Accountability vs. Immunity

Defendant’s four-year service as Commander in Chief did not bestow on him the divine right of kings to evade the criminal accountability that governs his fellow citizens.

Judge Tanya Chutkan

There’s no featured post this week.

This week everybody was talking about the war in Gaza

Which is back on. Fighting resumed on Friday morning, with each side blaming the other.

During the seven-day ceasefire, Hamas agreed to release 110 people from Gaza, including 78 Israeli women and children. As part of the deal, 240 Palestinians were also released from Israeli jails. They had been accused of a range of offences, from throwing stones to incitement and attempted murder. … It is estimated that about 140 Israeli hostages remain in captivity in Gaza.

Israel has resumed bombing, and its forces have begun moving into the southern part of Gaza. Hamas is again firing rockets into Israel.


Thursday, the NYT revealed that Israel had the Hamas attack plan for over a year. Israeli officials apparently ignored the plan, which Hamas “followed with shocking precision” on October 7.

The document circulated widely among Israeli military and intelligence leaders, but experts determined that an attack of that scale and ambition was beyond Hamas’s capabilities, according to documents and officials.

Josh Marshall adds:

Very recently, ground-level analysts monitoring video surveillance of activity in Gaza saw evidence that Hamas was war-gaming and running drills for attacks that looked like components of Jericho Wall. One analyst repeatedly pressed the issue with higher-ups, but her effort to raise the alarm was again disregarded.

His column doesn’t identify a source for that information.


Politically in the US, the Gaza War has been bad for Biden, but not for the reason a lot of people think. He is undoubtedly losing votes on the left for being too pro-Israel, but he would probably lose more votes if he were more critical of Israel. (“Biden is siding with the terrorists!”)

Biden will lose votes whatever he does, because Israel/Palestine is a wedge issue that splits Democrats, but not Republicans. Republicans would probably be happy with anything Israel did, even to the point of an actual genocide. (Aside: Whatever you think of Israel’s treatment of Palestinians, it’s not genocide. Genocide is too important a word to ruin through misuse.)

Similarly, the Ukraine War is a wedge issue that splits Republicans, but not Democrats. Democrats are united behind Ukraine. Meanwhile Putin remains a hero to many MAGA Republicans, even as establishment Republicans agree with Democrats in supporting Ukraine.


I know it’s too much to expect that people will take a step back and think rationally about an issue, but if they did, they’d see that the Gaza War validates a liberal rather than conservative view of how to maintain peace. In its simplest form, the conservative idea is peace-through-strength: If we’re strong enough and tough enough, no one will attack us because they’ll know they will suffer more than we will.

The liberal vision is peace-through-justice: If everyone is getting a square deal, they won’t want to risk it by going to war.

In their purest forms, both visions are naive; real peace requires both strength and justice. But I think liberals understand that, while I don’t think conservatives do. The Hamas attack exposed the folly of the Netanyahu peace-through-strength policy. If people feel aggrieved enough, they won’t care that a war will hurt them more than you. They’ll risk their lives to bite your ankle.

and the Trump trials

Trump’ claims of presidential immunity were denied by two different D. C. federal courts Friday. A three-judge panel of the D.C. Court of Appeals rejected his motion to dismiss a civil lawsuit filed by two U.S. Capitol police officers and several Democratic lawmakers against Trump and a few other individuals and groups they want held responsible for the January 6 violence. And District Judge Tanya Chutkan rejected his motion to dismiss Jack Smith’s election interference indictment.

Nothing in the Constitution explicitly immunizes a current or former president from legal processes. However, certain kinds of immunity have been recognized by the courts: Presidents are immune from lawsuits against the consequences of carrying out their duties. And longstanding DoJ policy, based on a memo by its Office of Legal Counsel, says that a sitting president can’t be indicted. (That doctrine has never been tested in court.) And courts have recognized a vague principle that at some point, legal harassment of a president might reach the point that it violates the separation of powers between the executive and judicial branches of government.

In his motions, Trump was asking the courts to expand that immunity to vast proportions. His arguments were slapped down in both cases.

Both motions were for dismissing the cases without a trial. Dismissal motions have to clear a very high bar, because they’re claiming that a trial can’t possibly reveal anything that would matter. So the judge has to assume that the claims made by the prosecutors or plaintiffs are true, and conclude that no penalty would apply anyway.

The appeals court ruled that the civil case against Trump needs to go forward, because it’s not obvious that Trump’s actions related to the January 6 riot were part of his job.

The President, though, does not spend every minute of every day exercising official responsibilities. And when he acts outside the functions of his office, he does not continue to enjoy immunity from damages liability just because he happens to be the President.

This kind of compartmentalization has never registered with Trump. In his mind, there was no separation between his person and his presidency. If the president had some power, then he had that power, to wield as he saw fit, independent of whether he was carrying out some official duty.

Judge Chutkan ruled similarly: Committing crimes is not part of a president’s job, so crimes allegedly committed while in office can be prosecuted. (Whether those crimes were or were not committed should be decided at trial.) And she need not settle the presidential-indictment question here, because Trump is not president.

Whatever immunities a sitting President may enjoy, the United States has only one Chief Executive at a time, and that position does not confer a lifelong “get-out-of-jail-free” pass. Former Presidents enjoy no special conditions on their federal criminal liability. Defendant may be subject to federal investigation, indictment, prosecution, conviction, and punishment for any criminal acts undertaken while in office

Chutkan also denied a motion claiming that the Smith indictment should be dismissed because it criminalizes speech protected by the First Amendment.

[I]t is well established that the First Amendment does not protect speech that is used as an instrument of a crime, and consequently the Indictment—which charges Defendant with, among other things, making statements in furtherance of a crime—does not violate Defendant’s First
Amendment rights.

The question of whether Trump’s false claims about the 2020 election were part of a criminal plot has to be decided at trial.

While Defendant challenges that allegation in his Motion, and may do so at trial, his claim that his belief was reasonable does not implicate the First Amendment. If the Government cannot prove beyond a reasonable doubt at trial that Defendant knowingly made false statements, he will not be convicted; that would not mean the Indictment violated the First Amendment.


Meanwhile, there are the gag orders. WaPo keeps track of which ones are active: Judge Chutkan’s order preventing Trump from disparaging prosecutors, witnesses and court personnel involved in his trial is suspended while the appellate court considers it. They might rule any day now.

Judge Engoron’s order preventing Trump from attacking court personnel is currently in force as an appeals court evaluates it.


After normalizing Trump for many years, many voices in the mainstream media finally seems to be acknowledging his threat to America’s constitutional democracy. Thursday, WaPo editor-at-large Robert Kagan published “A Trump dictatorship is increasingly inevitable. We should stop pretending.

Today’s NYT has an article “Why a Second Trump Presidency May Be More Radical than His First“. The authors note that Trump has always had “autocratic impulses”, dating back to his praise of the Chinese massacre of the Tiananmen Square demonstrators, and reflected in his admiration for autocrats like Saddam Hussein or the Philippines’ Rodrigo Duterte, not to mention Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping.

What would be different in a second Trump administration is not so much his character as his surroundings. Forces that somewhat contained his autocratic tendencies in his first term — staff members who saw their job as sometimes restraining him, a few congressional Republicans episodically willing to criticize or oppose him, a partisan balance on the Supreme Court that occasionally ruled against him — would all be weaker.

Princeton Professor Jan-Werner Müller has a similar article in The Guardian. He observes that establishment-Republican institutions like the Heritage Foundation are now on board with a Trump autocracy.

Trump is not hiding anything; nor does a figure like the Heritage president, who considers Hungary “not just a model for conservative statecraft, but the model”.


Liz Cheney’s book Oath and Honor comes out this week. Early reports portray it as an insider’s view of how the Republican Party officials caved in to Trump, even as they criticized and even laughed at him privately.

and Elon’s breakdown

Elon Musk is further gone than I thought. In an interview Wednesday at the NYT DealBook summit, he told companies who have responded to his antisemitic tweets by pulling their ads from X to “Go fuck yourself.”

If someone is going to try to blackmail me with advertising, blackmail me with money, go fuck yourself. GO. FUCK. YOUR. SELF.

You can watch the video. He clearly expected the audience to applaud his courageous stance, but instead there was a stunned silence. The interviewer (Andrew Ross Sorkin) then asked about “the economics of X”, which relies on advertising revenue to survive. And Elon responded:

What this advertising boycott is going to do, it’s going to kill the company. … And the whole world will know that those advertisers killed the company. We’ll document it in great detail.

When Sorkin explained how the advertisers would justify themselves, Musk countered:

Tell it to Earth. … Let’s see how Earth responds to that.

Elon seems convinced that he is the hero of this story, and that the People of Earth will frame events the way he does. How dare companies like Disney choose to spend their advertising dollars somewhere else? How dare they decide that displaying a trailer for “Wish” next to some white supremacist rant doesn’t serve their purposes? The People of Earth are so attached to the X platform and so enamored of Elon himself that they will make Disney pay for such arrogance.

Unsurprisingly, advertisers did not flock back to X after Musk’s threat to expose them to “Earth”.

Three things are worth pointing out here: First, Musk’s attempt to turn this into a free-speech issue falls flat. Sure: Antisemites, racists, misogynists, and even outright swastika-waving Nazis have a right to speak their minds and try to make converts. But they are not entitled to have someone else sponsor a platform for them.

And second, I see Elon’s stewardship of X as part of what Cory Doctorow calls “the Great Enshittening” of the internet. I would gladly spend my X-time elsewhere if some alternative platform achieved a critical mass of users, and I welcome X’s looming demise because it might create space for something better to emerge.

As for Musk himself, I see him as the kind of tragic figure Aeschylus would have found fascinating. Like the Trump saga, Elon’s story demonstrates that being worshiped is bad for mortals. Almost no humans have enough strength of character to stay sane once they’ve been surrounded by a cadre of worshipers the way Elon has.

One of the things I admire most about Barack Obama is that he has shown the good sense to keep our admiration at arm’s length.

and the Biden economy

GDP growth after inflation was 5.2% in the third quarter, which is a stunning number. At its peak in the third quarter of 2019, the Trump economy posted 4.6% growth.

The US economy continues to lead the G7 countries.

The inflation rate is now lower than when Biden took office.

And what about the claim that Biden has been bad for US oil production?


The continuing good economic news contrasts with the public view that the economy is in bad shape. David Roberts refers to this as the “vibes” problem, which Democrats have to get better at addressing.

Substantive accomplishments — even the ones the public says on polls they want/like — are not enough, in & of themselves, to win political approval. They don’t advertise themselves or tell their own story. The channels through which the public has traditionally been informed about political accomplishments have become fragmented, polluted, and dominated by lavishly funded right wingers. They can’t be relied on. … In other words, Dems are winning the war of substance but losing the vibes war, largely because they don’t seem to realize that those two fights have drifted almost entirely apart.

and you also might be interested in …

Henry Kissinger died at 100, inspiring obituaries like “Henry Kissinger, War Criminal Beloved by America’s Ruling Class, Finally Dies“. Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Chile … if you live long enough, all your crimes start to sound like ancient history.

But what I had thought was Kissinger’s most lasting contribution to American culture turns out not to be true: He wasn’t the model for Dr. Strangelove.

It is frequently claimed the character was based on Henry Kissinger, but Kubrick and Sellers denied this; Sellers said: “Strangelove was never modeled after Kissinger—that’s a popular misconception. It was always Wernher von Braun.” Furthermore, Henry Kissinger points out in his memoirs that at the time of the writing of Dr. Strangelove, he was a little-known academic.


Sandra Day O’Connor also died. The first woman to serve on the Supreme Court, she lived to be 93. Appointed by Ronald Reagan, she was the kind of conservative justice that today’s conservatives abhor. She wasn’t driven by ideology. Instead, the facts of the case mattered to her, and you couldn’t predict her vote without examining them. Politico summarizes:

[H]er decisions and her reasoning demonstrated a constant attention to the proper role of the Supreme Court as a nonpartisan arbiter of hot-button issues in American life, to the actual facts about the actual parties, and to the way in which the bench’s rulings would be experienced by the American public. … The strategy of the Roberts Court, however, has been strikingly different.


Republicans have begun talking about having a health care plan again. I say “again” not because they have had a health care plan in the past, but because they talk about having a plan every now and then.

Back in 2015 Trump promised a “terrific”, “phenomenal”, and “fantastic” system to replace ObamaCare. But once in office, he left the details to Republicans in Congress, who never united around any particular proposal. Their slogan of “repeal and replace” was always light on the “replace” side. When John McCain delivered the final vote needed to save ObamaCare in 2017, his office’s statement said:

While the amendment would have repealed some of Obamacare’s most burdensome regulations, it offered no replacement to actually reform our health care system and deliver affordable, quality health care to our citizens.

Nothing has changed in the last six years. Trump is now talking again about repealing ObamaCare.

Trump’s campaign is drawing up a health care proposal, although it is unclear when that will be released or if it will propose a full replacement plan (Republicans have struggled to put one together for years).

Not to be outdone, Ron DeSantis is also talking about a health care plan.

We need to have a health care plan that works,” he said when asked whether he will repeal and replace ObamaCare. “ObamaCare hasn’t worked. We are going to replace and supersede with a better — better plan.”

When?

DeSantis said details of the plan will likely be worked out in the spring and that his campaign would “roll out a big proposal.”

By spring, of course, DeSantis will be an ex-candidate and whatever proposal he might have come out with will be moot.

The basic conservative health-care problem is that market competition will never deliver a good health insurance system. There’s a simple reason for that: The way to make money in health insurance isn’t to deliver quality care at an affordable price. Instead, the path to high profits is to insure people who don’t get sick, and to encourage people who likely will get sick to insure with somebody else. The less government regulation a system has, the more this market imperative will assert itself.

Almost no other market works this way. For example, if you’re a car company, there’s no group of consumers that you hope doesn’t buy your car.


Sports Illustrated got nailed for apparently letting AI write articles and then crediting them to fake reporters with AI-generated photos.

What’s weird to me is the deception. I mean, why not be up-front about it? There’s nothing inherently immoral about letting ChatGPT write an article if you then fact-check, edit, and take responsibility for it. I have no plans to produce Sift articles that way, but if I did, I wouldn’t be ashamed to admit it. (I’m trying to inform people and promote my point of view rather than validate some claim about my abilities.)

In high school I worked for my local newspaper, and occasionally my job involved writing intro paragraphs for box scores of minor sporting events we hadn’t sent a reporter to: “Joe Blow scored 23 points to lead West Nowhere High to a 79-53 rout of its crosstown rival East Nowhere.” I was essentially doing the work of an AI: not reporting anything new, but applying common narrative templates to information already in the box score.

In the WaPo, Josh Tyrangiel takes a similar view: He used to work at Bloomberg, which quickly processed company earnings reports to produce headlines that its subscribers would trade on. But rapidly searching through numbers to find the most significant ones is something computers do better than humans.

Bloomberg shifted to automated earnings headlines in 2013 and has used AI to create its earnings summaries since 2018. It also employs more journalists and analysts now than it did back then — some 2,700, all of whom get to do more interesting work than writing earnings headlines and summaries.


As expected, George Santos was expelled from the House of Representatives. What’s surprising is the 114 votes not to expel him.


More evidence how out-of-it I am: The word of the year is “rizz”, which I had never heard of until I read the article. Reportedly, it is Gen Z slang for “a person’s ability to attract a romantic partner through style, charm or attractiveness”.


If you’re one of those people who does the bulk of your charity giving at the end of the year, consider the Wikimedia Foundation, which supports the Wikipedia. It doesn’t have any poster children or sad animals to show you, but Wikipedia has become central to our basic information infrastructure. I rely on it constantly for historical information, and it actually isn’t a bad way to keep track of evolving news stories, like natural disasters and mass shootings. Typically, the first reports in the media aren’t terribly accurate, and over a period of days it can be hard to sort out what was rumor and what is still considered reliable. Wikipedia collects and curates that stuff.

and let’s close with a visual pun

The artist Gustav Klimt had a very distinctive style, as you can see from one of his most famous works: The Woman in Gold.

The similarity in names inspired Carl Tétreault to produce this image of The Man With No Name: “Klimt Eastwood“.

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Comments

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 4, 2023 at 11:43 am

    A US guy was saying the other day “I’m not accountable.” It sounded to my British ears for all the world like “I’m not a cannibal.” Just saying.

  • earthenvessels's avatar earthenvessels  On December 4, 2023 at 12:18 pm

    Great reporting, as per usual! Thanks for being on top of so many issues that matter!

    Brian

    Brian THOMPSON, Professor of French emeritus University of Massachusetts Bostonhttp://www.umb.edu http://www.faculty.umb.edu/brian_thompson/home.htmhttp://www.faculty.umb.edu/brian_thompson/home.htm Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres Officier des Palmes Académiques Comité exécutif, webmestre, AATF Eastern Massachusettshttp://www.aatf-easternmass.org Co-Founder, Member of the Board, EVkids, evkids.orghttp://evkids.org Radio show “French Toast”, live Wednesdays 6-7 am (88.1 FM), live and archived on wmbr.orghttp://wmbr.org Conseil d’administration, Amitiés Internationales André Malrauxhttp://www.andremalraux.com/

    EVkids: Tutoring for School.Mentoring for Life.

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 4, 2023 at 12:25 pm

    Israel’s actions in Gaza absolutely are genocidal. The Economist article you’ve linked is essentially just saying that if the duck walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, but tells you he’s a squirrel, then he must not be a duck.

    • K. Thiessen's avatar K. Thiessen  On December 4, 2023 at 3:04 pm

      This. The article from the Economist is entirely unconvincing; it reads like boilerplate apologism for Likud/the current Israeli government. When actual Jews living in actual Israel are not afraid to call for the PM to step down because what the government is doing is wrong, why on earth would you prefer to listen to the spineless capital-worshipers at the Economist?

    • Lee Thomson's avatar Lee Thomson  On December 4, 2023 at 9:44 pm

      Yes. I was going to ask what made this not genocidal? The Israeli Armed Forces are driving a population by force into a more restricted area and then bombing them where they were told they would be safe. No place within Israel is safe for Palestinians, and the Israeli government is explicitly working to eradicate them. This is a genocide, and no tip toeing around definitions will erase this fact.

  • Creigh Gordon's avatar Creigh Gordon  On December 4, 2023 at 12:38 pm

    This is not really on topic, but the most hair raising thing I’ve read this week is a post by Martin Longman in progresspond.com talking about the historical parallels between the Weimar Republic’s legislative paralysis and our current legislative paralysis. Unfortunately it’s for paying readers only, but here’s an excerpt:

    “What’s constant between our system and Weimar however is that a dysfunctional legislative body loses public support and this leads to public acceptance of extra-constitutional solutions. Nothing is more extra-constitutional than Donald Trump and his political movement. This is a movement that refused to accept the legitimate results of the 2020 election and launched a violent insurrection against our legislative body in an effort to make Trump our Führer. If polls are to be believed, the American public would prefer a Führer right now to another four years of Joe Biden and a dysfunctional legislature….There’s no question at this point that the legislature cannot stand a strong challenge from the executive, precisely because the congressional Republicans want to give their responsibility away. And the judiciary cannot due much of anything without help from the other two branches.”

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 4, 2023 at 12:59 pm

    “It is estimated that about 140 Israeli hostages remain in captivity in Gaza.” I see this number mentioned often but the number I don’t see is the number of Palestinians being held in Israel without trials and even without charges. Many for many years.

  • Maryrkessler's avatar Maryrkessler  On December 4, 2023 at 1:44 pm

    Sent from my iPhone

  • ericprinceofflorin's avatar ericprinceofflorin  On December 4, 2023 at 2:05 pm

    Now a full week of asking for an explanation for the inclusion of an anti-Palestinian propaganda cartoon in the 11/27 weekly summary. I know you don’t often surf the comments replying to every person, but you need to address this, Doug.

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 4, 2023 at 2:28 pm

      or not…

    • Geoff Arnold's avatar Geoff Arnold  On December 4, 2023 at 2:33 pm

      No he doesn’t. Just drop it.

    • pauljbradford's avatar pauljbradford  On December 4, 2023 at 5:14 pm

      ericprinceofflorin, at least you’ve reduced your accusation from “racist” cartoon to “anti-Palestinian propaganda cartoon”. If you get closer to reality, Doug might feel more inclined to respond. As I said last week, I think the cartoon is misleading, since it let Netanyahu off the hook for his policies.

  • SCL's avatar SCL  On December 4, 2023 at 4:05 pm

    Hey Sift. I was a reader for about 10 years. Always thought you had good coverage. Sad to see your dehumanizing response to the genocide of Palestinians. This is my last weekly sift. Please try think harder and get on the right side of history here. Or just stop posting. Obviously you aren’t capable of fair analysis. Goodbye.

  • susanmbrewer's avatar susanmbrewer  On December 4, 2023 at 4:32 pm

    On a far lighter note, I like Klimt, especially The Woman in Gold and its story, and thoroughly enjoyed Klimt Eastwood — thanks!

  • pauljbradford's avatar pauljbradford  On December 4, 2023 at 5:19 pm

    Israel’s actions in Gaza absolutely are not genocidal. I think that the bombing is immoral, and I think it’s counterproductive to the long-term chances for peace. That doesn’t equal “genocidal”. (I’m talking specifically about the bombing, not the entire Israeli military campaign).

  • Anonymous Poster's avatar Anonymous Poster  On December 5, 2023 at 2:01 am

    Genocide is not only about mass death through violence. Genocide is also about making the conditions of life impossible. Given the rampant and widespread destruction in Gaza and the way it’s affecting life for Palestinians/Gazans, the Israeli government is absolutely carrying out a genocide. To suggest otherwise is foolish, if not downright irresponsible.

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 5, 2023 at 11:59 am

      The conditions of life being impossible in Gaza is entirely the moral responsibility of Hamas. Hamas has been in control of Gaza for 18 years. We talk about 50% of the people living there are children? Those children, until the last few weeks, never saw an Israeli soldier in Gaza. For those 18 years, Hamas has been turning Gaza into a maze of underground military installations, using the palestinian people as shields against israel’s military. hamas has been stealing international aid that is meant to buy food, and fuel, and create infrastructure, and using it to buy weapons, create military installations, and funneling it to the leaders of Hamas who live in Qatar. They have been stealing food, and fuel, and water, and supplying their hiding spaces in the tunnels beneath Gaza. And then, they broke the ceasefire that existed on October 6th, in the most horrific ways possible. Israel is responding stupidly, because this is exactly the response Hamas is almost certainly trying to generate, to isolate Israel, with the intent of then destroying Israel after it has been isolated. But Israel goes above and beyond in its actions in order to prevent civilian deaths in its justified by international law military actions against Gaza. When we talk about genocide, there is a much greater gap between what Israel is doing in gaza, and the defnition of genocide, than what hamas has been doing to Israel, AND, from what hamas is doing to Palestinians. If the focus of your outrage is on Israel, and you ignore the easier-to-call-genocide actions of Hamas… then you are bigot.

      • Anonymous Poster's avatar Anonymous Poster  On December 5, 2023 at 2:46 pm

        I criticize both Hamas and the Israeli government because neither side should be killing anyone. I openly and explicitly condemn Hamas for the horrific attack that started this war; I openly and explicitly condemn the Israeli government for taking the bait and killing innocent civilians en masse. I also openly and explicitly condemn both Hamas and the Israeli government for making the lives of Palestinians that much worse every day. And before you or anyone else asks: Yes, the Israeli government is justified in going after Hamas, but I will never justify the methods used for that goal. The ends cannot justify the means—especially if the means amount to a genocide.

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 5, 2023 at 5:00 am

    As I see it, people are reacting to Israel as if they think it still has the liberal government we associate with Jews, who are often liberal. It doesn’t. Netanyahu is far right wing. It’s what a right wing government does, not what a Jewish government does. That’s a different axis. The people of Israel are no more to blame than the Palestinians are for Hamas.

    • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 5, 2023 at 8:12 am

      The Israelis have repeatedly elected right-governments.

      • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 5, 2023 at 8:12 am

        right-wing governments.

  • mosckerr's avatar mosckerr  On December 5, 2023 at 11:51 am

    Noise. The Never Trumpers Never Obeyed Trump.

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 5, 2023 at 6:10 pm

    “Israel/Palestine is a wedge issue that splits Democrats”

    The comments on this blog certainly support that idea.

  • Dale Moses's avatar Dale Moses  On December 7, 2023 at 12:47 am

    1) oh my god Doug. It’s a genocide. It’s absolutely a genocide. You should reconsider your opinion. The key here is not to examine what Israel is saying it’s doing but examine what they are doing. And what they are doing is killing a people. Before Oct 7 their strategy was to utilize Hamas as a wedge against untied Palestinian actions and steadily colonize the West Bank. When the West Bank was clear of Palestinians they would have moved on to Gaza. Oct 7 gave them the excuse to start with Gaza right away. You can see this with how they wanted to deal with the hostage situation… which was to ignore it and bomb the people who were taken hostage. You can see this by the bombing targets by the types of bombs they use. But everything they do.

    2) Sandra day O’Connor was awful. I like LGM on this. They may be too liberal for you but they’re right. O’Connor was not a moderate. We just think she was because the rest of the Republican court is crazy : https://www.lawyersgunsmoneyblog.com/2023/12/oconnor-2

  • ericprinceofflorin's avatar ericprinceofflorin  On December 7, 2023 at 1:05 pm

    It’s been 10 days since you uncritically shared a racist cartoon, and we’re still waiting to hear your reasoning.

    • Geoff Arnold's avatar Geoff Arnold  On December 7, 2023 at 1:20 pm

      Who is this “we” to whom you refer? Speaking for myself, the only thing I’m “still waiting for” is for you to realize that this is Doug’s blog, and if you don’t like it you’re welcome to stop participating.

    • weeklysift's avatar weeklysift  On December 10, 2023 at 7:38 am

      Sorry, I’ve been on vacation and haven’t been reading comments.

      Looking back at the cartoon, I think it favors Netanyahu too much, and I can see the criticism that the Hamas terrorist is represented by a caricature. In my memory, that figure was clearly labeled as “Hamas”, which I can now see is inaccurate.

      If we interpret the cartoon’s two figures as representing Israelis and Palestinians, then I can understand the criticism that the cartoon is racist. I don’t think that’s the most obvious interpretation, and that isn’t how I interpreted it, but I should have foreseen that some people would. For that, I apologize.

      I saw the terrorist figure representing Hamas, and if it’s interpreted that way, the cartoon seems harsh, but not inappropriate.

      There’s also a second, less favorable, interpretation of the Netanyahu figure: that he’s telling the Palestinians to “cease” in general, not just to cease firing. Looking at it now, though, I think that interpretation is not the most compelling one.

      • ericprinceofflorin's avatar ericprinceofflorin  On December 10, 2023 at 4:06 pm

        Thank you, Doug. I was trying to be charitable in calling this out, but it really was jarring to see that image presented without comment. And then looking into the cartoonist behind it made it feel even worse, as we could call him at best very right-wing and at worst a rabid conservative sycophant based on other work I’ve now seen from him. I believe one of the core principles of this blog are to encourage media literacy, so this seemed like an important moment to put those skills to use.

        You do important work here in digging deeper with an amount of media we readers likely do not, and I think because of the work you put in it’s also important for your readers to engage critically with their own media intake, even this very blog. That’s a lesson I find I need to re-learn frequently, and I am certain I’m not great at taking the time to stop and consider if a lot of the things I read and see should go by without some further analysis, but this one caught my attention and it felt important to just acknowledge what felt troubling about it.

        I appreciate you taking a moment to reflect on the problem here, and I do look forward to enjoying much more of your analysis, even when I think I come at things from farther to the left than you. And I hope that vacation was a good recharge!!

  • Unknown's avatar Anonymous  On December 10, 2023 at 3:42 pm

    I think that Musk doesn’t understand that with X/Twitter the advertisers are his customers.

    When customers decide not to buy your product, that’s not blackmail. That’s just shopping.

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