Supremacism and Priority: Republicans and the American Right Wing

The broke ass population are who voted for Biden. There aren't enough of them so Biden lost.

I'm guessing I like women more than you do. I'm not a Nazi. I'm guessing that the economy will be better after 4 years of Trump than after 4 years of Harris. I could be wrong. There's always a first time.
 
What's the "broke ass population"?
I've been trying to figure that one out too. It's either they're demoralized, or they're financially strapped. But then, Seattle seems to vacillate re: precisely who these "broke ass" people are--are they the Biden voters or the Trump voters?
 
#ImagineThat | #WhatTheyVotedFor

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The report from Associated Press↱ reminds of certain priorities:

Colorado man is facing possible bias-motivated charges for allegedly attacking a television news reporter after demanding to know whether he was a citizen, saying "This is Trump's America now," according to court documents.

Patrick Thomas Egan, 39, was arrested Dec. 18 in Grand Junction, Colorado, after police say he followed KKCO/KJCT reporter Ja'Ronn Alex's vehicle for around 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the Delta area. Alex told police that he believed he had been followed and attacked because he is Pacific Islander.

After arriving in Grand Junction, Egan, who was driving a taxi, pulled up next to Alex at a stoplight and, according to an arrest affidavit, said something to the effect of: "Are you even a U.S. citizen? This is Trump's America now! I'm a Marine and I took an oath to protect this country from people like you!"

Alex, who had been out reporting, then drove back to his news station in the city. After he got out of his vehicle, Egan chased Alex as he ran toward the station's door and demanded to see his identification, according to the document laying out police's evidence in the case. Egan then tackled Alex, put him in a headlock and "began to strangle him," the affidavit said. Coworkers who ran out to help and witnesses told police that Alex appeared to be losing his ability to breathe during the attack, which was partially captured on surveillance video, according to the document.

While we would not doubt this is an unsettling experience for anyone who must endure such hatred and violence, it is also true the occasion ought not surprise.

†​

It is not unrelated that certain social media drama is occurring at this time. An apparent public relations disaster involving Elon Musk, Donald Trump, and the question of worker visas is rattling confidence among Trump voters aghast at Musk's preference for foreign workers, and those who are shocked and dismayed at racism among American conservatives. The upwelling of surprise and disappointment↱ among ostensible Indian-American voters and Indian-national workers who support Trump, expressed in various social media postings, reads slightly askew in the same way this kind of conservative messaging always does: One might reasonably wonder how they didn't already know. As FOX News token liberal Jessica Tarlov↱ put it: "I'll take f around and find out for 1000".

†​

The thing is, nobody should be surprised. Brutish supremacism is the most consistent priority of American conservative voters, the most durable element of the Republican Party argument, for fifty years at least. Supremacism has been an integral part of the conservative pitch, its most durable appeal, well preceding the time I've been voting.

And every time we pretend it's new, we condemn ourselves to another cycle. Every time we try to mitigate the phenomenon, pretend it's a deviation, the stuff of a few bad seeds, even suggest the real problem is that anybody would object in the first place, we do our part to empower its future.
____________________

Notes:

@JessicaTarlov. "I'll take f around and find out for 1000". X. 27 December 2024. X.com. 29 December 2024. status/1872730458871742471

Hampton, Daniel. "'F around and find out': Fox News host scoffs as influencer questions own GOP support". Raw Story. 27 December 2024. RawStory.com. 29 December 2024. https://www.rawstory.com/h1-b-visa/

Slevin, Colleen. "Man accused of attacking TV reporter, saying 'This is Trump's America now'". Associated Press. 27 December 2024. APNews.com. 29 December 2024. https://apnews.com/article/tv-reporter-attack-trumps-america-40c4c3622bf85baef9cefbd50d50fcec

See Also:

@Cloudwatch199. "I’m deeply questioning my decision to support the Republican Party after witnessing the persistent and dehumanizing attacks directed at me and my community by individuals who, despite hiding behind a veneer of respectability, openly harbor and amplify racist ideologies." X. 26 December 2024. X.com. 29 December 2024. status/1872433029270176105

 
The upwelling of surprise and disappointment↱ among ostensible Indian-American voters and Indian-national workers who support Trump, expressed in various social media postings, reads slightly askew in the same way this kind of conservative messaging always does: One might reasonably wonder how they didn't already know.
Calls to mind the popular meme about the Leopards Eating People's Face Party.


Trump clearly states who he is and what nasty things he wants to do, or have other people do for him. Conservatives steadfastly refuse to believe it, then become despondent when they make the startling discovery that he really meant it. Trump incites racist attacks with his brand of white nationalism, he shows a consistent ability to further unhinge the mentally ill and set them on a course of acting out, then everyone on the Right wrings their hands not over Trump's toxic ideological spew but the decline in mental health and the "unpredictable" nature of lunatics acting alone.
And, on the Right, they are ALWAYS framed as acting alone, lightning bolts from a clear blue sky. (on the Left, of course, the lone actor is always depicted by the RW as the product of evil socialist ideology and a sinister cabal of handlers)
 
I've been trying to figure that one out too … But then, Seattle seems to vacillate …

Nine years ago↗:

In a larger context it's one of the things that is frustrating about the American political discourse, right now; for years, there has appeared to be a strong coincidence between being conservative and refusing to actually attend the discourse one asserts to participate in. In the microcosmic presentation it's just annoying and seems deliberately insulting ....

.... We're in an age of rising Know-Nothingism, in which the way to relitigate lost political fights of history is to pretend ignorance, that the discussion might start all over from the ground up, and in this case the ground is usually fixed somewhere in the Long Decade.

And this reset is required because some can't deal with the fact that there really is no logical way to establish supremacism as a prerequisite of equality; how can we possibly find different outcomes unless we change the presuppositions?

But in order to change the presuppositions, one must pretend astounding ignorance of history.

And even before that↗:

And as our discussion proceeds here at Sciforums, we see once again an upwelling of know-nothingism, in which people who have argued related issues fluently in the past start behaving as if they need a remedial civics course. To the one, it's not shocking to consider the proposition that most Americans don't know the difference between a grand jury investigation and a criminal trial, but at some point the ignorance these people are posing for us really does stand out.

So, here's the trick: When Seattle was going on about inflation↗, and all that, it was in a different thread; that's why it has nothing to do with his "broke ass" bullshit. It's kind of like his pretense of confusion↗ about neo-Nazis. Pretending ignorance↗, playing dumb↗, there are various ways to describe the behavior; as it is, the point is to disrupt discussions, dragging them out to futility, e.g., "Muskovite Birds of a Feather" (pp. 9-11)↗, "Congratulations America" (pp. 75-78)↗.

It's not an original trick; indeed, around Sciforums, it's not uncommon. Moreover, if you watch closely, the behavior clusters in certain ways, and this, actually is an important point. Generally, we see the behavior in lieu of a stronger argument. To wit, it occurs in certain ranges of argument specifically because those arguments require or intend such cover.

A question that has long haunted Sciforums is when the expectation of supportable argument becomes the spectre of tyranny, and the threshold apparently has to do with which arguments require support. What we demand of "theists", or people who believe in ufos and ebes, is far too much to ask of other beliefs and evangelizations; inasmuch as we would not wish to silence political views, time and habit make clear what political views require lowered bars. When the mere prospect of evidence-based argument is viewed as a censorship threat, we can only wonder at the actual merit of the argument that requires such shielding. By one standard, the difference between crackpottery and an arguable political view has to do with arguability; by another, the difference is entirely aesthetic. By the one, merit is found in the evidence that supports an argument; by the other, an argument has equal merit by dint of having been uttered.

For someone like Seattle, the point is to disagree with certain people; the merit of his argument is that he has deigned to utter, and as his vacillations remind, the only real point is to disagree with and complain about the politics and people he disdains. In short, if the discussion is not going to go his way, then the discussion should not go at all.¹ Again, it's not any new trick.

†​

At Sciforums, there has long been a question about the idea of good faith, though it's not really unique to our little corner of nowhere. But at the intersection of supportable argument and the silencing of political views, it really does read like a compelling question of what views cannot survive without exemption. And if, for instance↗, at some point they start to sound like the religious crackpots, the skeptical face shown religion and ufology around here has long faltered when approaching conservatism and the right wing.

Moreover, if the blindly insistent↗ fail to understand the moral of the story, or maybe that's redundant; part of the point, though, is to observe, that's how easy it is to do their part.

As such, if some might suggest that's somehow unfair, that they never intended to, well, therein lies the point: That's how easy it is.

Because, sure, maybe Sciforums is just it's own thing, and we certainly can't blame this place for the ills fo the world, but even still, in that limited context, it is true that, these years later, people continue to behave this way because they have no reason not to.

That's how easy it is. Because they have no reason not to ... in social media circles, at the pub, over holiday dinner with extended family, among the church crowd. By the time we get around to what we expect of a news market intended to pander for market popularity, it's hard to contain the metaspill of conservative self-infliction in an easy sentence; short form, they are disinformed by increasing competition in the deregulated marketplace they prefer.²

†​

When we abide deliberately unequal standards; the favored politic shows through. What this inequality protects against is the soft silence of low standards. The problem is that one side of a generally dualistic argument is so bereft that basic expectation of honesty and supportability are somehow unjust to the point of tyranny, so that a setting in which people are expected to be able to support their arguments apparently causes the whole of the American conservative argument to collapse into silence.

Or do we need a toned-down, PC, self-regulated version in hope of accommodating oversensitive senstivities:

「The problem arises when one side of an ostensibly dualistic argument cannot stand on fact and evidence …」

But it's not universal behavior; or, rather, the behavior clusters not simply around arguments that need such cover, but those arguments must also be subjectively, i.e., prejudicially, tenable. That is to say, on average, one cannot slide by on crackpottery for liberalized change so easily as for preservation of traditional comfort.³

「… if this happens to coincide with a particular political argument, perhaps the problem is that particular political argument.」

For some, "winning" certain arguments, as such, is simply out of the question; the best they can do for the sake of such beliefs and views is forestall discussions they disdain or disagree with. It's something to watch for. Kind of like the fragmentary tabula rasa by which nothing someone said in any prior discussion can have anything to do with a different, later discussion. It's almost like they're just saying stuff in the moment, just to get through, and don't take their own words seriously.
____________________

Notes:

¹cf., "Ineffective Government, an outcome of our definition of 'Freedom'?"↗ with attention to how he responds to consideration of any definition of freedom that doesn't suit his fancy; it's one thing to consider ineffective goernment as an outcome of our definition of "freedom", but that can only be applied to the definition of freedom that empowers him to yell at drug addicts about growing up; any larger question of what freedom lends to ineffective government is somehow problematic. It really ought to be a straightforward tell when the argument must be prohibited any more general application, protected against any expectation or test of its consistency.

² It's kind of like how Christian moralists voted for politics and economy that contributed to the perceived necessity and justification of unmarried cohabitation; in the end, Horation Alger trumped Jesus Christ, and many who voted for things to be that way then complained about the result.

³ To be clear about that difference, the point is not that liberals should be somehow entitled to crackpottery, but, rather, to remind how easy it is to facilitate traditionalist fallacy.​
 
#priorities | #WhatTheyVotedFor

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Asleep at the wheel: Clay Bennett, 18 January 2023.

One of the enduring contrasts about American conservative politics is the difference between what Republican voters say they want and what they actually vote for.

To wit, no matter how frustrated voters say they are about monied interests, one thing they will never do in these United States is elect a federal governing majority of Democrats sufficient to brush aside bluedogging and fretting about midterms. That is, American voters have a long-established behavior of refusing to elect governments that can actually govern.¹

A Los Angeles-based company that owns more than a dozen hospitals in four states filed for bankruptcy late Saturday night, the second major system acquired by private equity to collapse in less than a year ....

.... Prospect Medical's bankruptcy comes less than a year after the bankruptcy of Steward Health Care, another major hospital system once-backed by private equity. CBS News documented how Steward, along with private equity investors, extracted hundreds of millions of dollars from that company, potentially leading to shortages of life-saving medical equipment.

Along with Steward, Prospect Medical has been one focus of an ongoing CBS News investigation revealing how private equity investors have siphoned hundreds of millions of dollars from community hospitals with devastating public health consequences.

From 2010 to 2021, private equity firm Leonard Green & Partners controlled a majority stake in Prospect Medical. CBS News has reported on a series of financial moves the company took to issue leadership a $457 million dividend in 2018. Prospect Medical's CEO Sam Lee took home about $90 million while Leonard Green shareholders were paid $257 million.

Among the similarities between Prospect Medical and Steward, both of them relied on the value of their hospital real estate to help finance large payouts for their owners. The transactions resulted in onerous lease agreements that diverted funds away from direct patient care.

Last week, a powerful, bipartisan Senate committee found what it said was "overwhelming evidence of financial mismanagement" as Leonard Green and Prospect Medical sought to drive profits, causing hospitals serving vulnerable communities to cut services or close altogether. The Senate committee's findings were part of a 162-page report report that concluded private equity's financial model may pose "a threat to the nation's health care infrastructure, particularly in underserved and rural areas."


(CBS News↱)

Remember, it's one thing if we point to certain business discourse that describes certain outcomes as obvious and inevitable, but another thing entirely to overlook other discussion. It seems reasonable enough, as such, to wonder why anyone would apply the red-lobster method to hospitals.

But that's also the thing: It's not really the red-lobster method. Steward was already going under when Red Lobster filed last year:

Assigning blame for company failures is tricky. But some analysts say the root of Red Lobster's woes was not the endless shrimp promotions that some have blamed. Yes, the company lost $11 million from the shrimp escapade, its bankruptcy filing shows, and suffered from inflation and higher labor costs. But a bigger culprit in the company's problems is a financing technique favored by a powerful force in the financial industry known as private equity.

The technique, colloquially known as asset-stripping, has been a part of retail chain failures such as Sears, Mervyn's and ShopKo as well as bankruptcies involving hospital and nursing home operations like Steward Healthcare and Manor Care. All had been owned by private equity.

Asset-stripping occurs when an owner or investor in a company sells off some of its assets, taking the benefits for itself and hobbling the company. This practice is favored among some private-equity firms that buy companies, load them with debt to finance the purchases and hope to sell them at a profit in a few years to someone else. A common form of asset-stripping is known as a sale/leaseback and involves selling a company's real estate; this type of transaction hobbled Red Lobster.

In recent years, private-equity firms have invested heavily in all areas of industry, including retailers, restaurants, media and health care. Some 12 million workers are employed by private equity-backed firms, or 7% of the workforce. Companies bought out and indebted by private equity go bankrupt 10 times more often than companies not purchased by these firms, academic research shows. In a report this month, Moody's Ratings said leveraged buyouts like those pursued by many private-equity firms drive corporate defaults higher and reduce the amounts investors recover when the companies are restructured.


(NBC News↱)

The Endless Shrimp, by the way, was actually part of the method↱.

One of the problems with trying to pretend conservative voters are focused on things like the economy and jobs is that they tend to vote for the politicians and political arguments that encourage the sorts of behaviors that screw up their jobs, economy, and quality of life. If they really, truly, sincerely are pursuing their own best interests on this count, they're really, really bad at it; perhaps the explanation lies elsewhere. That is, maybe this isn't really their priority.

Think of it this way: Even setting aside that they suddenly stopped worrying about the price of eggs, it seems facially ridiculous to propose that economic concerns moved voters to elect a known fraud verging into senility and a poster boy for venture capital, entrusting the economy to agents of a prank cryptocurrency under the auspices of a heritage billionaire whose own parents describe as "developmentally disabled" and "retarded".

Ironically², it's not exactly new. There is a joke running back to the 2010 Tea Party midterm that goes, "jobs, jobs, jobs, j'abortion". It's hardly news that conservative noise and fury about the economy is vapid and insincere. What's harder to understand is why anyone else would pretend otherwise.

To the other, if Tea Party governance focused on culture wars, aiming to move a record number of anti-abortion bills, and trying to redefine medicine along the way, we certainly ought not wonder if, maybe, that was the point.

And as we follow along, state Republicans are looking for child labor while conservative voters find themselves stung by their social media icon's rejection of American workers. Or not. We'll find ourselves asking quite regularly, as we go, whether the latest failure of particular potential priorities actually matters to the people who elected the incoming administration.

But there will come a day when they complain about getting what they voted for.

And then they'll probably vote for it again.

That, at least, is what history tells us. Stay tuned.
____________________

Notes:

¹ To the other, a study of how a Democrats in the state of Washington seemingly failed to govern in the early twenty-first century will, in its least damning telling, only remind the importance of taking certain opportunities when they present themselves.

² A word taken, on this occasion, to mean, historically.​

Doctorow, Cory. "Red Lobster was killed by private equity, not Endless Shrimp". Pluralistic. 23 May 2024. Pluralistic.net. 13 January 2025. https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/23/spineless/

Kaplan, Michael. "Prospect Medical Holdings files for bankruptcy after owners took hundreds of millions in payouts". CBS News. 12 January 2025. CBSNews.com. 13 January 2025. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/prospect-medical-holdings-bankruptcy-private-equity/

Morgenson, Gretchen. "How private equity rolled Red Lobster". NBC News. 24 May 2024. NBCNews.com. 13 January 2025. https://www.nbcnews.com/business/consumer/private-equity-rolled-red-lobster-rcna153397

 
#DEI | #GOP

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Two died in Nashville, Tennessee, on Wednesday after a student with a handgun killed a girl and then himself.

Jared Holt↱ observed:

A 17 year old opened fire in a Nashville high school today. Hours before police shared his name, fringe extremist communities correctly identified him as one of their own. He left behind a manifesto expressing unadulterated neo-Nazi ideology and endorsed “accelerationst” tactics.

The suspect appears to have been part of online communities that glorify and encourage mass shootings. He wrote he was radicalized against his own race to the point of suicide and wanting to kill others. Also an apparent fan of Nick Fuentes and online cesspits like 4chan, etc.

More particularly, per WTVF↱:

In one of his first sentences, Henderson wrote he "was ashamed to be Black." He was anti-Semitic in his writings and posted a flyer from the Goyim Defense League, which is a neo-Nazi white supremacy group that visited Nashville this summer.

Henderson said he was inspired by Candace Owens, a conservative Black pundit who previously called Nashville home.

"Candace Owens influenced me above all each time she spoke," Henderson wrote.

At least the Republican message is getting through to the young. Never let it be said the American right lacks diversity.

Congratulations. You must be so proud.
____________________

Notes:

@jaredholt. "A 17 year old opened fire in a Nashville high school today. Hours before police shared his name, fringe extremist communities correctly identified him as one of their own. He left behind a manifesto expressing unadulterated neo-Nazi ideology and endorsed 'accelerationst' tactics." (thread) X. 22 January 2025. X.com. 25 January 2025. status/1882219605244133679

Kraus, Jennifer and Emily R. West. "Purported writings from Antioch High School shooter show his plans, thoughts before death". WTVF. 22 January 2025. NewsChannel5.com. 25 January 2025. https://www.newschannel5.com/news/n...-shooter-show-his-plans-thoughts-before-death
 
Priority and Prejudice

If the twitform happens to go—

At his confirmation hearing, Kash Patel couldn't seem to remember who far-right extremist Stew Peters is, but he appeared on Peters' show eight times.

(@RightWingWatch↱)

—one way to read the room is according to who knows what it means compared to those who don't, and among those latter, those who genuinely don't know compared to those who make a point of pretending to not know.

Similarly, as a question of supremacism and priority, there is an interesting question of who doesn't know.

†​

Anyway, time out:

• This actually happened earlier this week: I had occasion to recall a once upon a time, not really that long ago, but faced an extraordinary refrain: Where do you get this stuff? And, sure, I get it, some stuff you don't necessarily pick up unless you read a particular book, or subscribed to a particular specialty newsletter, or something; but this time the answer was the evening news. It was a national headline. But youth suicides triggering national discussion and campaign are an unpleasant memory, so not only do they not remember, it feels so spectacular that it couldn't possibly be real, and is thus on par with fluoride conspiracism and other hyperventilating make-believe. It's one thing if somebody just answered their own question about how things got this far, but they will not recognize it.​

A'ight, roll.

†​

It's one thing if some proverbial most people couldn't tell Stew Peters from the hole in his ass, but the former rapper and bounty hunter finally found his groove as an online personality known for antivax, Covid conspiracism, and rabid white supremacism.

Peters is the podcaster who complained↗ that J.D. Vance is "coattail rider, a dick rider, who married a Hindu Indian … who likely eats shit and brushes her teeth with the same", and among some proverbial most people, sure you probably wouldn't know without paying specific attention to the fact that this sort of stuff goes on.

But, do you know who knows who Stew Peters is? QAnon conspiracist and FBI Director-nominee Kashyap Pramod Vinod Patel. There is a reason why the storybook, Hindu-raised son of Gujarati diaspora immigrants (by way of Canada and, before that, Uganda) panders to white supremacists.

And there are reasons why they let him.

To wit, do you know who else knows who Stew Peters is? A whole lot of Trump voters, more than would admit it.

It was never about the price of eggs.

Senate Judiciary Democrats↱ released their fact sheet on Patel's praise for "radical extremists"; the part on Stew Peters explains:

Stew Peters is a far-right internet personality who promotes abhorrent conspiracy theories including that Chief Justice Roberts and Vice President Pence were pedophiles. He also called for Anthony Fauci's execution, worked with neo-Nazi Nick Fuentes, and posted a picture of himself smiling with a copy of Mein Kampf with the caption "Visionary leadership." Kash Patel made eight separate appearances on his podcast, according to his questionnaire.

It's hard to figure the actual size of Peters' regular audience; it's probably less than a million (1.6 million combined socmed subscribers). Beyond that, it's unclear just how many conservatives actually encounter his produce.

But what isn't mysterious is that both Kash Patel and Stew Peters happen to coincide with the durable values, the consistent priorities, of American conservatives over the course of decades, even generations.

Fifteen years ago, the Tea Party movement rumbled toward power; the sad joke they delivered goes, "Jobs, jobs, jobs, j'abortion." Instead of following through on their other concerns, Republicans took their 2010 midterm victory as a mandate to pass record numbers of anti-abortion bills. And while the GOP hasn't done much for jobs or economy in the time since, we did get campaigns against oral contraception, intrauterine devices, hormone therapies, women, vaccines, homosexuals, transgender, African-Americans, Hispanics, Southeast Asians, South Asians, Haitians and Hatian-Americans, school curricula, teachers, Muslims, and now we're to the point calling for the deportation of born Americans for being Christian.

Kash Patel has approximately one job. As a Republican-appointed law enforcer, it's the same as it ever was. He will not secure your constitutional rights; he will not make you any safer; he will not pursue justice. But he will either serve as the face of his masters' prejudices, or they will find another to do the job.

He already knows this. "K$H" Patel has been trying to ride Donald Trump's coattails for years, now.

As we verge toward holocaust—(¿thirty-thousand at Guantánamo?)—Kash Patel's job is to make conservatives happy. They've been working so hard for this, for such a long time.
____________________

Notes:

@JudiciaryDems. "FACT SHEET: Kash Patel Praises Radical Extremists". X. 30 January 2025. X.com. 30 January 2025. status/1884993033650708674

@RightWingWatch. "At his confirmation hearing, Kash Patel couldn't seem to remember who far-right extremist Stew Peters is, but he appeared on Peters' show eight times." X. 30 January 2025. X.com. 30 January 2025. status/1884995742806208978
 
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