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Strike While the Donald is Hot

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Today’s Republican Party is a disgrace like nothing ever seen before at center stage of American politics.  From 2001 to 2009, it gave us the most lawless presidency in the history of the nation, and then from 2009 till now, it has given us the most obstructionist opposition party the nation has seen. Unprecedented, for a major American political party, in how consistently it is damaging the nation.

For well over a decade, this should have been the main topic of our national conversation.

No, let me correct that: Had the Democrats made it the main topic of our national conversation earlier, the dark force that has taken over the Republican Party would not still need to be brought to the attention of the American people. Calling it out forcefully enough would have either driven out this dark force from the one-time “Grand Old Party,” or have driven that Party into oblivion.

But the Democrats have been weak, and have never pressed the battle. And the combination of Republican destructiveness and Democratic weakness has been a disaster for America.

Today’s rise of Donald Trump gives the Democrats, and Liberal America generally, an unusually good opportunity to launch the long-needed attack on the Republican Party for the morally degraded force that it has become.

That opportunity arises from two factors.

First, Trump has thrown the Republican Party into disarray. Most of the time – largely because of the weakness and passivity of the Democratic Party – the Republicans have been able to control their narrative. But, with Trump lobbing his attention-getting rhetorical bombs and dominating virtually every news cycle, the Republicans are caught up in a story beyond their control. This leaves them weakened, distracted, disjointed — generally less able to fight back in a cohesive way.

So strike while the Donald is hot.

The second factor making this an opportune moment to attack the Republicans is that Donald Trump is holding up a mirror to the Republicans, and the ugliness in that mirror is precisely what Americans need to see and understand. Not Trump’s own ugliness — that of an opportunist who is utterly without scruples — which is of secondary importance, but the ugliness of the Party which has made him its frontrunner. And the ugliness of the dark spirit it has cultivated in millions of its supporters.

Let’s start with the cruelty on display in his demagoguery on the immigration issue, where he miscasts people seeking a better life for their families as violent criminals. We’ve seen this kind of angry, punitive spirit before in today’s Republican Party: e.g. from one audience in the 2012 Republican  presidential debates that erupted into cheers at the mention of all the executions Texas has conducted,  and from another audience when one candidate declared that a man lacking health insurance should be allowed to die rather than be given treatment.

Trump is also demonstrating that the people now aligned with the Republican Party will reward someone who speaks with an utter disregard for the truth. Trump trumpets the fiction that the Mexican government is “sending” these immigrants. He characterizes the Mexicans in our midst as criminals, even though the data show they have a lower rate of crime than our native-born American population. The other day, at the border in Laredo, Texas, Trump showed his absolute casualness about lying, asserting that the crowds that met his arrival there were pro-Trump, while the reporters on the scene had just seen that the reality was just the opposite.

In this Party, with its detachment from reality, Trump is showing that you can pretend to know what you don’t know at all, and rise to be the Republican frontrunner. Here is a man with no foreign policy experience pretending to have a secret plan to defeat ISIS, and making up a story about how he could get the Mexican government to pay for a wall at the border. Such pretension, once a disqualifier in either major party, is rewarded in today’s Republican Party.

Trump is showing that one can be without real principle, saying today for political effect the very opposite of what he used to say. (Immigration is one such issue, but there are so many others .

That all these qualities – cruelty, dishonesty, pretension, and hypocrisy – are rewarded by a major part of today’s Republican Party provides a meaningful insight into the morally broken condition of that Party. Trump’s blatant performance simply unmasks what has animated this Party for years.

Not that Trump’s mirror reveals all that can be shown about the moral atrocity the Republican Party has become. But this Trump phenomenon does present a great opportunity to start showing the still-sane part of America a dramatic picture of what dark forces at work in the Republican Party.

Democrats (and all of Liberal America) should seize the moment and strike while Trump is still the main political story.

But will they? Will we? Democrats have yet to show they have the vision and the strength to press the battle.

When the Democrats gained in power – in the elections of 2006 and 2008 -it was because the many failures of the George W. Bush presidency had become so visible to the American people. Because the Democrats never really called out the Republican darkness, the Republican Party was punished not for its crimes but for its incompetence (botching the war in Iraq, driving the economy over a cliff, etc.).

The Democrats simply reaped the rewards as Americans repudiated the failures of their opponents.

Isn’t it time now that Democrats took the initiative? Isn’t it time to drive the national conversation to focus on the moral darkness that has overtaken a once-respectable party?

See the evil. Call it out. Press the battle. That’s the strategy we need. And it is the strategy I develop in my new book WHAT WE’RE UP AGAINST .

Now is an opportune moment to put that strategy to work. Strike while the Donald is hot!

Cuccinelli Wrong Again, This Time on Iran; Top Comments on His FB Page Unsurprisingly Appalling

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Seriously, is Ken Cuccinelli ever right about anything? Apparently not. Even worse are the ugliness he attracts, and brings out, to his extremist demagoguery. For instance, the top comments on Cooch’s Facebook page to this post are as follows.

*23 likes: “Why would a deal like this include money being given to Iran? Logically, a deal should say that they will not do so and so, period. Money being given to foreign nations, borrowed from China, is the true death of our nation.”

*14 likes: “KILL THE DEAL AND THEN KILL IRAN,,, BOMB THE HELL OUT OF THEM…”

*13 likes: “Some well placed nukes will make for a short war. Sounds harsh but I would rather that than waste our men in the sand over there fighting these lunatics.”

Just another day on Ken Cuccinelli’s Facebook page, basically. Recall that a few weeks ago, we wrote about the top comment on his post on immigration stating, “illegal immigrant families deserve a ride to the border and if they come back they deserve a bullet.” Again,why is it that Cooch attracts despicable people like this? And why is it that Cooch isn’t atypical of many Republicans these days, from Mike Huckabee to Ted Cruz to E.W. Jackson to…we could go on all day? As Andy Schmookler writes in his new book, the “political right – and its political arm, the Republican Party – has become an extraordinarly destructive force in the American body politics,” one that’s “more consistently destructive and dishonest than anything seen before at center state of American politics (except perhaps for the decade leading up to the Civil War.” No argument here; the question is what’s the rest of America doing to stop this lunacy?

National and Virginia News Headlines: Tuesday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Tuesday, July 28. Also check out Jon Stewart taking on Mike Huckabee for his latest offensive insanity.

*Editors’ Note: Clinton Email Coverage (Massive #FAIL by the New York Times…)

*The GOP is just this screwed: Donald Trump, immigration and the Republicans’ massive rebranding failure (“New polling shows how the GOP can’t win on immigration: The base really wants deportations, but no one else does”)

*Jewish groups react to Mike Huckabee’s ‘oven’ remarks

*Boy Scouts lift ban on openly gay adult leaders

*Ex-Wife: Donald Trump Made Me Feel ‘Violated’ During Sex (Yep, Trump is as horrible as we all thought he was…)

*McCarthy: House will not vote on Senate’s highway funding bill (“McCarthy’s declaration that the House will not be ‘taking up the Senate bill’ means a short-term extension is the only way to prevent a lapse in federal infrastructure funding at the end of the week.”)

*Hillary Clinton Refuses to Take a Position on the Keystone Pipeline

*Mitch McConnell summons restive Republicans for ‘combative’ sitdown

*Push to Reduce Sentencing Laws Gains Momentum

*Poll: Va. voters split on Confederate flag plates, give McAuliffe 50% approval rating

*Editorial: Virginia will prove a 2016 battleground (Ya think?)

*Proposed changes to Virginia voter registration stirs fears among GOP (Because the more people vote, the more Democrats win!)

*Our view: The governor and the pipeline (“When Gov. Terry McAuliffe was in town recently, he tried to brush aside questions about one of the big topics in this part of the state – the proposed Mountain Valley Pipeline.”)

*A Times-Mirror conversation with Sen. Mark Warner

*So Long, Bacons Rebellion (Super-environmentalist Peter Galuszka definitely didn’t belong at a Dominion-sponsored blog.)

*Fairfax police refuse information to father of police shooting victim David Masters

*Elbowing Chesapeake neighbors

*D.C. area forecast: Heat, humidity continue with bigger storm chances late week

Virtual Net Metering for Virginia

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Senator Dave Marsdan, Senator George Barker and Delegate Tim Hugo,

Virginia has a nascent solar energy program and until recently has lagged behind other states in terms of solar installations.  Now that Dominion is on-board with bringing 500 MW of solar to the commonwealth of Virginia, it would be a good time to look at mechanisms that spur community involvement and investment in shared solar projects that can then be connected to our grid.

One such policy – virtual net metering – is an extension of net metering which is already in place here in Virginia.  Virtual net metering would allow Virginia ratepayers to invest in a local community energy project and have their share of the project accounted for on a ‘virtual net meter’ that would be aggregated on the bill.[1]

This allows for better site selection for solar and distributed energy projects.  Many roofs are not able to sustain a solar array for various reasons[2], and this would allow those homeowners a chance to green their energy bills and lock in fixed energy rates for that portion of their bill.

This brings additional financing to bear for community solar projects, as with larger projects the tax advantages from the solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) are hard for single homeowners to financially internalize.

Build one larger array versus several smaller arrays will cost less, have fewer regulatory demands for inspection and permitting, and will generate a better rate of return for rate paying investors without any of the worry of maintain an array on your residence.  For renters that move every year or so here in northern Virginia virtual net metering would be one of the few ways to invest in solar technology and help stabilize your energy bill.

1] “5 Reasons Virtual Net Metering is Better than Plain Ol’ Net Metering”[2 “Here’s how to get solar power if you don’t own a roof”  http://www.vox.com/2015/6/25/8…

E.W. Jackson Not Pleased with President Obama Calling Himself “Kenyan-American”

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I’m kinda curious, was E.W. Jackson angry at President Reagan when he spoke in Ireland in 1984 and said, “I’m certainly proud to be part of that great Irish American tradition…My roots in Ballyporeen, County Tipperary, are little different than millions of other Americans who find their roots in towns and counties all over the Isle of Erin?” Did Jackson think that Reagan was a “divider” not a “uniter?” Was he offended at Reagan’s frequent references to being Irish-American? Somehow, I doubt it.

National and Virginia News Headlines: Monday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Monday, July 27. Also, as Hillary Clinton says: “Climate change is an urgent challenge that threatens all of us. The United States is already taking steps to invest in our clean energy future, but we need to do more. We need to take bold action to combat climate change, create jobs, protect the health of American families and communities, and make the United States the world’s clean energy superpower.”

*Pact would ramp up U.S.-led air war in Syria

*Senate Resurrection of Export-Import Bank Goes to Divided House

*Senate smackdown: Ted Cruz, Mike Lee efforts squelched by leaders (Good, Cruz and Lee are wild-eyed extremists who badly need to be smacked down by Republican leadership.)

*Hillary Clinton rolls out climate agenda (I may write more about this later, but basically there’s good stuff in there, combined with a bunch of vague language. It also could have been MUCH more ambitious, given the tremendous advances in clean energy technology and cost the past few years.)

*Obamacare repeal vote fails in Senate

*If You Can’t Beat Trump, Join Him: Huckabee Delivers Most Outrageous Line Of 2016 (Disgusting.)

*Donald Trump And The Extraordinary Vapidness Of Political Punditry

*NBC/Marist Polls Show Donald Trump Running Strong in Iowa, NH

*Ken Cuccinelli Says ‘Black Lives Matter’ Insults White People

*Richmond Times-Dispatch Editorial: GOP is becoming a know-nothing caucus

*A failing bay cleanup (“Leaders cannot afford to ignore the catastrophe in the Chesapeake. The EPA also should not let them.”)

*Town: Clean Power Plan: The right choice for Southwest Virginia

*Account in Post from Iraq War veteran prompts Fairfax police inquiry

*Fairfax grand jury investigating John Geer police shooting begins Monday

*Arlington’s high-rise downtown Rosslyn is about to rise higher

*Rise in Richmond property values prompts talk of lowering tax rate

*Ross and Taylor shine, but Pirates get best of Nats in series-deciding 3-1 win

*D.C. area forecast: A steamy week with a chance of storms to start

100 Days Out: Virginia Democrats In Strong Position, Hold Weekend of Action [PHOTOS]

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From the DPVA:

DPVA Weekend of Action

Virginia is inside of 100 days until voters head to the polls for all 140 seats in the General Assembly. To mark the occasion, Virginia Democrats participated in a Weekend of Action, canvassing thousands of doors across the Commonwealth. This enthusiasm is one of the many assets Democrats have moving into the fall. Here's the lay of the land for the next 100 days:
  • Democrats have a significant fundraising advantage, with Common Good VA and the DPVA outraising Republicans by a factor of 15:1. This has allowed for the strategic investment of resources early on.
  • Over the next 100 days, we will continue to outpace them.
  • Democrats have built the biggest field program ever seen in a non-statewide election year. Volunteers have contacted a large percentage of the electorate through tens of thousands of door-knocks and phone calls.
  • Over the next 100 days, we will continue to implement the most targeted, aggressive voter contact program in a state legislative cycle.
  • Republican candidates are weak with extremist baggage.  Democrats want to build on the progress made by Governor Terry McAullife in growing jobs and building a new Virginia economy. The Republican agenda is to stand in the way of progress, prevent 400,000 Virginians from receiving health care we've already paid for, and enact extreme attacks on women's health care.
  • Over the next 100 days, Democrats will ensure voters understand the choices they face.
“In just 100 days, voters across Virginia will face a choice. Elect Democrats who will partner with our Governor to create jobs and build a new Virginia economy — or elect extremist Republicans who are distracted by divisive partisan battles or in the pockets of special interests,” said Democratic Party of Virginia Chairwoman Susan Swecker. “A Democratic State Senate will work to create jobs, expand health care for all, take commonsense steps to make communities safer, and ensure every Virginia woman receives equal pay for equal work.”

Photos from the Weekend of Action HERE, photo credit Democratic Party of Virginia.

 

Schmookler’s New Book Takes Aim at Liberals’ “Extraordinary Weakness” in Face of Right-Wing Threat

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Blue Virginia readers are, presumably highly familiar with Andy Schmookler’s fundamental thesis about America today: 1) that the “political right – and its political arm, the Republican Party – has become an extraordinarly destructive force in the American body politic”; and 2) that “the political left…and its political arm, the Democratic Party, has shown extraodinary weakness in the face of the threat posed to the nation by that destructive force.” Andy has also written extensively on this subject at The Huffington Post, Daily Kos, and elsewhere. Now, Andy skillfully pulls it all together into highly readable paperback book form, in What We’re Up Against: The Destructive Force at Work in Our World – And How We Can Defeat It. Andy sent me an advance, review copy, which I’ve just finished reading. Other than strongly recommending that people  read it, here are a few thoughts and questions in no particular order.

*I’m not a huge fan of the word “evil,” as I believe it’s has far too much baggage – religious, etc. – and can be offputting (although Andy does a strong job or arguing why it’s an important and necessary word to use, not in a religious but in a secular context). Personally, perhaps given my background in social psychology and the broader social sciences, I prefer Andy’s discussion of the right in America as a force for “brokenness” – dishonesty, environmental destruction, inequality, conflict, hostility to knowledge and empiricism, an increasingly unrestrained corporate takeover of our (soon-to-be-former?) democracy, etc.

*Andy’s approach is highly intellectual (he contrasts it with the emotional approach embodied in the book, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” which can be argued stirred Northerners to increased anti-slavery activism and even helped trigger the Civil War), although well written and suffused with passionate intensity, yet I do wonder if this book will find an audience in liberal America (I hope it does; it certainly will NOT be read by those on the right). I went back and looked through Andy’s postings at The Huffington Post and Daily Kos, in particular, and found very little discussion stimulated. Perhaps even worse, as Andy himself notes in his book, what discussion DID occur wasn’t really on point, “almost always ignored the larger assertions within each piece and focused instead on the most immediate and concrete points,” simply didn’t light the “fire” Andy was aiming to ignite. The questions are: a) why was that; and b) is there any chance of this situation changing? I don’t really have the answers to either of those questions.

*Andy certainly takes a shot at what he calls the “abdication of the press,” arguing that the media has ignored “one of the biggest stories in American history” – “the rise to power of a force more consistently destructive and dishonest than anything seen before at center state of American politics (except perhaps for the decade leading up to the Civil War).” I wish Andy had delved more into this issue, for instance looking at why the media has abdicated its role, resorting instead to mindless, cowardly, and ultimately flat-out false “both sides” “reporting” – because I think it’s extremely important as well as a continuing, serious problem (e.g., just this morning Chuck Todd allowed vicious racist, anti-Semite and homophobe Pat Buchanan on his show –for the “conservative” point of view, presumably? Still, WTF?).

*Instead, Andy spends a great deal of time and effort in this book laying out the concepts of “wholeness,” “brokenness,” “evil as a force,” the Republican Party as a “pure case” of that “evil,” the “weakening of the cultural ‘immune system’ that has allowed evil to advance,” the “failure of the rest of the American body politics…to respond appropriately,” etc.

*While Andy believes to his core that the Republican Party and the “evil force” it represents must be firmly and relentlessly confronted, he argues that he does not – and the rest of us should not – have any “malice” towards the “broken” individuals in that party, but more a feeling of “compassion” towards them, a spirit of “with malice towards none,” quoting President Lincoln from his second inaugural address.

*As for America’s liberals, the people who Andy aims his book at, I sense a combination of frustration, exasperation and a bit of hope that with the right message, presumably delivered by the right messenger in an effective way, liberal Americans can be roused to action against the “evil force.” For now, though, Andy laments that liberal Americans simply are “blind” (willfully or otherwise) to the evil; the problem being, of course, that “can’t hit what you can’t (or won’t) see,” as Andy puts it.  

*Andy muses that the ’60s counterculture and revolution against “society’s moral structures” may have been well-intentioned, but that it ultimately “led to disastrous results,” including a harsh reactionary response by those on “the other side of the cultural divide.” It’s an interesting argument, one I’m not sure I’ve heard made previously by someone of the “left” (broadly speaking), but it does ring true that the rapid social, cultural, economic and other changes America has seen over the past few decades has been deeply unsettling in many ways, even if it’s been for the better in important areas (e.g., women gaining a lot more power, equality for gay Americans, the civil rights movement, the environmental movement).

*The counter-reaction by the political right to the rapid changes in American “morality” has, no question, been harsh in many cases. Right here in Virginia, I present to you the 2013 far-far-far-right-wing “Extreme Team” of Ken Cuccinelli, E.W. Jackson and Mark Obenshain as Exhibit A of where this can lead. I’d also present the current 2016 Republican presidential field, which is filled with people far further to the right – and also apparently without any “third rails” they are unwilling to touch – than the Republican Party of the 1970s, 1980s (I mean, Reagan today would be considered a “RINO” by a lot of these folks) and even into the 1990s, although certainly the 1994 Congressional elections brought to power Newt Gingrich and other truly ugly exemplars of the “brokenness” Andy talks about in his book. The results of that election – and also the 2000 (s)election of George W. Bush, the disastrous 2010 and 2014 mid-term elections, and the takeover of many state legislatures by extreme, right-wing, corporatist forces – has not been pretty.

*Andy makes several references to fictional characters responding to “evil” forces — Sully in “Avatar,” Luke Skywalker in “Star Wars,” and Frodo in “Lord of the Rings.” For me, the latter is by far the most resonant (and relevant), as Frodo was simply an “ordinary hobbit,” living comfortably in the Shire (just as most liberals are fairly comfortable in suburban America), not looking to be battling dark and menacing forces but ultimately courageous enough to do so when he sees there’s no other (good) choice (other than letting the world fall under Sauron’s reign of terror). So...how many “Frodos” are out there, and how many “Gandalfs” to open their eyes to the forces arrayed against everything they hold dear? That’s what I’m deeply unsure about.

*The bottom line question, again, is whether a holistic, comprehensive, wide-ranging, integrative force, such as  Andy’s new book strives to be (and largely succeeds) can rouse liberals to action, possibly even awaken some of the “good people” among conservatives to how they’re being manipulated by wealthy, powerful interests. After reading Andy’s book – as thoughtful and well-argued as it is (not surprising by someone with the decades of study Andy has undertaken, as well as a tremendous ability to synthesize vast amounts of information across disciplines) – I remain deeply skeptical, even as I hope to be proven wrong. I’d be interested what others think, and encourage Blue Virginia readers to check out the book and post your thoughts. Thanks.

P.S. One more point is that by writing stuff like this, one runs the risk of being marginalized by the “very serious people” who insist on denying that the Republican Party is extreme, radical, etc. For instance, see the case of Thomas Mann and Norman Ornstein, who called out just that (“The GOP has become an insurgent outlier in American politics. It is ideologically extreme; scornful of compromise; unmoved by conventional understanding of facts, evidence and science; and dismissive of the legitimacy of its political opposition.”) and as a consequence “don’t get invited to talk to the leaders of news organizations anymore.” Apparently, there are some truths that the “very serious people” simply aren’t willing to hear.

National and Virginia News Headlines: Sunday Morning

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Here are a few national and Virginia news headlines, political and otherwise, for Sunday, July 26. With regard to the video, I continue to have mixed feelings about progressives going on right-wing shows: a) it IS a chance to debunk their lies; b) in the case of Mark Levine, he does a great job; but c) it also legitimizes the right-wing shows, as if there really are two equivalent sides in the debate; and d) the hosts of these shows frame the entire debate in a wildly biased way (e.g., in this case, the nonsense about a “number of accusations and scandals going on” regarding Hillary Clinton; in fact, these are all right-wing-echo-chamber-imagined “scandals” that exist only in their fevered imaginations.)

*In Kenya, Obama Is Upbeat but With Notes of Discord

*Obama, Kenyatta clash on gay rights in Kenya

*Republican Support for Trump Surges but his Unfavorable Ratings are Also Rising

*Trump launches offensive against Walker

*Hillary Clinton denies sending classified info from private server

*Factory farming is killing the planet: Why the meat industry’s future needs to look more like its past (It’s an abomination in every way.)

*Obama Administration Targets Trade in African Elephant Ivory

*Schapiro: McAuliffe not completing term? Fuhgettaboutit! (“Richmond’s chattering classes muse over an improbable and – for Democrats – dangerous scenario: That McAuliffe quits as governor for a position in a Hillary Clinton White House.”)

*McAuliffe PAC posts big numbers from out-of-state donors

*Justice Dept.: Virginia ignored court order on funding for the disabled

*Lesson learned in public-private deals: Be careful

*Voter turnout in Tuesday’s special election less than 5 percent

*Nationals top Pirates in Anthony Rendon’s return from disabled list

*D.C. area forecast: Staying toasty, turning up the humidity