On Sinema at the Sinema: October 2021 US Politics thread

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Those are the true progressives

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:01 (four years ago)

why does only the good protestantism count

certified juice therapist (harbl), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:01 (four years ago)

Or the bad for that matter?

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:04 (four years ago)

there is a separate northern ireland to help people who don't understand directions, something the protestants did because they are generous

certified juice therapist (harbl), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:04 (four years ago)

VHS, my earlier posts were talking about "work" and the way Protestant and puritan ethics of "work" being tied to one's "worth" in a society have helped contribute greatly to problems in the US. This is not up for debate, afaic— it's a fact.

I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:05 (four years ago)

there are many lutherans in namibia because it became popular on its own

certified juice therapist (harbl), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:05 (four years ago)

VHS, my earlier posts were talking about "work" and the way Protestant and puritan ethics of "work" being tied to one's "worth" in a society have helped contribute greatly to problems in the US. This is not up for debate, afaic— it's a fact.

― I'm a sovereign jizz citizen (the table is the table), Wednesday, October 20, 2021 7:05 PM (one minute ago) bookmarkflaglink

The notion that work is tied to one's worth is disseminated throughout the world (because of colonialism as your rightly pointed) and yet the US seems to be only nation to be unable to bring about proper a welfare state on par with these other nations. I just don't think it's the variable.

Van Horn Street, Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:09 (four years ago)

I agree with jvc re Havana Syndrome.

jaymc, Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:18 (four years ago)

It is unclear whether in this scenario Manchin would end up caucusing with the Democrats, which would allow them to continue to control the Senate, or side with the Republicans and place the Senate in GOP hands. In either event, he would hold great sway over this half of Congress...But he was encouraged by the conversations with Sanders and top Democrats that occurred at the start of the week and did not yet see a reason to take this step. Still, he has informed associates that because he is so out of sync with the Democratic Party, he believes it is likely he will leave the party by November 2022.

This part seems more and more plausible, although of course it would even w out the tale of leavin':

Manchin has repeatedly said he has a significant philosophical difference with most of his fellow Democrats. He has told reporters that he believes major programs in the Build Back Better bill would move the United States toward an “entitlement mentality” and that he cannot accept that. In a recent meeting with Biden, Manchin told the president that he sees government as a partner with the public not the ultimate provider, according to people who heard the senator’s account of the conversation. He explained to the president that in his view Biden didn’t win the presidency last year by championing progressive proposals, and he pressed the president to recall his campaign promise to bring people together. He also reminded Biden that he has vowed not to support any package unless it contains the Hyde Amendment, which bans the use of federal funds to pay for abortions, except in cases of incest or when the life of the mother is at risk.
...Manchin told associates that he is hopeful a compromise that creates an overall framework for the bill can be reached by the end of this week—but at no more than the $1.75 trillion he supports. He has said that he believes if a deal is not attained on the social infrastructure package, he expects to be blamed and receive a ton of criticism.

Manchin’s press secretary did not respond to a request for comment.

UPDATE: After this article was published, reporters questioned Manchin about it. He replied, “I can’t control rumors, and it’s bullshit, bullshit spelled with a B, U, L, L, capital B.” Mother Jones stands by the story.

dow, Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:21 (four years ago)

yes this was the response

MANCHIN to @burgessev and me on the report he is threatening to leave the Democratic Party if his demands are not met on infrastructure: “I can’t control rumors and it’s bullshit, bullshit spelled with a B, U, L, L, capital ‘B’”: pic.twitter.com/ex8iHMIiSs

— Frank Thorp V (@frankthorp) October 20, 2021

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:24 (four years ago)

all of us lower-case bullshitters are feeling a little hurt by that but ok

John Stockton buying a used car from (Karl Malone), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:29 (four years ago)

Curious to know what Manchin's response is to reports that he may become a republican

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:35 (four years ago)

scroll up

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:50 (four years ago)

Too difficult, guess I'll never know

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Wednesday, 20 October 2021 23:51 (four years ago)

Re mention of dark money in this, I'm thinking the effort to discredit science as well as gov is, among other things, about preparation for further opposing efforts to deal with climate disruption--
When Nick Lawyer, a physician assistant in Sanders County, Mont. was asked by local leaders to take on the voluntary position of county public health officer, it felt like the right thing to do to serve his community in a crisis.

"I kind of think I was one of the few who expressed any interest in the position who had any reasonable qualifications for the job," Lawyer says.
...Little did he know, those qualifications would soon become a mark on him in the eyes of some local activists.
Things came to a head for Nick Lawyer in Sanders County when he penned an op-ed for several small town newspapers in the region in which he urged people to get the life saving vaccines (only about 40% of the population in Sanders County is fully vaccinated today).

Angry confrontations and protests at local meetings followed. It appeared there was a coordinated campaign of harassment targeted at him.

"It's really disappointing that these people who I've cared for, these people whose kids I've coached suddenly decided that I'm sort of outsider," Lawyer says.

Lawyer grew up in Sanders County. His family goes back five generations. He and his wife are also serve on local boards and he coaches in the schools. Today, he also works in the same hospital his mom once did.

"To see this fraction of our community become so vocally hostile towards me and my family, to threaten my wife and my wife's business, it's really disappointing," he says.

It all came to a dramatic, troubling crescendo in September after an elderly local activist spoke at a county meeting, angry and grieving, saying his 82-year-old wife had died from COVID. He reportedly called Lawyer a "petty tyrant."

"I never met her," Lawyer says. "I actually never provided her any care. But her husband blames me for her death saying that I put up barriers to her receiving unproven measures like ivermectin and other treatments."
fter that latest ruckus, county commissioners decided they couldn't do their business anymore because these activists were so loudly and frequently disrupting their meetings. So they asked for Lawyer to resign and he did.

"This is a very good example of where the bullies won," says Travis McAdam, an extremism expert at the Montana Human Rights Network.

McAdam says far right groups have developed a play book for how to disrupt public meetings and the lives of public health officials.

"They're using bullying, intimidation and harassment as political tools," he says.

Extremist group monitors like McAdam interviewed for this story say dark money groups are increasingly making all the training and social media tools readily available online. It's not so much that money is flowing into these communities or targeting certain races or positions, they say, it's more that groups such as those run by Ammon Bundy quickly send out text alerts or use Facebook groups to alert activists to mobilize across the rural Northwest.

"In most cases, no, it's not just a spontaneous thing where a hundred people all the sudden decide to go to the school board meeting that night," McAdam says.

Anti government militants like Ammon Bundy started recruiting and organizing around lockdowns early on in the pandemic, seeking to capitalize on long held antigovernment sentiment against in rural areas.

Lately McAdam points out that Bundy and others have shifted strategy toward actually running for political office and trying to fill seats on health boards and other local organizations. In Sanders County, there are murmurs that one local Bundy sympathizer is making moves to try to take over Nick Lawyer's former health post.

"In some cases, people are much more afraid of their perceived government overreach than they are of the virus," says Diana Lachiondo, a former commissioner and health board officer in Ada County, Idaho.

Last December when she and other members on the state's Central Health District board expressed support for preventive measures like extending mask ordinances, they were confronted by an angry mob that tried to break into the building where the meeting was being held. Protesters also screamed, banged pots and played clips from Scarface outside Lachiondo's Boise home.

Today, she's worried qualified people will no longer step up to serve in these positions.
More here, transcript and stream/dl:
https://www.npr.org/2021/10/20/1047336966/organizing-on-social-media-covid-skeptics-drive-public-health-professionals-from

dow, Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:00 (four years ago)

jvc, while I understand your frustration in this conversation, I just don't really understand why you're so concerned about these people who are, by dint of their job alone, objectively *bad* people.

Because the implication in this argument is that, as long as you view some subset of other as "objectively bad people", it's a-ok to completely throw basic decency and empathy out the window. And you don't have to spend more than five minutes glancing at American history to see why it's a really fucking awful idea to let people dictate the medical treatment of others by how "worthy" any particular subset might be.

Look I think we can all agree that the CIA is bad, no one itt needs to prove their leftist credentials to prove that point. But it grosses me out when people throw empathy out the window because it might accidentally get spent on someone they don't like. It's odious and deserves to be noted as such.

And let me reiterate, this is not coming from a place of "oh think of the feelings of the poor CIA agents". It's coming from a place of, "holy shit, this exact line of thinking has been twisted in some pretty horrifying ways through our country's history so maybe be careful".

But I know that I'm going to get blasted for finding this a hill worth fighting on, so be it.

Thanks jaymc, at least I know I'm not completely off base here.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:00 (four years ago)

xpost Oh yeah, and this is in Montana:
Starting last winter, when the COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out, Lawyer found himself in the crosshairs of what he calls a small, yet vocal group of extremists. He was surprised, because by then Montana's far right Governor Greg Gianforte had already overturned the state's mask mandate and the state's Republican controlled legislature had passed the only law in the nation banning private businesses from requiring their employees to get vaccinated.

"Although there was no mask mandate, there were no vaccine mandates, there were no health restrictions in our county, people still felt that their rights were being trampled on," Lawyer says.

dow, Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:03 (four years ago)

Are they really all CIA.

Typo? Negative! (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:12 (four years ago)

Back to Manchin and the environment too, The Daily had a good discussion of RIP bill---"there's no version of i he will accept"---that is, not one that provides incentive, incl payments, to speed up transition from coal etc, because climate disruption way ahead of sched:

...o he has a philosophical objection and a parochial, in my backyard objection, which is: This is going to destroy an industry and its jobs in my home state for which I am a United States senator.

Coral Davenport
Absolutely. I mean, and that’s a legitimate objection as well. But there’s something else, which is: Senator Manchin does also make a lot of money off the coal industry himself. Back before he was Senator Manchin, when he was Joe Manchin of Farmington, West Virginia, he founded a coal brokerage company, which he turned over to his son when he first ran for state office in West Virginia. So it is not his company anymore, but he’s still a stockholder in that.

And last year alone, he made almost $500,000 in dividends from this coal brokerage. So it’s absolutely true that he has a personal financial investment in which he profits quite handsomely in this same industry that would be shut down by this policy.
...Coral Davenport
But to be very clear, and to be fair to Senator Manchin, he absolutely is in compliance with senate ethics requirements. He’s very open about this. He has filed all of his financial disclosures. Nothing is concealed. He himself does not own this company. He’s been subject to a lot of criticism for essentially making personal profit on the coal industry, but senators are allowed to have these investments, and he complies with the letter of the law of the ethics requirements.

Michael Barbaro
So what has been the reaction to Joe Manchin’s decision to essentially kill off this program?

Coral Davenport
Well, as you can imagine, there are progressive Democrats, Democrats who have built their whole political careers around climate change, who are furious. They’re furious, of course, not only at Manchin, but they’re furious at the idea that this piece could be taken out of the bill at all. And almost immediately when this happened last week, I talked to the staff of Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota, who has been central in writing this program, who said, essentially, if they don’t have a strong climate program, if they don’t have a program that cuts carbon emissions, they should not count on our vote.

transcript:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/20/podcasts/the-daily/joe-biden-climate-plan-joe-manchin.html?showTranscript=1

pod: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/20/podcasts/the-daily/joe-biden-climate-plan-joe-manchin.html

dow, Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:15 (four years ago)

And let me reiterate, this is not coming from a place of "oh think of the feelings of the poor CIA agents". It's coming from a place of, "holy shit, this exact line of thinking has been twisted in some pretty horrifying ways through our country's history so maybe be careful".

Still don’t see how this differs from ODing cops and Vax Victims, though? Because cops are in a position of power and the vax victims are ridiculous? But how is that different from “CIA case officer targeted by headache gun”?

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:26 (four years ago)

this really is one of the least interesting arguments you guys have had and that’s saying something

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 21 October 2021 00:27 (four years ago)

who is winning? i haven't really checked into the particulars, but i know a guy in dc. he has "high clearance". apparently he's just one of over 1.5 million people around there who do

John Stockton buying a used car from (Karl Malone), Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:06 (four years ago)

Still don’t see how this differs from ODing cops and Vax Victims, though? Because cops are in a position of power and the vax victims are ridiculous? But how is that different from “CIA case officer targeted by headache gun”?

Not sure I understand the question here? I understood the reference upthread to cops touching fentanyl to be a nod to those faked videos of cops pretending to OD when they brushed their fingers against it. I don't think any cop faking an OD is deserving of sympathy at all. If you are asking if I have sympathy for cop ODing from recreational drug use? Yeah, I do have sympathy. I can wish that every cop in America immediately quits policing to do something non-destructive with their lives, but also realize that they likely have family, friends and loved ones who are going to be impacted should they die. As for "Vax Victims", I'm not sure what that term, exactly. But assuming you mean anti-vaxxers dying from their own stubborn refusal and belief in stupid ideas, well, it depends, I guess. If we are talking Tucker Carlson or someone who has gone out of their way to spread disinformation, nah, probably not going to have a lot of sympathy (though he's a bad example because I'm certain he has been vaxxed). But if it's someone's random grandma who has been isolated and ended up in an echo chamber that reinforces harmful beliefs in her head, I am going to have sympathy for her death, absolutely. It's a shitty system that killed her. Though again, I'm not sure I understand your question, so this may be a different reading than you intended.

My point being that I think the more often we reduce things to "X group is bad, so all members of X group should suffer or die", the more we allow space for other people to do the same and I sure as hell know that other people are going to have a very different "group X" in mind.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:10 (four years ago)

And I realize we are talking about a "mystery" headache and sickness, not anything as severe as death, I was just picking up on the "ODing cops" and "Vax Victims" part of that post.

I'm going to bow out of this now because I realize when I'm fighting a losing battle.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:14 (four years ago)

My point being that I think the more often we reduce things to "X group is bad, so all members of X group should suffer or die", the more we allow space for other people to do the same and I sure as hell know that other people are going to have a very different "group X" in mind.

This is broadly true (and thus hard to disagree with), but

a) in this situation we who are making fun of so-called "Havana Syndrome" sufferers are not so much saying "those people over there are bad, and they should suffer and die" as "those people over there are full of shit, and it's funny that journalists' brains are so broken that they take this obvious bullshit seriously", and

b) your broader principle is so broad that it ultimately would prohibit you from making any kind of judgement about any group at all, ever, because Bad People might exercise the same right and then you'd be... bad by association, because you did it once, too? It's the paradox of tolerance, where you have to be "tolerant" even to people who are themselves intolerant, because to not do so would make you intolerant, too, which is bad, all over again. And just like that's horseshit (you're not obligated to be tolerant to Nazis), so is this. Making fun of CIA agents who claim the Russians aimed a migraine cannon at them is not the same as denying that black hospital patients really feel pain when they get surgery. It's just fucking not.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:24 (four years ago)

Some people can oppose someone's ideologies and politics while being sympathetic to their suffering. It's not being tolerant of their intolerance, it's just being empathic.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:46 (four years ago)

Some people can oppose someone's ideologies and politics while being sympathetic to their suffering. It's not being tolerant of their intolerance, it's just being empathic.

Sure, but these people are not suffering from a real thing, any more than if they claimed to have morgellons. There is no such thing as "Havana Syndrome," and even entertaining the idea that there might be makes you a rube and a mark.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 21 October 2021 01:57 (four years ago)

If Bernie claimed that Manchin was hitting him with a magical death ray it would be equally absurd and dismissible.

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 21 October 2021 02:01 (four years ago)

We know the CIA heart attack gun isn't real because Biden would have used it on Breyer.

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 21 October 2021 02:02 (four years ago)

fwiw the fentanyl cops probably aren't really "faking it" either, they're experiencing panic attacks or some kind of conversion syndrome. and as a long time panic attack sufferer i sympathize with them i guess? kind of? but mostly they can eat shit, they brought it on themselves

Clay, Thursday, 21 October 2021 02:04 (four years ago)

CDC guidelines for fentanyl were terrible and there has been a massive amount of mythology around the drug, I don't know how much it comes from the police profession itself (probably a lot!) but for a while, with the limited info available, it was normal to be pretty scared of the whole thing. Medical first responders were equally scared.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 21 October 2021 02:13 (four years ago)

I see the guidelines are still terrible.

Van Horn Street, Thursday, 21 October 2021 02:13 (four years ago)

Sure, but these people are not suffering from a real thing, any more than if they claimed to have morgellons. There is no such thing as "Havana Syndrome," and even entertaining the idea that there might be makes you a rube and a mark.

I haven't done a deep dive into Havana Syndrome, but I've read articles in credible publications (for instance, this New Yorker article from a few months ago) that basically take the stance of "huh, this is really weird, and there still doesn't seem to be a good explanation for it." So that's basically where my head is at, and I don't really understand the jump to "this is obviously fake," regardless of how one feels about the CIA. (That said, I also don't think that individuals who work for the CIA are inherently and objectively bad or untrustworthy or undeserving of sympathy.)

jaymc, Thursday, 21 October 2021 04:10 (four years ago)

Story on NBC news week or so ago had a couple State Dept. people that had some brain MRIs that showed some abnormalities and the doctors clueless on how they got that way. Who knows...call Fox Mulder I guess.

https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/early-victims-of-havana-syndrome-speak-out-about-ongoing-health-struggles-123482693615

I keep thinking about that scene in that BBC Hawkwind documentary of Lemmy talking about DikMik using the pulse generator in the shows.

"In case of sonic attack on your district, follow these rules..."

earlnash, Thursday, 21 October 2021 12:13 (four years ago)

Five veterans tapped to advise Senator Kyrsten Sinema, an Arizona Democrat, resigned from their posts on Thursday, publicly accusing her of “hanging your constituents out to dry” in the latest sign of growing hostility toward a centrist who has emerged as a key holdout on President Biden’s agenda.

“You have become one of the principal obstacles to progress, answering to big donors rather than your own people,” the veterans wrote in a letter that is to be featured in a new advertisement by Common Defense, a progressive veterans’ activist group that has targeted Ms. Sinema.

“We shouldn’t have to buy representation from you, and your failure to stand by your people and see their urgent needs is alarming,” they added.

Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Thursday, 21 October 2021 14:07 (four years ago)

Now we just need her entire team to quit

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 21 October 2021 14:41 (four years ago)

American democracy saved by a triathlon coach who isn’t having it anymore

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 21 October 2021 14:44 (four years ago)

"I don't really understand the jump to "this is obviously fake," regardless of how one feels about the CIA. "

me either, it reminds me of people who refused to believe fybromyalgia or lyme disease were real. No doubt there are probably people jumping on this 'diagnosis' who are full of shit or suffer from munchausen or something, but I'm not in the habit of utterly dismissing illness in people when I don't know them.

akm, Thursday, 21 October 2021 16:28 (four years ago)

maybe they should call it Langley Syndrome. might be easier for pol to take seriously

caddy lac brougham? (will), Thursday, 21 October 2021 16:40 (four years ago)

ppl*

obv pols are taking it Extremely Seriously, much more so than crumbling infrastructure or extreme weather events every other month or $900 insulin

caddy lac brougham? (will), Thursday, 21 October 2021 16:42 (four years ago)

Hopefully I’m not a jerk; I created a thread for those who want to talk about the Havana syndrome

The Havana Syndrome

Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 21 October 2021 16:43 (four years ago)

"I don't really understand the jump to "this is obviously fake," regardless of how one feels about the CIA. "

me either, it reminds me of people who refused to believe fybromyalgia or lyme disease were real.

I don't know about this. Are lyme disease or fybromyalgia sufferers getting sanctions passed against ???? foreign enemies?

Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Thursday, 21 October 2021 16:47 (four years ago)

me either, it reminds me of people who refused to believe fybromyalgia or lyme disease were real. No doubt there are probably people jumping on this 'diagnosis' who are full of shit or suffer from munchausen or something, but I'm not in the habit of utterly dismissing illness in people when I don't know them.

careful, I got roasted for making this same point yesterday...

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 21 October 2021 17:14 (four years ago)

I got roasted for making this same point

The very existence of 24 hour reports about remote events gives everyone the right to form summary judgments upon people they have never met, events they did not witness or experience, and ideas they may not understand in full. Suggesting that these judgments may be faulty or premature, due to faulty, imprecise or scanty information is an attack upon Our Freedom To Opine. #publicserviceannouncement

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 21 October 2021 17:42 (four years ago)

I missed the stories about Lyme disease being a Russian weapon, I guess.

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 21 October 2021 17:54 (four years ago)

American weapon otoh

The US House of Representatives has ordered the Pentagon’s inspector general to conduct a review of whether the defence department “experimented with ticks and other insects regarding use as biological weapons between 1950 and 1975.”1

The demand for a review, proposed by Chris Smith, a New Jersey Republican, passed easily among a raft of other late amendments to a House bill on defence spending. It must still be “reconciled” with the Senate’s version of the spending bill, but Smith said that he was confident of Senate support.

He told the House that his amendment had been “inspired by a number of books and articles suggesting that significant research had been done at US government facilities including Fort Detrick, Maryland, and Plum Island, New York, to turn ticks and other insects into bioweapons.”

Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Thursday, 21 October 2021 18:04 (four years ago)

Politicks

mothersbaugh of invention (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 21 October 2021 18:10 (four years ago)

It’s pretty embarrassing that we spend multiples of every other country on intelligence and the military and don’t have a death ray of our own.

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 21 October 2021 18:10 (four years ago)

We are years behind on headache technology

Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Thursday, 21 October 2021 18:12 (four years ago)

I don't know that it's a foreign weapon, in fact I'd be more inclined to believe this is due to either 1) some issue in the embassy buildings themselves, the cause of which I dunno or 2) a side effect of some bullshit the CIA is actually trying to do to foreign parties; either way, completely dismissing illness complaints from people is nagl imo tbh wtf

akm, Thursday, 21 October 2021 18:14 (four years ago)


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