Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Right Wing Fascism In The USA

Welcome friends!

I read a rather comical discussion online the other day in which someone argued anti-democracy conservatives and Republicans here in the USA cannot properly be called “fascists” because in his or her estimation fascism is a “leftist” political movement and conservatives and Republicans are opposed to leftism. My first thought was, if the comment was meant at all sincerely, and one never knows these days, one can only assume it came from an unusually poorly educated young person because surely anyone else would be sufficiently familiar with the history of the twentieth century to perceive the important distinction between right wing, anti-democracy, authoritarian fascism and its mortal enemy left wing, anti-democracy, authoritarian communism. However, after a few additional moments of thought, it occurred to me the element that distinguishes the two, the economic dimension, the significance of the distribution of economic power and the use of that economic power in markets to resolve interpersonal conflicts, are exactly those elements of economics so studiously and self-consciously submerged by what my fellow traveller, Hansel Krankepantzen, would call bad economics, by which he has in mind certain ubiquitous misinterpretations of neoclassical welfare economics that systematically draw attention away from issues relating to the distribution and use of economic power in markets, the role of government force in establishing and maintaining markets, and the important role of democratic government in deciding the ethical issues relevant to evaluating markets.

In bad economics, and the bad folk economics it engenders, such as so-called “libertarianism,” “Austrian” economics, fake market based anarchism (I believe called “anarcho-capitalism” or some such), markets do not require government force to be created or maintained, there is no system defined by government and law to distribute economic power, and markets don’t really resolve interpersonal conflict on the basis of economic power. Instead, a market economy is “free” and everyone involved has the “liberty” to do whatever he or she likes, there is no social conflict, everyone gets exactly what they want or deserve, and the only thing democratic government does is interfere and render everyone less free. Young people, and those prone more to fantasy and magical thinking, appear to imagine spontaneous laws that spring forth and are followed with no enforcement or justice system required. More mature and realistic people who understand the role of government in creating and maintaining market system imagine an authoritarian system impervious to the problems and machinations of democratic government, that is to say, incapable of being captured by the ethically compromised hoi polloi and used as a weapon to interfere with ethically correct market results, pick people’s pockets, take from the virtuous rich and give to the deservedly poor, and so on.

Setting aside the young and those oriented to fantasy, who as always inhabit their own special world older and more reasonable people could never hope to enter, the likely reason the more mature and realistic element of the conservative and Republican movements don’t appreciate the relationship between the non-democratic, plutocratic, authoritarian government they have in mind and old time European fascism is American conservatives and Republicans want and suppose the non-democratic, authoritarian government they have in mind will be small, while the non-democratic, authoritarian governments associated with the European fascist movements were big, and they believe accepting big government is invariably a leftist idea. That is to say, rather than that looking at the distinction between mortal enemies fascism and communism in an intellectually serious way, focusing on questions of social power and who wields it, the intent or purpose of the governments, the difference in situations of the people who support the one or the other, they look to something rather less well defined and conceptually significant, the ostensible size of the government sector, and conclude risibly that fascism and communism were basically the same thing and all the fighting and warfare was really for nothing.

With that sort of thought process in mind, I thought it might be worthwhile to suggest European fascism wasn’t authoritarian big government for shits and giggles. That is to say, it’s rather difficult to imagine anyone supporting fascism because they thought it might be nice to have a large, powerful government sector. It seems rather more likely fascism led to a big and pervasive government sector for two very sensible reasons: 1) security and self-preservation, and 2) economic expediency. Let’s consider those two in turn.

I would suggest one important impulse for the relative size and power of the government sector in European fascism was simply the need to prevent what they considered morally corrupt supporters of political democracy and leftists in general from “interfering” with the “free market” and the power of the economic elite, which supported fascism specifically because of its undoubted ability to crack down on organized labor, preserve their economic power, prevent them paying taxes especially for programs they did not support, and ensure they could wield their enormous economic power without interference on the market. Turns out in a country like Germany of that time one needed a rather large and draconian government security sector to prevent unrest, stop people organizing, keep a lid on free speech, control media and academia, and promote propaganda positive to the government. Keeping everyone in line in a fascist society is a big deal.

The other important impulse for the eventual size of the government sector in European fascism was likely simple economics. Stimulating economic growth is always of paramount importance in very unequal economic systems in which government cannot address distributional issues directly or separately from economic growth. To keep the less well off portion of the population on board and thinking things are getting better for them specifically while not inconveniencing in any way those who already hold vast economic power far beyond their practical needs, economic growth must be robust enough that the rising tide lifts even the most broken down and derelict of boats. The fascists hit pretty quickly upon the power of what we would now call Keynesian fiscal policy to get their economies moving, launching military and infrastructure stimulus spending sprees. However, even that appears to have been inadequate to their needs, and they famously settled on continuous, aggressive warfare as the engine they thought would make their economic machine go where it needed to go, while also enriching the economic elite, and allowing the fascist political elite to expand their political power. It was what we in the USA we would call a win-win situation, at least until they rather unexpectedly met their comeuppance militarily, in which it rapidly transformed into a lose-lose situation, albeit with the economic elite surviving rather more in tact than the political elite. In that context, it might be noted there does seem to have been some development in the relationship between the fascist political elite and the economic and business elite that supported them over time with the fascist political elite eventually throwing their weight about more and more as they consolidated power even to the point of occasionally lambasting free market economics as a Jewish plot when it suggested conclusions that did not fit their military and economic agenda, and the economic and business elite, formerly the driving force and great patrons of the fascist movement, arguably became more of a silent and somewhat abused partner, but they were certainly never at odds entirely. The fascist political elite was always on warm terms with the business and free market oriented economic elite of the day.

Given these rather predictable reasons for the eventual size of the European fascist state, there seems little reason to suppose the trajectory of American fascism would be significantly different however much American conservatives and Republicans suppose their movement entirely different because of their focus, initially at least, on small non-democratic, authoritarian government. Comically, of course, it seems quite likely the government would continue to appear “small” to American fascists even if it followed the same trajectory as European fascism because government would be confined to only those activities they believe necessary, which is really the only sensible definition of the size of the government sector in the first place. In a market system government is inevitably and necessarily large at least along the dimension of creating, maintain, and enforcing the laws that make property, contracts, and markets possible. What one wants to add to that function while contending the government remains suitably small seems a rather subjective exercise. National defense? It’s not a small undertaking by any means. Other activities?

Of course, the similarity of modern American conservatism and Republicanism to European fascism is not simply the anti-democracy element nor the intent of preserving the current distribution of economic power and preventing society from interfering with the unrestricted exercise of that economic power in markets. European fascism famously made great political use of racism, nativism, and nationalism. It was famously corrupt, lawless, and nepotistic. It was anti-intellectual and relied heavily on simple violence and intimidation. It focused great energy on disinformation, propaganda, the staging of mass rallies, and so on. One cannot even list these non-essential characteristics of European fascism without being immediately struck by the many obvious similarities to the current American strain of fascism represented by conservatives and the Republican Party.

So what’s the conclusion? Fascism was and is a right wing political movement predicated on doing whatever is necessary to maintain the “free market” and defend the power of the economic elite from potential interference by political democracy as well as anti-democratic leftist political movements like communism. Anti-democracy, plutocratic, market based American conservatism and Republicanism is a right wing, fascist movement. However, at the end of the day, deciding the definition of fascism and determining the right wing and arguably left wing elements is very much an intellectual side show. The danger posed by the recent anti-democracy activity we’ve been seeing by right wing conservatives and Republicans is the same whether one recognizes it as a form of fascism or not. 

Saturday, January 9, 2021

The Republican Attack On Democracy In The USA 2021

Welcome friends!

I thought I might take a day off and just do a little side post today to make my own personal historical record of the one hundred and forty-seven conservative and Republican politicians in the US Congress who voted in January 2012 to destroy American democracy by throwing out the Electoral College votes from certain US states in order to steal the recent presidential election at the Congressional level for the Republican candidate, Mr. Donald Trump. I’m sure the information is already recorded in a variety of places, but it seems too important an event to not make a record of my own of some kind. It will make me feel a little more comfortable knowing I’ve done what I can to ensure Americans never forget the events of January 6, 2021. A day that will live forever in infamy in the historical accounts of our great nation.

Just to review, the Electoral College votes these Republican politicians attempted to throw out had previously all been properly certified by state election authorities, after any audits and recounts they found necessary, according to well established legal procedures. The Republicans had previously filed multiple lawsuits alleging voting irregularities, none of which went anywhere in the US legal system because of a lack of evidence. The Republican politicians attempting to subvert democracy offered two official pretexts for their unprecedented attempt to substitute their own opinions, whims, feelings, preferences for the will of the American electorate. One pretext was the evidence-free allegations of voting irregularities. The other pretext was ostensibly popular outrage those same Republican politicians had laboriously manufactured over the preceding two months on the basis of the evidence-free allegations of voting irregularities. What made the history making attempt to undermine American democracy all the more notable was that it was accompanied by a well televised storming of the US Capitol Building by an angry and violent mob of Republicans, who had been egged on shortly before by president Trump and his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who exhorted the rabble to “fight like hell” and engage in a “trial by combat” in favor of their preferred candidate, Mr. Trump. The intent was clearly to use the attack by the violent mob on the US capital as either a means of directing attention away from the attempt to destroy American democracy in Congress or to serve the role of the burning of the Reichstag in the ascension of the fascist Nazi Party in early twentieth century Germany, in which the attack on an important government facility was offered up as evidence of popular unrest that supposedly only the suspension of democracy and installation of a fascist dictator could quell. The violent attack on the Capitol by the Republican mob resulted in the death of a member of the Capitol Police force, as well as some Republican attackers.

Although the entire Republican contingent in Congress had spent the previous four years in unanimous, lock-step support of everything president Trump said and did, excusing him even his impeachment for abuse of power, a number of them balked at this final and most conclusive stage of undermining American democracy. The actions of the entire Republican contingent in Congress in the years 2016 through 2020 led to and enabled the final assault on American democracy on January 6, 2021, but the cold feet of a number of them on the day of the outrage itself affords them a pass in this record. What I would like to record are that miserable subset who not only eagerly set the stage but enthusiastically plunged in the dagger in a vain attempt to conclusively kill democracy in our great nation.

Long live democracy in the USA!


The ringleaders of the Republican attempt to destroy democracy in the USA were as follows:


Senator Josh Hawley (Republican - Missouri)

Senator Ted Cruz (Republican - Texas)


There were joined in the Senate by the following six Senators:


Sen. Tommy Tuberville (Republican - Alabama)

Sen. Rick Scott (Republican - Florida)

Sen. Roger Marshall (Republican - Kansas)

Sen. John Kennedy (Republican - Louisiana)

Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (Republican - Mississippi)

Sen. Cynthia Lummis (Republican - Wyoming)


They were joined in the House of Representatives by the following one hundred and thirty-nine Representatives:


Rep. Robert B. Aderholt (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Mo Brooks (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Jerry Carl (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Barry Moore (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Gary Palmer (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Mike Rogers (Republican - Alabama)

Rep. Andy Biggs (Republican - Arizona)

Rep. Paul Gosar (Republican - Arizona)

Rep. Debbie Lesko (Republican - Arizona)

Rep. David Schweikert (Republican - Arizona)

Rep. Rick Crawford (Republican - Arkansas)

Rep. Ken Calvert (Republican - California)

Rep. Mike Garcia (Republican - California)

Rep. Darrell Issa (Republican - California)

Rep. Doug LaMalfa (Republican - California)

Rep. Kevin McCarthy (Republican - California)

Rep. Devin Nunes (Republican - California)

Rep. Jay Obernolte (Republican - California)

Rep. Lauren Boebert, (Republican - Colorado)

Rep. Doug Lamborn (Republican - Colorado)

Rep. Kat Cammack (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Byron Donalds (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Neal Dunn (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Scott Franklin (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Matt Gaetz (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Carlos Gimenez (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Brian Mast (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Bill Posey (Republican - Florida)

Rep. John Rutherford (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Greg Steube (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Daniel Webster (Republican - Florida)

Rep. Rick Allen (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Earl L. "Buddy" Carter (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Andrew Clyde (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Jody Hice (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Barry Loudermilk (Republican - Georgia)

Rep. Russ Fulcher (Republican - Idaho)

Rep. Mike Bost (Republican - Illinois)

Rep. Mary Miller (Republican - Illinois)

Rep. Jim Baird (Republican - Indiana)

Rep. Jim Banks (Republican - Indiana)

Reo. Greg Pence (Republican - Indiana)

Rep. Jackie Walorski (Republican - Indiana) 

Rep. Ron Estes (Republican - Kansas)

Rep. Jacob LaTurner Republican - Kansas)

Rep. Tracey Mann (Republican - Kansas)

Rep. Harold Rogers (Republican - Kentucky)

Rep. Garret Graves (Republican - Louisiana)

Rep. Clay Higgins (Republican - Louisiana)

Rep. Mike Johnson (Republican - Louisiana)

Rep. Steve Scalise (Republican - Louisiana)

Rep. Andy Harris ((Republican - Maryland) 

Rep. Jack Bergman (Republican - Michigan)

Rep. Lisa McClain (Republican - Michigan)

Rep. Tim Walberg  (Republican - Michigan)

Rep.  Michelle Fischbach (Republican - Minnesota)

Rep. Jim Hagedorn (Republican - Minnesota)

Rep. Michael Guest (Republican - Mississippi)

Rep. Trent Kelly (Republican - Mississippi)

Rep. Steven Palazzo (Republican - Mississippi) 

Rep. Sam Graves (Republican - Missouri)

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (Republican - Missouri)

Rep. Billy Long (Republican - Missouri)

Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (Republican - Missouri)

Rep. Jason Smith (Republican - Missouri)

Rep. Matt Rosendale (Republican - Montana)

Rep. Dan Bishop (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Ted Budd (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Madison Cawthorn (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Virginia Foxx (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Richard Hudson (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Gregory F. Murphy (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. David Rouzer (Republican - North Carolina)

Rep. Jeff Van Drew (Republican - New Jersey)

Rep. Yvette Herrell (Republican - New Mexico)

Rep. Chris Jacobs (Republican - New York)

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (Republican - New York) 

Rep. Elise M. Stefanik (Republican - New York)

Rep. Lee Zeldin (Republican - New York) 

Rep. Adrian Smith (Republican - Nebraska)

Rep. Steve Chabot (Republican - Ohio)

Rep. Warren Davidson (Republican - Ohio)

Rep. Bob Gibbs (Republican - Ohio)

Rep. Bill Johnson (Republican - Ohio)

Rep. Jim Jordan (Republican - Ohio)

Rep. Stephanie Bice (Republican - Oklahoma)

Rep. Tom Cole (Republican - Oklahoma)

Rep. Kevin Hern (Republican - Oklahoma)

Rep. Frank Lucas (Republican - Oklahoma)

Rep. Markwayne Mullin (Republican - Oklahoma)

Rep. Cliff Bentz (Republican - Oregon) 

Rep. John Joyce (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Fred Keller (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Mike Kelly (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Daniel Meuser (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Scott Perry (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Lloyd Smucker (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Glenn Thompson (Republican - Pennsylvania)

Rep. Jeff Duncan (Republican - South Carolina)

Rep. Ralph Norman (Republican - South Carolina)

Rep. Tom Rice (Republican - South Carolina)

Rep. William Timmons (Republican - South Carolina)

Rep. Joe Wilson (Republican - South Carolina)

Rep. Tim Burchett (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. Scott DesJarlais (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. Chuck Fleischmann (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. Mark E. Green (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. Diana Harshbarger (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. David Kustoff (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. John Rose (Republican - Tennessee)

Rep. Jodey Arrington (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Brian Babin (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Michael C. Burgess (Republican - Texas)

Rep.  John R. Carter (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Michael Cloud (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Pat Fallon (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Louie Gohmert (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Lance Gooden (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Ronny Jackson (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Troy Nehls (Republican - Texas)

Rep. August Pfluger (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Pete Sessions (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Beth Van Duyne (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Randy Weber (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Roger Williams (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Ron Wright (Republican - Texas)

Rep. Burgess Owens (Republican - Utah)

Rep. Chris Stewart (Republican - Utah)

Rep. Ben Cline (Republican - Virginia)

Rep. Bob Good (Republican - Virginia)

Rep. Morgan Griffith (Republican - Virginia)

Rep. Robert J. Wittman (Republican - Virginia)

Rep. Carol Miller (Republican - West Virginia)

Rep. Alexander X. Mooney (Republican - West Virginia)

Rep. Scott Fitzgerald (Republican - Wisconsin)

Rep. Tom Tiffany (Republican - Wisconsin)


Reference


The 147 Republicans Who Voted To Overturn Election Results. Yourish, Karen; Buchanan, Larry; and Lu, Denise. January 7, 2021. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/01/07/us/elections/electoral-college-biden-objectors.html?action=click&module=Spotlight&pgtype=Homepage.

Thursday, January 7, 2021

The Storming Of the US Capitol 2021

Welcome friends!

I wasn’t really intending to post on this site again so soon, but my oh my, did you happen to watch TV yesterday and witness the violent mob storming the US Capitol? It was something I certainly never thought Id see in my lifetime. It was horrifying, of course, but also weirdly entertaining. Certainly an unusual sight to see the unwashed hordes of fascist fanatics and homegrown American terrorists running riot in those august surroundings, hanging from the balconies, making off with the speaker’s podium, awkwardly slouching behind desks, muddy clodhoppers plonked proudly atop papers they likely could never comprehend if they had a thousand years to study them. What an amazing spectacle. We had comical figures like the semi-clad fellow with the face paint and Viking horns who apparently thought he was going to a football match. We had pretend policemen and pretend soldiers. We had ominous, vaguely Middle Eastern style hooded figures with zip ties in hand apparently looking for victims to kidnap and murder, an echo of the similar anti-democracy criminality that took place recently in Lansing, the state capital of Michigan, in which a similar mob was intent on kidnapping and murdering the governor of the state. And so many flags. You’d think our fascist nation within a nation would settle on one or the other. We had the incongruously blue flag of Trump Country, of course, but also the flag of the old Confederacy, what looked like a flag of Texas but with an assault rifle superimposed, a flag with a cross that looked vaguely like the Iron Cross of Germany, the flag of Mr. Trump done up as a character from the Rambo movies, the state flag of Michigan, and many, many others. I even saw, rather comically, a few US flags, the stars and stripes, being carried by what one can only presume were the most colossally clueless of the bunch. We had secret hand signals being flashed for the cameras. No, not that one. I mean weird groupings of fingers flashed in a particular sequence in the manner of childhood clubhouses and drug gangs everywhere. We had Neo-Nazis with T-shirts extolling Auschwitz and carrying large, hand scrawled placards about circumcision and so on. I’m telling you, it was a regular three ring circus. For all my foreign readers, who I sometimes suspect may not have an accurate idea of what the USA is really like, please do take a look at some videos of the remarkable event so you can get up to speed on the real America, as opposed to the fake, honey glazed, Hollywood version.

In addition to our public airing of the seamy underside of violent, right wing, anti-democracy, American redneck culture, the event was interesting because it had been immediately preceded by a rabble rousing speech by the outgoing president of the USA, billionaire puppet master Donald Trump, who apparently wanted a demonstration of popular support for his latest con: stealing the recent presidential election after the fact with the help of Congressional Republicans on the risibly flimsy pretext of alleged voting irregularities, which have already been thoroughly vetted by our legal system and basically thrown out of every court in which they have appeared for lack of evidence. Don’t exactly see that every day either. Mr. Trump, a former spoiled rich boy, bankruptcy artist, TV reality show star, and in the past several years Twitter personality, has always prided himself on his ability to whip up large crowds of imbeciles, and he was certainly in his element on the day, hamming it up for the crowd, exhorting the rabble to “fight like hell,” declaring in his best feeble minded American parody of Mr. Churchill, “We will never give up! We will never concede!,” and encouraging his base to be strong. No, not strong in the sense of having the emotional maturity to graciously accept defeat in a democratic election. Are you kidding me? Nazi strong. Willing to bash as many innocent heads as necessary, at least until confronted by an equal or stronger opposing force. His redoubtable stagecraft was augmented by an appearance of his personal ghoul, a ghastly apparition many call Rudy Giuliani, who backed up the president by calling for a “trial by combat.” Actually, that was pretty comical. Can one imagine that nitwit as a medieval knight going to a joust only to show up at the wrong venue, makeup running down his face, babbling nonsense? Or I guess the actual combat was meant to be undertaken by the mob of angry peasants, not by Mr. Giuliani himself, which seems even more comically misinformed. Of course, after the event, during which four of Mr. Trump’s minions died for one reason or another, one from the rather obvious cause of being shot by a guard, Mr. Trump did appear to pledge to what he called a peaceful transition using someone else’s Twitter account, as his own Twitter account had been shut down indefinitely for spreading dangerous and fact free conspiracy theories. Apparently, his felt his people had made his point. However, he was not so uncouth as to just let them die and say nothing at all. He thanked them for their service, saying, “You’re very special,” which is a phrase often used to comic effect here in the USA. He also noted his struggle to topple American democracy had really just begun, noting “it’s only the beginning of our fight.”

Interestingly, on the day, a total of one hundred and forty-seven Republicans in Congress ended up supporting Mr. Trump’s scheme to do away with American democracy, agreeing with Nazi youth leader impersonator Sen. Hawley (Republican - Missouri) and professional right wing agitator and southern good old boy first class, Sen. Cruz (Republican - Texas), that the US Congress should throw out the actual votes delivered from the states in favor of their own opinions or feelings about who should prevail in the election based apparently on their gut feelings, “people are talking,” or on a political calculus of some sort or other, but anyway certainly not for the ostensible reason proffered as the official rationale. As I mentioned earlier, it’s been well established at this point there is no factual basis or real substance to any of Mr. Trump’s various whoppers and tall tales about voting irregularities, which he may or may not sincerely believe, and which he seems to have gotten off the internet from sources unknown. Although it’s difficult to determine if Mr. Trump’s apparent ignorance and enthusiasm is the result of stupidity or a foxy feigned stupidity, one must presume the latter based on his history of business scams and cons of various sorts, there can be no such uncertainty about the one hundred and forty-seven Republicans in the US Congress. One can rest assured they harbor no illusions about the facts of the matter. Whether these politicians felt the mob trashing the Capitol helped or hindered their cause is anyone’s bet. The events certainly didn’t seem to bother them to any great degree, that much seems clear. One supposes they were satisfied with how it all played out on the various crackpot and fake news media that cater exclusively to right wingers, conservatives, and Republicans here in the USA.

So there you have it. The slide from a problematic, big money saturated, not entirely representational but moderately functioning political democracy to a fascistic, anything goes power grab supported by violent street mobs, took only four short years of conservative and Republican leadership to engineer. Seems they can do something after all, when they set their minds to it. On the bright side, the results do not appear to be what they had in mind, as they’ve managed to lose control of the White House and both houses of Congress in the process. One senses if they’re going to seize power in the future it won’t be through our democratic political institutions. No, seems there’s still some fight in the old USA after all. One imagines foreign despots like Tsar Vladimir of Russia being convinced if they helped Mr. Trump and our right wing conservatives and Republicans win the 2016 elections, if they gave American democracy a little nudge toward the abyss, the entire thing would collapse in short order, but seems we’re not quite as bad off as all that. There’s still some fight left in American liberals, progressives, and democratic leftists of all stripes. We’re not ready to accept conservative and Republican plutocratic, market-based fascism just yet. Long live democracy in the USA!

Addendum

After I wrote my post, the always unpredictable Mr. Trump finally delivered a video address in which he promised a “smooth, orderly, seamless transition of power” and referenced his presidency in the past tense. One must give credit when credit is due, no matter how late in the day nor how routine the activity may be for others. In the immortal words of President Trump, “America is and must always be a nation of law and order. The demonstrators who infiltrated the Capitol have defiled the seat of American democracy ... To those who engaged in the acts of violence and destruction: You do not represent our country. And to those who broke the law: You will pay.” So there you have it, again. Oh yes, and the body count increased by one, as a member of the Capitol Police died from injuries sustained during the attack.