Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Mission Hospital room Sept.8, 2025 with Mount Pisgah in the distance, named after the mountain that Moses stood on to see the promised land. The building is AB-Tech, our local training school

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

The good news from AOC

Americans of Conscience Checklist--May 13, 2024


 Good news matters!

We do good news because we know that negative news is designed to keep you emotionally hooked. The more time you watch, the more advertisements you see. Make a choice today to moderate your consumption of negative news, and instead, join us in reveling about all the good things happening in our nation recently:

  • Congress passes and the president signs the reauthorization of funding for migratory bird conservation.
  • The Biden-Harris administration requires federally-funded state & Tribal foster care agencies to ensure that LGBTQI+ youth are placed in homes where they will be safe from discrimination, harassment, and so-called “conversion therapy.”
  • Danna Jackson (Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes) is nominated to serve as a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for Montana, potentially becoming the first Indigenous person to serve as a federal judge in the state.
  • The DOJ will file an antitrust suit against Live Nation for its monopoly on entertainment ticket sales.
  • The FTC bans new noncompete clauses for all agency workers, protecting the freedom of employees to change jobs.
  • CA’s energy grid recently ran only on clean energy sources for 9.5 hours.
  • KS’s legislature votes to sustain Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of legislation that would have banned gender-affirming healthcare for transgender youth.
  • MD passes a slate of legislation to improve access to affordable housing and protect renters, including a Tenants Bill of Rights.
  • NE residents with past felony convictions are automatically eligible to vote upon completion of their sentences under newly-passed legislation.
  • PA: CVS Health Plans and Geisinger Health Plans cover over-the-counter contraception with or without a prescription at no cost.
  • A federal appeals court rules that it is discriminatory for WV and NC to refuse coverage of gender-affirmative healthcare for transgender people with government-sponsored insurance.
  • Middletown, RI high school students run a voter registration drive for their classmates as part of the Secretary of State’s Civic Liaison Program.
  • The League of Women Voters' resource website, Vote411.org, is nominated for a Webby Award in the Government & Associations: Websites and Mobile Sites category.
  • Kids with incarcerated parents can enjoy story time with them at Becca’s Place, a cozy reading area within Chicago’s Cook County Department of Corrections.
  • Construction on the U.S.’s first high-speed rail begins in the southwest.
 

Want to support more good news 

Unlike negative news networks, AoCC doesn't ever sell ads, so we rely on the support of people like you to fund our modest operational costs. If you make a monthly contribution of $3-25 per month, you'll support Americans taking action for democracy and equality and also receive our good news lists a week early! Learn more here.

Monday, May 13, 2024

A bit political today, the cowboy myth

Today I read with pleasure "Letters from an American" by Heather Cox Richardson. And I quote:

"I write a lot about how the Biden-Harris administration is working to restore the principles of the period between 1933 and 1981, when members of both political parties widely shared the belief that the government should regulate business, provide a basic social safety net, promote infrastructure, and protect civil rights. And I write about how that so-called liberal consensus broke down as extremists used the Reconstruction-era image of the American cowboy—who, according to myth, wanted nothing from the government but to be left alone—to stand against what they insisted was creeping socialism that stole tax dollars from hardworking white men in order to give handouts to lazy minorities and women. 

But five major stories over the past several days made me realize that I’ve never written about how Trump and his loyalists have distorted the cowboy image until it has become a poisonous caricature of the values its recent defenders have claimed to champion.

The cowboy myth originated during the Reconstruction era as a response to the idea that a government that defended Black rights was “socialist” and that the tax dollars required to pay bureaucrats and army officers would break hardworking white men. 

This weekend, on Saturday, May 11, Paul Kiel of ProPublica and Russ Buettner of the New York Times teamed up to deliver a deep investigation into what Trump was talking about when he insisted that he must break tradition and refuse to release his tax returns when he ran for office in 2016 and 2020, citing an audit.

The New York Times had already reported that one of the reasons the Internal Revenue Service was auditing Trump’s taxes was that, beginning in 2010, he began to claim a $72.9 million tax refund because of huge losses from his failing casinos.  

Kiel and Buettner followed the convoluted web of Trump’s finances to find another issue with his tax history. They concluded that Trump’s Chicago skyscraper, his last major construction project, was “a vast money loser.” He claimed losses as high as $651 million on it in 2008. But then he appears to have moved ownership of the building in 2010 from one entity to a new one—the authors describe it as “like moving coins from one pocket to another”—and used that move to claim another $168 million in losses, thereby double-dipping. 

The experts the authors consulted said that if he loses the audit battle, Trump could owe the IRS more than $100 million. University of Baltimore law professor Walter Schwidetzky, who is an expert on partnership taxation, told the authors: “I think he ripped off the tax system.” 

The cowboy myth emphasized dominance over the Indigenous Americans and Mexicans allegedly attacking white settlers from the East. On Friday an impressive piece of reporting from Jude Joffe-Block at NPR untangled the origins of a story pushed by Republicans that Democrats were encouraging asylum seekers to vote illegally for President Joe Biden in 2024, revealing that the story was entirely made up.  

The story broke on X, formerly Twitter, on April 15, when the investigative arm of the right-wing Heritage Foundation, which promises to provide “aggressive oversight” of the Biden administration, posted photos of what it claimed were flyers from inside portable toilets at a migrant camp in Matamoros, Mexico, that said in broken Spanish: “Reminder to vote for President Biden when you are in the United States. We need another four years of his term to stay open.” The tweet thread got more than 9 million views and was boosted by Elon Musk, X’s owner.

But the story was fabricated. The flyer used the name of a small organization that helps asylum seekers, along with the name of the woman who runs the organization. She is a U.S. citizen and told Joffe-Block that her organization has “never encouraged people to vote for anyone.” Indeed, it has never come up because everyone knows noncitizens are not eligible to vote. The flyer had outdated phone numbers and addresses, and its Spanish was full of errors. Migrants who are staying at the encampment as they wait for their appointments to enter the U.S. say they have never seen such flyers, and no one has urged them to vote for Biden.

Digging showed that the flyer was “discovered” by the right-wing video site Muckraker, which specializes in “undercover” escapades. The founder of Muckraker, Anthony Rubin, and his brother, Joshua Rubin, had shown up at the organization’s headquarters in Matamoros asking to become volunteers for the organization; they and their conversation were captured on video, and signs point to the conclusion that they planted the flyers. 

Nonetheless, Republicans ran with the story. Within 12 hours after the fake flyer appeared on X, Republican representatives Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Dan Bishop (R-NC) brought posters of it to Congress, and Republicans made it a centerpiece of their insistence that Congress must pass a new law against noncitizen voting. Rather than being protected by modern-day cowboys, the woman who ran the organization that helps asylum seekers got death threats.

The cowboy image emphasized the masculinity of the independent men it championed, but the testimony of Stephanie Clifford, the adult film actress also known as Stormy Daniels, in Trump’s criminal trial for falsifying business records to cover up his payments to Clifford to keep her story of their sexual encounter secret before the 2016 election, turns Trump’s aggressive dominance into sad weakness. Covering Clifford’s testimony, Maureen Dowd of the New York Times yesterday wrote that “Trump came across as a loser in her account—a narcissist, cheater, sad Hugh Hefner wannabe, trading his satin pajamas for a dress shirt and trousers (and, later, boxers) as soon as Stormy mocked him.”

In the literature of the cowboy myth, the young champion of the underdog is eventually supposed to settle down and take care of his family, who adore him. But the news of the past week has caricatured that shift, too. On Wednesday, May 8, the Republican Party of Florida announced that it had picked Trump’s youngest son, 18-year-old Barron, as one of the state’s at-large delegates to the Republican National Convention, along with Trump’s other sons, Eric and Donald Jr.; Don Jr.’s fiancĂ©e, Kimberly Guilfoyle; and Trump’s second daughter, Tiffany, and her husband. 

On Friday, May 10, Trump’s current wife and Barron’s mother, former first lady Melania Trump, issued a statement saying: “While Barron is honored to have been chosen as a delegate by the Florida Republican Party, he regretfully declines to participate due to prior commitments.” It is hard not to interpret this extraordinary snub from his own wife and son as a chilly response to the past month of testimony about his extramarital escapades while Barron was an infant.

Finally, there was the eye-popping story broken by Josh Dawsey and Maxine Joselow in the Washington Post on Thursday, revealing that last month, at a private meeting with about two dozen top oil executives at Mar-a-Lago, Trump offered to reverse President Joe Biden’s environmental rules designed to combat climate change and to stop any new ones from being enacted in exchange for a $1 billion donation. 

Trump has promised his supporters that he would be an outsider, using his knowledge of business to defend ordinary Americans against those elites who don’t care about them. Now he has been revealed as being willing to sell us out—to sell humanity out—for the bargain basement price of $1 billion (with about 8 billion people in the world, this would make us each worth about 12 and a half cents). 

Chief White House ethics lawyer in the George W. Bush administration Richard Painter wrote: “This is called bribery. It’s a felony.” He followed up with “Even a candidate who loses can be prosecuted for bribery. That includes the former guy asking for a billion dollars in campaign cash from oil companies in exchange for rolling back environmental laws.”

The cowboy myth was always a political image, designed to undermine the idea of a government that worked for ordinary Americans. It was powerful after the Civil War but faded into the past in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s as Americans realized that their lives depended on government regulation and a basic social safety net. The American cowboy burst back into prominence with the advent of the Marlboro Man in 1954, the year of the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision, and the idea of an individual white man who worked hard, wanted nothing from the government but to be left alone, was a sex symbol, and protected his women became a central myth in the rise of politicians determined to overturn the liberal consensus. 

Now it seems the myth has come full circle, with the party led by a man whose wife rejects him and whose lovers ridicule him, who makes up stories about dangerous “others,” cheats on his taxes, solicits bribes, and tries to sell out his followers for cash—the very caricature the mythological cowboy was invented to fight.

Notes:

https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-irs-audit-chicago-hotel-taxes

https://www.npr.org/2024/05/10

/1248599505/migrants-vote-biden-conspiracy-theory-social-media

https://www.npr.org/2024/05/10/1250585392/takeaways-migration-biden-flyer-matamoros

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/11/opinion/trump-stormy-daniels-trial.html

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/05/09/trump-oil-industry-campaign-money/

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/barron-trump-florida-delegate-republican-national-convention-rcna151388

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/barron-trump-declines-invitation-delegate-republican-convention-rcna151761

Twitter (X):

rwpusa/status/1789632040054165516

Sunday, May 12, 2024

Children make you a mother

 

These were the sons of my grandmother Ada Rogers, (named out of order... should say Alexander, George, James, Chauncey!)

Ada Rogers with her granddaughters, Mary Beth and Barbara Rogers (me) around 1947. I still like to carry my purse across my body!

The Rogers clan in 1957...Poppy (George Rogers Sr.) myself, my father George Jr, and his brother, James. In back my mother (Mataley) right behind me, and Gummy (Ada Rogers) highest., the matriarch of the family if ever there was one!

On the other side of the family, my grandmother Mozelle Munhall and my mother Mataley in 1924

A great shot of my mother from the 1950s

My sister, myself and my mother around 1960


My parents and my first 2 sons, grandmother Mataley, then son Marty, George Rogers then me holding son Russ.


My three sons, Marty holding Russ, holding Tai, 1981




Fast forward, my eldest son, Marty on l, his daughter Cayenne, his (then) wife and mother of his children, Cinnamon, and his son William with me standing on Mother's Day 2006 or 07.


Son Marty, and second wife Barbara.

Son Russ and wife Michelle


Russ' family; daughter Audrey, wife Michelle, Russ, daughter Caroline, daughter Kate, about 2023


Son Tai and wife Kendra (they don't like posed photos!)



My 70th in 2012, going around the circle...Michelle, Tai, Kate, Audrey, Marty, William, Cayenne, Caroline, myself, Russ. (Kendra was photographer!)



And My 80th in 2022! G-son William, G-dtr Cayenne, G-dtr Audrey in back, son Russ, G-dtr Caroline in back, myself, son Tai in back, son Marty, G-son Michael. Missing Michelle and Kate. Kendra once again photographer!

Happy Mother's Day to all who choose to have children, and to all women who choose to be creative in other ways!

Thursday, May 9, 2024

Adding pollinator friendly flowers

 Some thoughts for the butterflies and flowers:

"Planting a pollinator-friendly lawn supports biodiversity, but it also helps the climate too. Healthy ecosystems are more resilient to climate change, and greening urban areas cools them by reducing the local heat island effect.

 
If you have a grass lawn, consider a “Slow Mow Summer.” A recent study that found that even just letting your grass grow longer attracts anywhere between 18 to 93 percent more butterflies to your yard. “To make an impact on the biodiversity crisis we need to be creating places where butterflies and other wildlife can breed. [Letting grass grow] is simple, doesn’t cost anything and saves you time and effort,” said Dr Richard Fox, the head of science at Butterfly Conservation and a co-author of the study. It doesn’t even have to be the whole lawn – a patch will help!
 
What if you only have a balcony? Priyanka Singh lives on the 13th floor of a high-rise apartment building in Mumbai. There’s not a lot of nature around: or so you’d think, until she planted a butterfly garden on her balcony. As this article describes, she cultivates lantana, curry leaves, Jamaican spike, ixora, meswak, and patharchatta, all on her balcony. These provide food for butterflies, places to lay eggs, and habitat for caterpillars to grow.
 
Priyanka has raised around 55 different species of butterflies from caterpillars, and estimates that more than 5,000 butterflies have been nurtured by her balcony garden over the past ten years, earning her the title “Butterfly Mom.” You can follow Priyanka on Instagram here or visit her on Facebook here - she often shares tips that can help you in your own quest to bring butterflies to your garden. 
 
These are all climate and biodiversity solutions people can see, right in front of them, in the places where they live. So if anyone asks you what’s going on with your lawn or your balcony, don’t miss the chance to start a conversation about what a difference these steps can make!"

from Katharine Hayhoe's newsletter TalkingClimateNewsletter May 6,2024

I'm interested in what Priyanka Singh is doing! Going to look for pollinator friendly flowers for my porch this year!

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Republicans for Biden

 An interesting article about the latest (May 7, 2024) Republican to leave the tRump freight train and declare for Biden, in The Status Quo a newsletter I've just started receiving. 


The latest convert is Geoff Duncan, the former Lieutenant Governor of Georgia, which is a crucial swing state. In an OpEd in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Monday, Duncan warned that the Republican Party “will never rebuild until we move on from the Trump era.”

For Duncan, Trump has “disqualified himself through his conduct and his character,” leaving Duncan “no choice but to pull the lever for Biden.”

Duncan is the latest Republican to cross party lines. The New York Times listed a few others: former Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, Senators Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah, and former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey. 

But Duncan’s decision is notable for at least three reasons. 

First, he is not just not voting for Donald Trump, he is actively voting for Joe Biden.

Second, he was highly critical of other GOP officials who cynically continue to support Trump, and he named names. 

And third, he laid out a unique off ramp for Republicans opposed to Trumpism but still generally supportive of Republican policies—something that might have strong appeal for so-called “Haley” Republicans.

Amid celebration, a death (kept quiet)



Ohio State University police cordoned off an area outside Ohio Stadium after someone fell from the stands and died during a graduation ceremony Sunday. (He fell from top deck before the ceremony from next section over from where we were sitting - completely unaware)

Doral Chenoweth/Columbus Dispatch/USA Today Network

Published 12:04 PM EDT, Mon May 6, 2024

A person fell from the stands at the football stadium during Ohio State University’s graduation ceremony and died Sunday, university officials confirmed.

“Tragically, an individual fell from the stands and is deceased,” Benjamin Johnson, a representative for the university, told CNN in an email Monday, adding the school had no additional details to share.

The identity of the person who died is not yet available.


 The commencement was hosted at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, which can seat more than 100,000 people. Guests were seated in several levels of bleachers lining the horseshoe-shaped stadium, as seen in video of the event posted by Ohio State.

Ohio State awarded 12,555 degrees and certificates at the ceremony Sunday to students from all 50 states and more than 100 countries, the university reported.

Chris Pan, a social entrepreneur, musician and inspirational speaker was the designated commencement speaker for the event.

The university is working to make counseling and other support resources available for anyone affected by the incident, Johnson said.

Stadium deaths are not unheard of, especially as stadiums are being built bigger to accommodate larger crowds, researchers say.

Ohio Stadium could seat about 66,000 people when it was first built in 1922. Over the years, the stadium has seen several renovations, including those to build extra seating and install railings, according to Ohio State.

Thursday, May 2, 2024

And then there are abortion laws

 "Vice President Kamala Harris was in Jacksonville, Florida, today [May 1] to talk about reproductive rights. She put the fight over abortion in the larger context of the discriminatory state laws that have, historically, constructed a world in which some people have more rights than others. 

“This is a fight for freedom,” she said, “the fundamental freedom to make decisions about one’s own body and not have their government tell them what they’re supposed to do.” 

On May 1 "...Florida’s ban on abortions after six weeks—earlier than most women know they’re pregnant—went into effect. The Florida legislature passed the law and Florida governor Ron DeSantis signed it a little more than a year ago, on April 13, 2023, but the new law was on hold while the Florida Supreme Court reviewed it. On April 1 the court permitted the law to go into operation today. 

The new Florida law is possible because two years ago, on June 24, 2022, the Supreme Court  overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that recognized the constitutional right to abortion. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the modern court decided that the right to determine abortion rights must be returned “to the people’s elected representatives” at the state level. 

Immediately, Republican-dominated states began to restrict abortion rights. Now, one out of three American women of childbearing age lives in one of the more than 20 states with abortion bans. This means, as Cecile Richards, former president of Planned Parenthood, put it in The Daily Beast today, “child rape victims forced to give birth, miscarrying patients turned away from emergency rooms and told to return when they’re in sepsis.” It means recognizing that the state has claimed the right to make a person’s most personal health decisions. 

Until today, Florida’s law was less stringent than that of other southern states, making it a destination for women of other states to obtain the abortions they could not get at home. In the Washington Post today, Caroline Kitchener noted that in the past, more than 80,000 women a year obtained abortions in Florida. Now, receiving that reproductive care will mean a trip to Virginia, Illinois, or North Carolina, where the procedure is still legal, putting it out of reach for many women. 

This November, voters in Florida will weigh in on a proposed amendment to the Florida constitution to establish the right to abortion. The proposed amendment reads: “No law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.” Even if the amendment receives the 60% support it will need to be added to the constitution, it will come too late for tens of thousands of women."

------------------------

Thanks Heather Cox Richardson of Letters from an American

My opinion echoes Vice-President Harris completely. Whether state of federal laws, none should determine any decisions of personal medical care.

Just imagine if states or countries could determine who was eligible to even have children? Remember China's one child rule? 

And how about organ donors? Already there's a black market of organs where they are taken perhaps forcefully from those who need money or drugs, just for richer people to continue their lives. What if the governments started determining who should or shouldn't give their organs to others?

This is why men should also be supporting the laws that allow all of us freedom to choose our own medical decisions.


Going along the way

Busy day today. Early Physical Therapy session.

Change of plans for my approach to walking stairs in the stadium for graduating granddaughter. My collapsible walking stick won't fit in carry on luggage. And I'm sure not going to walk with it through two airports. My hiking there will be slow and steady with a carry on suitcase on wheels.

So I will depend upon one of my sons to be at hand, to literally lean on.

Lean on me... that's the song from way back then...you've got a friend...

I just read an interesting poem about traveling.

Wanderer, your footsteps are the road,
and nothing more;
Wanderer, there is no road.
The road is made by walking...

By walking one makes the road,
and upon glancing behind
one sees the path that will
never be trod again...

Wanderer, there is no road -
only wakes upon the sea..."

Antonio Machado

My own approach was that this adventure would be like a safari - maybe with wild animals and terrain that is perhaps lovely...I'll keep an eye out for any beauty. And standing in line is designed to be tree meditation. On two feet of course!

So after I figure out what vegetables/fruits will definitely go bad, and make a bag of the ones that my friend might eat...I'll toss one bag in the trash can outside, and give her the other when she picks me up to go to the airport at noon.

I'll try to eat the last banana, and the baked potato that's left over from a lunch earlier in the week. 

And I must remember to unplug the computer and TV surge protectors. I came home from a trip one year to find my lap top fried, even though it had been on a surge protector...but lightening struck somewhere nearby. 

Would you believe I don't have enough in my suitcase so it will probably rattle around? That's because 4 changes of clothes don't really take up much room...and I've used this suitcase for a week's worth of winter wear. It's an easy over head type with handle and wheels. And of course a bag with cross body strap will hold everything else. I will look beseeching and hope a gentleman nearby will put it up in the overhead bin.

So my son called last night and suggested I bring an old lap top that I'm not using because his daughter who's a Jr. in high school just fried hers. The old laptop that I have only works when plugged in, and has a cord which doesn't work...so we may need to find an Apple store with this kind of cord (a little magnet connects the wire to it, and that's the place where the cord has died.) But it will add 3 pounds to the carry on suitcase. But maybe fill up some space!

I'm on my way...


Autochrome colour photo by French photographer Lèon Gimple taken at the 1909 Grand Exhibition in Paris.

Today's quote:
Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen) wrote, "Truth is for tailors and shoemakers. ... I, on the contrary, have always held that the Lord has a penchant for masquerades." 

PS.
I am not sure I can make comments since I'll only have a iPad to read blogs with...so I can read yours, but I haven't been able to get blogger to believe I am the google person I am.


Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Letters from an American on May 1, 2024



This morning, Time magazine published a cover story by Eric Cortellessa about what Trump is planning for a second term. Based on two interviews with Trump and conversations with more than a dozen of his closest advisors, the story lays out Trump’s conviction that he was “too nice” in his first term and that he would not make such a mistake again. 

Cortellessa writes that Trump intends to establish “an imperial presidency that would reshape America and its role in the world.” 

He plans to use the military to round up, put in camps, and deport more than 11 million people. He is willing to permit Republican-dominated states to monitor pregnancies and prosecute people who violate abortion bans. He will shape the laws by refusing to release funds appropriated by Congress (as he did in 2019 to try to get Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky to smear Hunter Biden). He would like to bring the Department of Justice under his own control, pardoning those convicted of attacking the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, and ending the U.S. system of an independent judiciary. In a second Trump presidency, the U.S. might not come to the aid of a European or Asian ally that Trump thinks isn’t paying enough for its own defense. Trump would, Cortelessa wrote, “gut the U.S. civil service, deploy the National Guard to American cities as he sees fit, close the White House pandemic-preparedness office, and staff his Administration with acolytes who back his false assertion that the 2020 election was stolen.”

To that list, former political director of the AFL-CIO Michael Podhorzer added on social media that if Trump wins, “he could replace [Supreme Court justices Clarence] Thomas, [Samuel] Alito, and 40+ federal judges over 75 with young zealots.” 

“I ask him, Don’t you see why many Americans see such talk of dictatorship as contrary to our most cherished principles?” Cortellessa wrote. No, Trump said. “‘I think a lot of people like it.” 

Time included the full transcripts and a piece fact-checking Trump’s assertions. The transcripts reflect the former president’s scattershot language that makes little logical sense but conveys impressions by repeating key phrases and advancing a narrative of grievance. The fact-checking reveals that narrative is based largely on fantasy. 

Trump’s own words prove the truth of what careful observers have been saying about his plans based on their examination of MAGA Republicans’ speeches, interviews, Project 2025, and so on, often to find themselves accused of a liberal bias that makes them exaggerate the dangers of a second Trump presidency. 

The idea that truthful reporting based on verifiable evidence is a plot by “liberal media” to undermine conservative values had its start in 1951, when William F. Buckley Jr., fresh out of Yale, published God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of “Academic Freedom.” Fervently opposed to the bipartisan liberal consensus that the federal government should regulate business, provide a basic social safety net, protect civil rights, and promote infrastructure, Buckley was incensed that voters continued to support such a system. He rejected the “superstition” that fact-based public debate would enable people to choose the best option from a wide range of ideas—a tradition based in the Enlightenment—because such debate had encouraged voters to choose the liberal consensus, which he considered socialism. Instead, he called for universities to exclude “bad” ideas like the Keynesian economics on which the liberal consensus was based, and instead promote Christianity and free enterprise.

Buckley soon began to publish his own magazine, the National Review, in which he promised to tell the “violated businessman’s side of the story,” but it was a confidential memorandum written in 1971 by lawyer Lewis M. Powell Jr. for a friend who chaired the education committee of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that insisted the media had a liberal bias that must be balanced with a business perspective. 

Warning that “the American economic system is under broad attack,” Powell worried not about “the Communists, New Leftists and other revolutionaries who would destroy the entire system.” They were, he wrote, a small minority. What he worried about were those coming from “perfectly respectable elements of society: from the college campus, the pulpit, the media, the intellectual and literary journals, the arts and sciences, and from politicians.” 

Businessmen must “confront this problem as a primary responsibility of corporate management,” he wrote, launching a unified effort to defend American enterprise. Among the many plans Powell suggested for defending corporate America was keeping the media “under constant surveillance” to complain about “criticism of the enterprise system” and demand equal time. 

President Richard Nixon appointed Powell to the Supreme Court, and when Nixon was forced to resign for his participation in the scheme to cover up the attempt to bug the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate Hotel before the 1972 election, he claimed he had to leave not because he had committed a crime, but because the “liberal” media had made it impossible for him to do his job. Six years later, Ronald Reagan, who was an early supporter of Buckley’s National Review, claimed the “liberal media” was biased against him when reporters accurately called out his exaggerations and misinformation during his 1980 campaign. 

In 1987, Reagan’s appointees to the Federal Communications Commission abandoned the Fairness Doctrine that required media with a public license to present information honestly and fairly. Within a year, talk radio had gone national, with hosts like Rush Limbaugh electrifying listeners with his attacks on “liberals” and his warning that they were forcing “socialism” on the United States. 

By 1996, when Australian-born media mogul Rupert Murdoch started the Fox News Channel (FNC), followers had come to believe that the news that came from a mainstream reporter was likely left-wing propaganda. FNC promised to restore fairness and balance to American political news. At the same time, the complaints of increasingly radicalized Republicans about the “liberal media” pushed mainstream media to wander from fact-based reality to give more and more time to the right-wing narrative. By 2018, “bothsidesing” had entered our vocabulary to mean “the media or public figures giving credence to the other side of a cause, action, or idea to seem fair or only for the sake of argument when the credibility of that side may be unmerited.”

In 2023, FNC had to pay almost $800 million to settle defamation claims made by Dominion Voting Systems after FNC hosts pushed the lie that Dominion machines had changed the outcome of the 2020 presidential election, and it has since tried to retreat from the more egregious parts of its false narrative. 

News broke yesterday that Hunter Biden’s lawyer had threatened to sue FNC for “conspiracy and subsequent actions to defame Mr. Biden and paint him in a false light, the unlicensed commercial exploitation of his image, name, and likeness, and the unlawful publication of hacked intimate images of him.” Today, FNC quietly took down from its streaming service its six-part “mock trial” of Hunter Biden, as well as a video promoting the series. 

Also today, Judge Juan Merchan, who is presiding over Trump’s criminal trial for election fraud, found Trump in contempt of court for attacking witnesses and jurors. Merchan also fined Trump $1,000 per offense, required him to take down the nine social media posts at the heart of the decision, and warned him that future violations could bring jail time. This afternoon, Trump’s team deleted the social media posts. 

For the first time in history, a former U.S. president has been found in contempt of court. We know who he is, and today, Trump himself validated the truth of what observers who deal in facts have been saying about what a second Trump term would mean for the United States.

Reacting to the Time magazine piece, James Singer, the spokesperson for the Biden-Harris campaign, released a statement saying: “Not since the Civil War have freedom and democracy been under assault at home as they are today—because of Donald Trump. Trump is willing to throw away the very idea of America to put himself in power…. Trump is a danger to the Constitution and a threat to democracy.” 

Tomorrow, May 1, is “Law Day,” established in 1958 by Republican president Dwight D. Eisenhower as a national recognition of the importance of the rule of law. In proclaiming the holiday today, Biden said: “America can and should be a Nation that defends democracy, protects our rights and freedoms, and pioneers a future of possibilities for all Americans. History and common sense show us that this can only come to pass in a democracy, and we must be its keepers.” 

— 

Notes:

https://time.com/6972021/donald-trump-2024-election-interview/

https://www.justsecurity.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/just-security-clearinghouse-manhattan-da-trial-motion-for-contempt-order-april-30-2024.pdf

https://abcnews.go.com/US/live-updates/trump-hush-money-trial/trump-removes-all-9-social-posts-cited-by-judge-109798916?id=109760957

https://time.com/6972022/donald-trump-transcript-2024-election/

https://time.com/6972024/donald-trump-fact-check-2024-election-interview/

https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/powellmemo/

https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/assets/usa-courts-secrecy-lobbyist/powell-memo.pdf

https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/bothsidesing-bothsidesism-new-words-were-watching

https://www.thedailybeast.com/fox-news-quietly-deletes-hunter-biden-mock-trial-special-following-lawsuit-threat

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2024/04/30/a-proclamation-on-law-day-u-s-a-2024/

Twitter (X):

Mike_Podhorzer/status/1785348580334501936

rgoodlaw/status/1785312635652591975

Jemsinger/status/1785345553712222272/photo/2