us, and our Constitutional democracy, right. Chin up, folks. Dee

Lies

Lies have consequences. And huge lies have consequences that can kill constitutional democracies. Here’s my abbreviated version of “the big lie” and what I believe needs to be done to fix our democracy.

In the wee hours of November 4, 2020, Donald Trump declared, upon his majesty and the unsober advice of at least one lawyer, declared himself re-elected and demanded that the vote count be stopped. That was the public beginning of The Big Lie.

The actual beginning was months before when he derided mail-in ballots and, perhaps even earlier, when in 2016 he said that unless he won the presidency, he wouldn’t accept the results. But in 2020 the machinations were put into place (legal challenges, and illegal means such as slowing down the U.S. Mail to mess with ballots, tampering with voting machines, installation of fake electors and shakedowns of legislatures and state voting officials) in order to keep Donald Trump in the White House. It didn’t matter that everyone else across the country who was on the ballot that same day lived with the results without crying foul. Funny that nobody asked them about that.

Why not believe him? He’s the President, after all. So Republican-led states bought into the lie for their own purposes and threw themselves behind “election integrity,” which is not what it seemed. They made it more difficult for Democrats, especially people of color, to vote. Plus, they got rid of ERIC, a pretty snazzy mechanism that allows states to share information to prevent interstate voter fraud. Now realizing they need this type of program, they’re creating a buggier version to meet their needs, mainly to prove voter fraud where there is none. The real reason to dump ERIC is that it would give someone like me who tends to be mobile, an easy way to register to vote when I move to another state. Yes, I sometimes vote for the Democrat, so they wouldn’t want me to register in a swing state under any circumstances.

So now the MAGA “crazy eight” toppled Kevin McCarthy in order to create the chaos they so love. Then they tanked Steve Scalise. Then some sane members of the party (institutionalists, appropriators, and those in “Biden” districts) tanked Jim Jordan yesterday. Interestingly, I heard this morning that eight of the ten new Speaker candidates are also election deniers. Hmmm. There’s a theme here, one that goes right to the 2024 election and what happens if Trump loses.

Here’s my recipe (hey, it started as just a cooking blog, years ago) for having a United States of America to celebrate on its upcoming 250th birthday.

First, The Supreme Court must adopt a code of ethics at least as stringent as that for Federal judges. I believe it should be monitored by the Judicial Conference. I believe they should have 15-year term limits and that the court should be increased to 15 members. My reasoning is that people don’t trust the Court these days because of their overt partisanship and selling out to the far right donor (yacht-owning) class. They need to be sane and sober and adhere to the real Constitution and not the Heritage Foundation’s version.

Second, The House of Representatives has to function. That means a power-sharing arrangement with Democrats that will allow them to put away the scissors they’ve been running amok with and concentrate on governing. It’s time to tell these congresspersons that there are more important things in the world, and facing our nation, than their egos. As for the Senate, it’s time to wake up and realize that we’re in a democracy living under the tyranny of the minority when the House can be taken over by eight members. Ditch the filibuster and legislate, already. Start with approving all those military appointments. I’ve got a great idea, Leader Schumer. Make them stay starting on Thanksgiving through the holidays, and go ’round the clock, one by one, until all 300 appointments are approved. They’ll fold quickly, as they love their weekends and holidays and Sen. Tommy Tuberville can be tied to his chair so he has to be in the Chamber for every single vote until he cries “uncle.”

Third, it should go without say that violence is not an option. Jim Jordan is learning that the hard way. Purported news organizations should not be actively involved in personnel issues of Congress (I’ve registered a complaint with the FCC about Fox) but unfortunately I don’t have a clue how to stop the Alex Jones’ of the world from spreading their vitriol in this lifetime, but do have suggestions as to where he’ll reside in the next.

*****

We had a couple over for a first dinner recently and when we raised our glasses for a toast, I added one for Dianne Feinstein, who had died that day. They stayed for dinner, so it must have been OK. But who knows what could have happened? I’d like to go to an event or have nice folks over without coming to fisticuffs.

It’s time for the middle to take back our nation. We certainly have the numbers. Now, do we have the guts to do what needs to be done? Let’s hope so. Dee

Last Chance

Senate Republicans, this is it. Before you go into this impeachment trial, know that it is not about you. It is not even about Donald Trump. It is not about either of your quest for eternal power.

It is about our nation, our democracy, the stuff all our kids learn about at school. It is about how voters decide what kind of America we wish to live in. Not courts, not secretaries of state, elected officials or angry mobs. It’s about us, we the people, your constituents whose votes you tried to invalidate two months ago.

You created the monster and let it loose: you let extremists try to take over our Capitol and our Electoral College. Only you can put Humpty Dumpty back together again and for that you need a collective spine.

To do so you cannot hide behind lies of stolen elections, unconstitutionality of this impeachment or figment-of-the-imagination first amendment claims. You must face the beast head on, tell our former president that neither he nor his extremist perpetrators are welcome in a democracy. He can’t primary all of you.

Then you have to apologize to the American people for misleading them for months pre-and post-election, and stop Republican-led state legislatures from imposing even more draconian impediments to cast one’s vote. Yes, you have to do this, because in order to be worthy of being a political party worth its ideals and a platform, you must have them first. Then believe in them, then and only then can you open your doors to new voters and say “look over here, this is what we stand for. Come join us!”

In the end, a perpetual minority cannot legitimately rule the majority. The sooner you get that into your head, the better. Face the beast you created lest a smarter, more devious version of it will crash our democracy next time. You were given a chance to convict a year ago and you passed. You pass now at your peril, because the voters are on to you and your tricks now, and the next election season we’ll be voting for who will really care for the American people and our democracy. Think about that before you vote on our behalf. Cheers, Dee