Reverend Al Sharpton’s Top-Notch Advice for Biden Campaign Tactics Vs. Trump

Just a few minutes ago, on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, Reverend Al Sharpton bluntly and brilliantly invited Joe Biden to a street fight. Informing the assembled panel of politically correct conflict averse Morning Joe regulars – other than Scarborough himself – that Biden’s approach is far too soft in his race against Trump, the apex predator; the Rev, cried “Havoc!” and let the dogs out, saying:

Job opening: Street Fightin’ Man

“The thing I think the Biden campaign needs to do, Joe, is to realize they are not in a professional boxing match, they’re in a street fight. Donald Trump is a street fighter. You do not come into the ring with gloves, looking for the referee to stop it every three minutes and rest. No, this is a street fight, you come in with a broke bottle and an ash can because it’s gonna be that kind of battle, and he doesn’t understand anything else, and you have to show in a graphical way him saying ‘Use bleach,’ and then show the lines of people at food chains trying to line up to get free food like they had to do at my headquarters with Andre the Chef. You need to be graphic about it. You need to show people protesting about George Floyd and him standing in front of a church with a bible that he cleared them out with tear gas. You need to come and street fight because if you street fight him you can beat him.”

This is as well-stated as I’ve heard this election cycle, especially on a mainstream media outlet. The aversion to politically blunt language among the networks is a massive disservice to the country as it faces a potential political disaster should Trump be elected just five months from now, yes, just five months. We’re at DEFCON 2. We’ve no time for tree hugging, politically correct, anemic political narration. The Rev’s cry from the heart is, frankly, what Sharpton was born to do at many junctions in the past, and especially now.

Unfortunately, I hope otherwise, but this call to arms will most certainly be ignored, so mired in soft language has the center of the Democratic party become. I do give Biden credit for his (too) recent turn towards more aggressive rhetoric which began six months ago at the State of the Union address. Nevertheless, he is constitutionally not inclined in that direction and lacks the bluntness needed to injure Trump. Biden does not have the “voice” for ruthlessness. Moreover, his surrogates do not appear enough in public to keep up a steady drumbeat.

In effect, the campaign speaks in broad generalities about concepts like “democracy” and “rule of law” that are rarely backed up with stark examples of how Trump has, and will if elected, brutally assault them. They need to point to the GOP’s Heritage Foundation screed, Project 2025, the written plans for Trump’s attack on our government. See gruesome examples galore in their Project 2025 playbook. They are telling us in 900+ pages exactly what they plan for America, it’s a Mein Kampf of sorts.

Hopefully, there is time to remedy this, although it’s unlikely that anything other than a full-on declaration of political war with the Trump campaign will suffice. We’re in deep trouble with our backs to the wall. Let’s pray for the realization of this John Dryden quote:

“Beware the fury of the patient man.”


Another Planet Discovered Within the Universe of Reasons Why We Might Not Survive a Gingrich Presidency

December 11, 2011

At last night’s debate, Gingo got into a pis*ing match with Mitt Romney over Israel/Palestine policy. Who is more macho. Who has courage? Who is timid. Gingrich’s utterly unearned sense of his own bravery, his own singular judgment, in the face of complex international issues is literally frightening. We’ve known this for a long time, but he’s rarely given us a better example of unrestrained, and ultimately galactically irresponsible hubris.
 
Here’s what he said: “I think sometimes it is helpful to have a president of the United States with the courage to tell the truth, just as was Ronald Reagan who went around his entire national security apparatus to call the Soviet Union an evil empire and who overruled his entire State Department in order to say, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” Reagan believed the power of truth restated the world and reframed the world. I am a Reaganite, I’m proud to be a Reaganite. I will tell the truth, even if it’s at the risk of causing some confusion sometimes with the timid.” The perfectly opposite example of this is Newt Gingrich.

In 1985, he told Jane Mayer of The Wall Street Journal that he still believed that “Vietnam was the right battlefield at the right time.” Why didn’t he go? “Given everything I believe in, a large part of me thinks I should have gone over,” he allowed. But, recovering, he added, “Part of the question I had to ask myself was what difference I would have made.”

That wasn’t an appropriate question. He like all those who went to Vietnam had a role to play, an unfortunate role. Gingo would have been the same, he’d have served a role, and “made a difference.” To use the question about whether he’d have made a difference is not a question one asks when called upon to serve one’s country. It’s dissembling. It’s like a card game with a player who has exceptional sleight of hand. A principled way to avoid service is well known: conscientious objection. Gingo’s way was self-serving; dishonesty masquerading as honesty.

The Wounded Stock Market and the Political Abandonment of the Working Class

August 4, 2011

Today, I’m not simply referencing the equities market collapse over the past week, including today’s significant losses as of 2:30 p.m. There are many other reasons for this week’s swan dive. So, eager as I may be to do so, I can’t put this entirely at the door of the GOP and its maniacal dancing monkeys, the Tea party. This week, though, undeniably, the debt “deal” is among the forces decimating equity prices and Americans’ confidence. 

The deal’s unrelenting tight-fisted approach seems, at present, to rule out any fiscal stimulus emerging from Congress. The independent Federal Reserve’s “according to Hoyle” monetary stimulus efforts seem to have done little good stimulating employment growth and lending so far, and it shouldn’t be expected to be helpful in the future. The fed funds rate has for a long time been as low as a snake in a cesspool, and, today, the Treasuries that were almost a pariah two days ago are rallying across the board, sending interest rates lower than low. To what avail after four years of recession? (Note: We never emerged from it in 2009 . . .) And now, without fiscal stimulus, the country and the equally shaky world faces a likely killing dose of American “fiscal austerity” and the further unemployment it brings with it. Who will be able to buy cars, refrigerators, computers, or bubble gum? Who, then, will be able to provide the earnings that could revive this critically sick stock market? 

Well, no one, it seems, in D.C., thought about that very much. The Tea Party wrecking crew pushed our overly accommodating President and most of the Democratic and Republican parties into a final package that will pummel employment at all levels and in all sectors. The debt ceiling deal just signed into law will, perhaps radically, worsen employment, lessen personal income, and diminish already anemic personal spending. If we avoid what would be remembered as the 2nd Great Depression, we need to make some WPA-type Hail Mary passes, and soon. 

For now, though, the Tea Party and the GOP it commands stand stolidly and stubbornly by the windows in their House and watch all this destruction without so much as offering the tiniest ray of hope that we, as a nation, will pull together again as we did in the 1930s. Unfortunately, the President, an apparently conflict averse leader, as well as much of the far too “civil” Democratic party, also watch from afar as well. Just watching, it seems, deeming it too uncivil or uncouth or strenuous to fight for the country. The unindicted co-conspirators.

Flaccid House Democratic Leaders Call for Weiner’s Resignation

His “voluntary” leave of absence announced today – obviously engineered by Pelosi – marks a nearly certain end to the career of a man who took the fight to the enemy with magnificent moxie. And to be sentenced without reflection or rationality by his own political family is shameful. His was a summary execution for offenses of very small consequence, a triumph of “civility” in the face of the shameless and hypocritical party of Vitter/Ensign. Nowhere did Minority Leader Pelosi or DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz call out Louisiana Senator David “Ho’monger” Vitter, nor did Pelosi mention the ethics hearings she had been so charged up about last week.

This new chapter in Weinergate began at 2:00 pm yesterday, when the WaPo reported:

The top leaders in the Democratic party called on embattled Rep. Anthony Weiner (D) to resign Saturday, a potential tipping point in the two-week long scandal involving the New York Democrat’s online liaisons. ‘Congressman Weiner has the love of his family, the confidence of his constituents, and the recognition that he needs help,’ said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.). ‘I urge Congressman Weiner to seek that help without the pressures of being a Member of Congress.’ Of Weiner, Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Fla.) said ‘the behavior he has exhibited is indefensible and Representative Weiner’s continued service in Congress is untenable.’ Weiner spokeswoman Risa Heller said Saturday afternoon that the Congressman ‘departed this morning to seek professional treatment to focus on becoming a better husband and healthier person.’ She added that he would request ‘a short leave of absence from the House’ after which he would make a decision on his political future.’”

Under The Bus, and Then Off The Bridge. O.K., one can agree that the congressman really stepped in it. One can be disgusted with him, disgruntled, or just mystified. I agree, but I’m not going to waste time with all that. So far, what I’ve read and heard leaves me shaking my head, not much more. In the realm of adult-to-adult behavior, Weiner’s offenses were mild, at best;  I certainly can’t volunteer to throw the first – or any subsequent – stone. I felt the same about Republican Chris “Craigslist” Lee when he resigned last February. Neither man had violated so-called “black letter” law.

Weiner’s behavior does bring Congress under a moral microscope, and that too is understandable. In a philosophical sense, though, the House displays far worse moral behavior than Weiner’s – and it’s not remotely sexual. Witness Republican proposals to impoverish millions for the sake of Ayn Rand and Paul Ryan. Sex, though, is a trump card in scandals; one’s urge to look away is always shellacked by one’s curious glee. We’ve all giggled like fourth graders since the story reared its ugly head. When any behavior, sexual or otherwise, crosses into the area of illegality, like non-sexual misdoings of former House Speakers Gingrich and Wright, sanctions are called for, and resignation plausible. When alleged illegality is absent, though, as with Weiner, then only the moral question remains. And for many years, disagreements over morals have divided our country decisively. And sex scandals? Wow.

Given that national moral paralysis, and the obscene choice of letting Congress decide Weiner’s fate, let’s separate our moral opinions of Weiner’s poor judgment, and put this mess where it belongs, in the hands – and votes – of his constituents. Thus far, they’re in his corner. If they want to rid themselves of him, if they consider him a moral wasteland, they will do so in about 17 months in the 2012 election. Period. Paragraph.

Flaccid House Democratic Leadership Quivers. Speaking of morality, is there a level of moral flaccidity so stultifying that it requires a declaration of time of death? If so, the House Dems are trending that way. You can see the quotes above – Pelosi’s astoundingly insincere concern; Wasserman Schultz’s usual moral certainty and overreaction; and the silent others, most of whom couldn’t deign to throw the man a life preserver. Sadly, by and large, this is the Democratic party today. With some exceptions – like the unabashed partisan Weiner – it’s been that way for years.

If You Can Dodge a Wrench, You Can Dodge a Ball.  Here, the Dems once again allowed the GOP to deploy one of their favored tactics: the cynical use our sense of morality against us. It always works like this:

1. Weiner did as wieners do, and got caught, then lied, and thereby injured his wife, family, supporters, constituents, etc. etc.,

2. GOP cynics quickly jump to roundly condemn him. With long faces, shocked demeanor, and self-righteous falderal they lecture him, the Dems, and us just plain folks on the consequences that ought to befall such moral failings, such sexual “creepiness,” to paraphrase the skeevy GOP Chairman, Reince Prieibus.

3. The hypocritical GOP song and dance goes on to boost the favored position of their own party’s family values, and thereby draw in and rally their base constituency (and I mean “base” in both its senses).

4. When it’s pointed out to them that they inexplicably express no concern whatever about the likes of the departed GOP Senator John Ensign, or the (still seated) GOP Senator David Vitter, the GOP en masse goes utterly deaf, and simply pushes aside these questions as irrelevant and improper. 

5. As the aforementioned Reince Priebus told Greta Van Susteren last week, “I’m not here to re-litigate the David Vitter story.” Last night he said the Vitter matter “is a seven year old story.” Wow! A virtuoso. See? Thereafter and forever, as we’ll see, the GOP stays completely on message and cycles it again and again, mentioning God, the dignity of the House, ethics, morals, family values, and all their balderdash.

6. When Democrats – dumbly – think they’re falling behind, that a “morals gap” is opening, they – dumbly – do not fight back, but instead – dumbly – overreact and, in Congressman Weiner’s case, they go for what they believe will be the winning blow, and instead kick themselves in the groin by displaying rank cowardice, and ironically, moral weakness. Isn’t loyalty is a moral act?

Let’s face it, unless it’s revealed that Weiner violated any state or federal law, the likely illegal acts of Vitter and Ensign make Weiner’s bad behavior look like a schoolboy in short pants unleashing a spitball. You see, most of the GOP elite has no interest at all in a definitive set of moral values except as a tool to build a following among their now largely evangelical political base, especially now with the Iowa straw vote approaching. Faking it, however, causes the base to conclude their GOP celebrities are plain folk too, just like them.

Here’s what’s key, though. The Democratic party time and again reacts with a head down long sigh of shame. Do they fight back?  Do they vigorously explain to the American people the Grand Canyon-sized distance between Weiner’s case and Vitter’s or Ensign’s?  Simply put, do they fight for one of their own, regardless of how mixed their feelings are about his abrasive legislative personality? Of course not. Why? To Democrats these days, fighting back with the unvarnished truth about GOP hypocrisy would violate one of their leading principles: don’t look “angry,” or “aggressive,” or, most of all, don’t sink into “incivility.” And that’s how the GOP plays our own values and morals against us, values they do not themselves share, do not even credit.

Sometimes A Cigar Is Just a Cigar – Attributed to Sigmund Freud. This GOP indifference is particularly true of sexual morality – witness David Vitter canoodling with prostitutes as often as his constituents say “Obamacare” on an average day. Look there at Gingo Gingrich, burying his “ethics” in then staffer Callista Bisek (now Callista Gingrich) at the same time he was driving the country insane trying to impeach Bill Clinton. How about Speaker-elect Bob Livingston who was to succeed Gingo after he resigned? This “family values” guy was rabid for Clinton’s impeachment. Oh, and which Louisiana politico replaced Mr. Livingston? Another “family values” guy, David Vitter! This cynical use of moral beliefs held by their constituents pays off at the ballot box, and then, in office they work steadfastly against the needs of the very plain folk who bought their bill of goods and put them in office.

So, by pushing Congressman Weiner to resign, the Democratic party leadership, and the vast majority of the Dem caucus, have as usual fallen headlong and clueless into the GOP trap. They allowed the GOP, that pack of lying hypocrites, to determine Democratic tactics. To avoid at all costs the appearance of having backbones, Pelosi, Wasserman Schultz, and the weasel pack ran sniveling and panicked into the deep hole prepared by the GOP. This will, in its cowardice, as always, cause some more voters to turn away from the “Democrat” party in disgust. Civility in answer to provocation is not a moral victory, it’s a moral failing.