Daily Outrages. Tyrant.

It is too tiring to keep up on the daily outrages. I have things to do. But we can’t become complacent. So headlines today, with minimal comment.

  • Items about gaslighting, Bari Weiss, Trump not as fascist but as tyrant, winking at white nationalists, giving a pass to a red state’s welfare fraud, Trump’s Greenland delusion, the reversal in cutting funds to mental health and addiction services, more gaslighting, RFK Jr.’s plan to bankrupt vaccine manufacturers;
  • Re: Heated Rivalry: how Russia treats gays the way MAGA treats the left; and how the world keeps warming while conservatives are apparently unable to understand this.
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  • LA Times, 15 Jan 2026: The Earth keeps getting hotter, and Americans’ trust in science is on a down trend
  • A Pew Research poll reveals partisan division over U.S. scientific leadership, with Democrats far more concerned about losing ground than Republicans.
  • The report comes as officials confirm that 2025 was Earth’s third-hottest year on record, pushing it closer to breaching the Paris climate agreement’s 1.5-degree limit.
  • The Trump administration has withdrawn from the Paris agreement and cut federal funding for science and climate programs.
  • Because conservatives/Republicans, if they can’t see it right in front of them, they don’t believe it. They don’t do evidence or inference. Another running theme on this blog.
Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Lunacy, Politics, Psychology | Leave a comment

Further Evidence

Another busy day; no time for a big think piece. Short pieces then. Every day there’s more evidence of my running themes.

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ICE are the terrorists.

The Telegraph, 14 Jan 2026: Moment ICE agents drag ‘disabled woman’ from car in Minneapolis, subtitled “Officers filmed smashing window and cutting driver’s seat belt to remove her from vehicle”

Another woman turning onto a street filled with ICE agents. And therefore doomed.

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The Trump administration is about retribution against people they don’t like. Fishing expeditions to find dirt. Jerome Powell, the wife of Renee Good, senator Mark Kelly. It’s not about justice or law.

NY Times, 13 Jan 2026: The Defense Department’s Case Against Mark Kelly Is Even Dumber Than It Sounds, subtitled “At the same time, it’s still having the intended effect.”

Because the MAGA yokels believe everything he says. And because the moves, however baseless, intimidate others. The NYT writer says:

I know of a few officers who are hesitant to speak out against Trump or his policies precisely because they fear retribution—and lack the access to resources, high profile, and legal protections that Kelly enjoys as a member of Congress. There is also a disposition among many officers, bred in them from their days as cadets, to steer clear of political activity, even if it’s meant to protest the politicization of the military.

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Business interests are always favored; i.e. making money.

Vox, Umair Irfan, 14 Jan 2026: Trump’s EPA is setting the value of human health to $0, subtitled “The agency’s new math to favor polluters, explained.”

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They are undoing progress towards the goals of health and equality in favor of white supremacy and saving money on undesirables. (This recalls the reactions of some conservatives about COVID: just let the grandmas die.)

NPR, 14 Jan 2026: Trump administration sends letter wiping out addiction, mental health grants

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They’re against campaigns against misinformation and scams, because they profit by spreading misinformation and scams.

Ars Technica, 13 Jan 2026: FDA deletes warning on bogus autism therapies touted by RFK Jr.‘s allies, subtitled “The agency used to warn of chelation, used by RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine ally David Geier.”

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They are ignorant of the world, don’t understand how it works, and so are attracted to conspiracy theories.

AlterNet, Thomas Kika, 14 Jan 2026: How a ‘bottomless thirst for conspiracism’ consumed MAGA’s youth

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Which relates to this book review (which review I haven’t read thoroughly) from a few days ago.

NY Times Book Review, Mark Lilla, 10 Jan 2026: Can American Children Point to America on a Map?

Subtitled: In “The Cradle of Citizenship,” the journalist James Traub finds that the biggest crisis in education is not what kids are learning, but whether they’re learning anything at all.

And parents home-schooling their kids or attacking public school curricula are part of the problem. They are eroding the common knowledge of human civilization, in favor of their own particular religious myths.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Nature, Philosophy, Politics | Leave a comment

The Political Divide

  • Eric Levitz at Vox on the “fiction” of the Left/Right divide, and how core principles nevertheless do divide the parties;
  • Brief items about ICE recruiting and the right presuming the worst about everyone;
  • Noting the death of Erich von Däniken, and what Carl Sagan said about him.
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Long piece I saw yesterday.

Vox, Eric Levitz, 12 Jan 2026: The fiction at the heart of America’s political divide, subtitled “The uncomfortable truth about ‘the left’ and ‘the right.'”

I’ll quote some of this piece’s thesis…

America’s most impassioned Democrats and Republicans don’t agree on much. Ask the inhabitants of Bluesky and Truth Social whether a fetus is a person, or undocumented immigrants are a scourge, or trans women are women, or climate change is a crisis, or Covid vaccines are toxic, or taxes are too high, or welfare spending is too low, or AR-15s should be banned, or the federal bureaucracy should be gutted, or the police discriminate against Black people, or universities discriminate against white men, or Donald Trump is a fascist, or Joe Biden is the reanimated corpse of a man who died in 2020, and each group is liable to provide warring answers.

If staunch Democrats and Republicans agree on anything, however, it’s that their myriad policy disputes all follow from a deeper philosophical conflict — the centuries-long clash between progressive and conservative conceptions of political justice, truth, and human nature.

But some political scientists, social psychologists, and philosophers say this is, to use a technical term, “bullshit.”

According to such thinkers, there are no coherent principles that bind the left and right’s various positions. No timeless precept compels conservatives to be both anti-abortion and pro-tax cuts — or progressives to be both anti-gun and pro-environment.

Rather, in this view, it is contingent historical alliances, not age-old moral philosophies, that explain each side’s motley assortment of issue stances: In the mid-20th century, Christian traditionalists happened to form a coalition with libertarian businessmen inside the GOP. Conservatives consequently discovered that banning abortion and cutting taxes were both indispensable for preserving America’s founding values.

It goes on with further examples. OK, sure, some elements of each coalition came into alignment by happenstance — think of the great conservative switch (from Democrat to Republican) in the ’60s, driven both by racism (the civil rights movement) and big business resentment of regulations. But surely there’s something fundamental at the heart of each ideology that differs on matters of human nature and truth (distinguished largely by religion); that’s what I’ve been tracking here in this blog for years.

This theory of what divides our parties — and ails our politics — has its insights. But it also takes its case too far. The left and right’s policy disputes are not all manifestations of one ageless moral conflict. But it does not follow that progressives and conservatives are divided by nothing more than arbitrary alliances and tribal psychology.

Long piece, as I said; it goes back to how the ideological spectrum was born in France in 1789. But I’m going to skip to the end. There *are* differences of worldview.

Ideologues surely overestimate the philosophical unity of their commitments. Rid the Earth of such confusion, however, and much of the enmity between America’s left and right would remain. The devotees of Donald Trump and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have genuinely different worldviews. Progressives aren’t wrong to perceive this White House as a threat to their conceptions of both democracy and social justice. And conservatives aren’t mistaken in thinking that the Democratic Party is hostile to their convictions about the nature of gender, economic liberty, and the metaphysical status of the unborn.

The left and right hold some distinct principles. But neither can derive answers to all of today’s governance challenges from their broad moral precepts. You cannot discern whether zoning restrictions reduce housing affordability — or whether gifted programs harm disadvantaged students — merely by deciding that you care a lot about inequality. Nor can you determine whether tariffs or mass deportation will raise American living standards, simply by deciding that the government must put “America first.”

Yet ideological essentialism invites the opposite impression by casting all policy debates, even the most technical, as referenda on bedrock moral principles. This framework is attractive to partisans, as it reduces the cognitive burdens of political advocacy: It is much easier to decide how you feel about one philosophical premise than to carefully adjudicate dozens of technocratic claims. Further, when a policy argument is understood as a gauge of moral character — rather than a test of empirical propositions — it becomes a better vehicle for partisans’ self-expression and communal bonding.

OK, that’s not the end, but it’s enough. This is a sort of perfect-enemy-of-the-good argument. OK, here’s the very end:

In other words, for progressives or conservatives to develop anything resembling a perfectly principled platform, they must first recognize that none exists.

Maybe no perfectly principled platform exists. But core principles do differ between the two camps. It’s right there — “empirical principles” vs “bedrock moral principles” which for conservatives means things that cannot be challenged. Progressives learn; conservatives reject anything that would challenge the so-called wisdom of their ancestors. That’s the principle divide.

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For example, today. Right Wing Watch, Kyle Mantyla, 12 Jan 2026: Christian Nationalist Pastor Dale Partridge Says Freedom Of Religion Is ‘A Really Bad Idea’

Because, obviously, *his* religion is the only true one. Never mind the principles of the American government; he knows better.

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More short takes for today.

Slate, Laura Jedeed, 13 Jan 2026: You’ve Heard About Who ICE Is Recruiting. The Truth Is Far Worse. I’m the Proof., subtitled “What happens when you do minimal screening before hiring agents, arming them, and sending them into the streets? We’re all finding out.”

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Another example of conservatives automatically thinking the worst about everyone.

Comic Sands, 9 Jan 2026 (via George Takei on Facebook): Newsmax Host Epically Fact-Checked After Assuming Stickers On Murdered Minneapolis Woman’s Car Are For ‘Wack Job Groups’

They were National Park stickers.

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Perhaps I’ll note the death of Erich von Däniken, a popularizer of alien visitation conspiracy theories back in the 1960s and ’70s, by quoting Carl Sagan.

NY Times, 11 Jan 2026: Erich von Däniken, Who Claimed Aliens Visited Earth, Dies at 90, subtitled “His 1968 book, ‘Chariots of the Gods,’ sold hundreds of thousands of copies, but one critic called it a ‘warped parody of reasoning.'”

Von Däniken was one of those writers I read in that era, my early teens, along with Frank Edwards, until my contemporaneous reading of Isaac Asimov and Carl Sagan disabused me of their thinking. Here’s Carl Sagan, quoted in this piece:

The astrophysicist Carl Sagan said of Mr. von Däniken: “Every time he sees something he can’t understand, he attributes it to extraterrestrial intelligence, and since he understands almost nothing, he sees evidence of extraterrestrial intelligence all over the planet.”

And this principle, I think, goes to many conspiracy theorists, and, for that matter, religious apologists. They don’t understand the complexity of the world, and so presume that someone, or some One, must be behind it all.

Posted in Human Nature, Politics, Science | Leave a comment

Their Core Priority: Make Money

Busy day so a quick post for now and no time to dress up yesterday’s post. Today I have a couple long items that will have to wait until tomorrow.

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There may be a tie in all this to the so-called masculinity crisis. As a couple commentators have mentioned, nothing upsets a macho MAGA guy more than thinking a woman is laughing at him, or not taking him seriously. And if that guy has a gun…

Salon, Andi Zeisler, 12 Jan 2026: In Renee Good’s killing, ICE’s misogyny isn’t a side note — it’s the point, subtitled “The words of the man who shot Renee Good speak to the Trump administration’s fixation on masculinity”

Moments before she’s killed, Good is on video speaking directly to Ross: “It’s okay, dude. I’m not mad at you.” Ross’ response comes only after he fires three shots into Good’s face as she attempts to turn her car away; Ross still has the phone in his hand when a man’s voice — presumably his — utters two words: “F*cking b*tch.” Conservative onlookers celebrated the video: To them, the disdain in Ross’ voice wasn’t evidence of guilt, but confirmation that a woman who challenged the authority of a man in uniform got exactly what she deserved.

But even before the recording surfaced, Good had been condemned by conservative onlookers in language that was terrifyingly familiar: She must have done something to provoke him. Why didn’t she just do what she was told? It’s too bad, but she brought it on herself. These are phrases that have been used to explain away assault, rape and domestic violence against women since time immemorial. They are also, apparently, how the MAGA crowd now identifies women whose desire to help neighbors avoid being deported offends their sensibilities, as talk-show host Erick Erickson established when describing Good with the acronym AWFUL (Affluent White Female Urban Liberal) in a now-deleted post on X.

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And, of course, you see this attitude from Fox News.

JMG, 12 Jan 2026: Fox Host: “Smug Liberal White Women” Had It Coming

Quoting Fox host Will Cain.

“There’s a weird kind of smugness, by the way, in the way that some of these liberal white women interact with authority. Most guys learn early in life that every confrontation has a sort of escalation chain. A joke, a push, an argument can eventually turn to violence.”

But it’s violence from men! Cain also claims:

This comes — in this press conference today — comes as we’re getting new witness video of Renee Good before the shooting. She can be seen in her vehicle blocking agents for several minutes, even dancing to the tune of her own car horn. You know, all the behavior of a legal observer.

First, some of these new videos are AI. I saw one today on Fb showing the ICE agent standing directly in front of her car — which no peace office is supposed to do — but taken from on high. By a drone? If there were drone videos of the incident, wouldn’t we have seen them by now?

Second, this is all about conservatives taking the worst possible interpretation of any incident, and of anyone not like themselves.

She was just a woman who had dropped off her kid at school, was driving home, turned onto a street filled with ICE agents, and tried to do a 3-point-turn to leave the scene.

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Same point.

JMG, 12 Jan 2026: Franklin Graham: Pray At Noon Wednesday For Jesus To Protect Trump Officials From “The Lying Paid Agitators”

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This will only get worse.

Slate, Mark Joseph Stern, 12 Jan 2026: Trump Loves Calling People “Terrorists.” We’re Starting to See How That Ends.

Title on Slate homepage: “Trump Says He Can Kill Anyone He Labels a ‘Terrorist.’ We Can Already See How That’s Going.”

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Two more items for today, that lead me to an essential insight.

NY Times, 12 Jan 2026: E.P.A. to Stop Considering Lives Saved When Setting Rules on Air Pollution, subtitled “In a reversal, the agency plans to calculate only the cost to industry when setting pollution limits, and not the monetary value of saving human lives, documents show.” [gift link]

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There’s a German rebuke to unsolicited advice from RFK Jr., which I thought I saw from Heather Cox Richardson, but now I can’t find the link. I’ll find it tomorrow.

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But the insight is: everything the Trump administration does is to favor big business. Cut regulations that would improve the climate, because such regulations would hurt big business. It’s all about short-term gains, and never mind long-term consequences. Rearrange the food pyramid to favor big meat. And so on and so on. This must have been obvious to everyone except me, since I keep looking for deep explanations. It’s all about making money. Which is what Trump and his family have done all along.

Posted in conservatives, Human Nature, Politics | Leave a comment

Our Era of 21st Century Villains

More fallout.

Just the headline will do here.

Washington Post, Letters to the Editor, 11 Jan 2026: MAGA justice: Shoot first, don’t even ask questions later

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NY Times, 10 Jan 2026: F.B.I.’s Inquiry Into ICE Shooting Faces Doubts After White House’s Remarks

First para:

The Trump administration blocked Minnesota officials from investigating the death of the woman shot on Wednesday by a federal agent, then quietly offered this explanation: Local investigators simply could not be trusted to conduct a fair inquiry.

This is, of course, exactly upside down. It is the Trump administration that cannot be trusted to conduct a fair inquiry, because it’s already passed judgment about the victim as some kind of left-wing agitator who deserved what she got, within a mere couple hours after the incident, and before exculpatory videos came in.

Mr. Trump had already declared the shooting justified. Vice President JD Vance has asserted that federal agents had “absolute immunity” from prosecution. The homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, has spoken about the incident as if it were a closed case: Ms. Good had “weaponized” her S.U.V. to kill agents, she said, even though video analysis by The New York Times suggested it was more likely that she was turning her car away from officers.

All of their claims are wrong.

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Similarly at JMG: Junior: ICE Agent Should Sue Democrats For Slander

The media owes JD Vance, and all of America a big apology. The Minneapolis ICE shooting is literally Covington 2026. The video clearly shows the ice officer getting hit by the car. She comes right at him. It doesn’t get more conclusive than that.

This is absolutely not true. The video clearly shows something different. Do these people think they can get away with lying to everyone, all the time?

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Stepping out.

NY Times, David French, 11 Jan 2026: Trump and Vance Are Fanning the Flames. Again.

He begins by setting the context. George Floyd, Michael Brown Jr., the beating of Rodney King in 1992 in LA.

The King case was a preview of our modern dilemma. How do political leaders respond when video evidence causes the public to make up its own mind — regardless of what any judge or jury might have to say?

The terrible divisiveness of police violence is why responsible leaders respond to every incident with extreme care. You lament the lives lost, you promise a fair and thorough investigation, and you call for calm. You do not prejudge the case. You do not set up an expectation that justice will be done only if your side’s interests are vindicated. And you definitely don’t send out allies and subordinates to whip up public anger.

… But Trump isn’t a responsible leader, and he’s at his absolute worst in a crisis. He lies. He inflames his base. And — most dangerous of all — he pits the federal government against states and cities, treating them not as partners in constitutional governance but as hostile inferiors that must be brought to heel.

That’s exactly what has happened in the hours and days since an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Good on the streets of Minneapolis on Wednesday.

Instantly, the administration’s narrative locked in.

… But if you watch videos of the shooting, one thing is clear: No fair-minded person could watch that incident and conclude that Good was a “domestic terrorist” on a mission to run down ICE agents. The administration’s claims of terrorism are false — absurdly so.

But we’ve learned not to believe anything Trump or his administration says already; this is just another reason why. The problem is that there is apparently a large segment of the population, who only glancingly pays attention to the news, that *does* believe him, by rote. And they are as culpable for this administration’s bad behavior as anyone.

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Another broader perspective.

Paul Krugman, 9 Jan 2026: The Mad King’s Madness Deepens, subtitled “Trump wants war, war and more war – even against Americans”

And as January 6th 2021 showed, Trump simply can’t stand political rejection. He will do anything, use any tool or any person at his disposal, to obliterate the sources of that rejection.

So as we head into the 2026 midterm season, the best way to understand U.S. policy is that it’s in the pursuit of one crucial objective: Propping up Trump’s fragile ego.

And so Maduro and Venezuela. And then Minneapolis.

Trump and his minions responded by flatly lying about what happened. But their accounts have been refuted by video evidence which show an out-of-control ICE agent gunning down a woman who was simply trying to get away from a frightening situation. Yes, MAGA loyalists will fall into line, preferring to believe Trump rather than their own lying eyes. But public revulsion over Good’s murder and Trump’s mendacity are high and growing.

And so Trump changes the topic by announcing a huge increase in military spending. Just what dictators need. Krugman concludes:

And here’s a warning to those directly perpetrating Trump-directed atrocities: He will not be in power forever, and I expect and hope that you will be held accountable, personally, and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

Here’s another long-term perspective, a new thought today. Everyday politics is driven by inattention and ignorance and short-term thinking. The longer-term view will be written by historians and captured by novelists and filmmakers. And in their view, Trump will go down as perhaps the greatest villain in American history. He’s perverted American ideals and undercut its ambitions and ruined its reputation in the world. Like Hitler, in German history. Hitler didn’t “win,” and neither will Trump.

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One more take.

Letters from an American, Heather Cox Richardson: January 10, 2026

Yesterday, in an apparent attempt to regain control of the national narrative surrounding the deadly shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis, Vice President J.D. Vance led the administration in pushing a video of the shooting captured by the shooter himself, Jonathan Ross, on his cell phone.

She describes the video in more detail than I’ve seen anywhere else. Then:

What is truly astonishing is that the administration thought this video would exonerate Ross and support the administration’s insistence that he was under attack from a domestic terrorist trying to ram him with her car. The video was leaked to a right-wing news site, and Vance reposted it with the caption: “What the press has done in lying about this innocent law enforcement officer is disgusting. You should all be ashamed of yourselves.” The Department of Homeland Security reposted Vance’s post.

As senior editor of Lawfare Media Eric Columbus commented: “Do Vance and DHS think we can’t actually watch the video?” Multiple social media users noted that Good’s last words to Ross were “That’s fine. I’m not mad at you,” while his to her, after he shot her in the face, were “F*cking b*tch!”

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I have some comments about the new “food pyramid” and how it reflects interests other than science, but keep putting them off in favor this latest scandal.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Politics | Leave a comment

Does Human Morality Progress, or Not?

Apropos of nothing else in this post, but anyone following social media will understand.

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The big story of the week, which I’m not quite letting this go. This could be a growing story that actually has consequences. Unlike so many scandalous incidents by Trump and his MAGA acolytes, that they just get away with.

This Christian lies.

JMG, 10 Jan 2026Christian Site Mocks “Toxic Empathy” For ICE Victim

Quoting Ryan Helfenbein in the Christian Post: “This tragedy was entirely avoidable, but because a mother decided her duty to obstruct law enforcement, try to flee, and accelerate straight at them superseded her duty to comply, she is now dead.” Then he quotes scripture, where you can find justification for absolutely anything you want to believe.

She did *not* “accelerate straight at them.” It’s there over and over, in the videos. Why does he lie? Because religious ideology trumps evidence and reason; and everyone not on Trump and MAGA’s side is assumed to be evil and culpable?

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Stepping out, but illustrating the same broad point.

The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, 6 Jan 2026: MAGA’s Foundational Lie, subtitled “The movement claims to stand with the police. Trump’s decision to pardon the cop-beaters of January 6 exposed his movement for what it is.”

Which is as I described yesterday.

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Stepping out even further.

The Atlantic, Gal Beckerman, 10 Jan 2026: What Stephen Miller Gets Wrong About Human Nature, subtitled “The Trump adviser’s assertions about the ‘real world’ reflect a deep misunderstanding of Thomas Hobbes’s dog-eat-dog worldview.”

Once again, there’s the famous dichotomy about the views of human nature as stated by John Locke and Thomas Hobbes.

The 17th-century philosophers each offered a picture of human nature in its rawest form, and they came to different conclusions. Locke, whose ideas were central to the birth of modern democracy, thought that people were capable of reason and moral judgment. Hobbes, on the other hand, believed that we were vicious creatures who needed to be protected from ourselves by a powerful king. Whether a leader is Lockean or Hobbesian really does set the table for the kind of government they want.

And, once again, it’s not one or the other. Humans like to divide issues into bipolar opposites, one or the other. Whereas reality is always a mix of the opposite patterns that humans perceive. (This is the subject of Rutger Bregman’s HUMANKIND, who takes Locke’s side; and Steven Pinker’s books, who considers both sides, but especially how Hobbes’ Leviathan brought order to the world.)

One way to understand the head-spinning nature of being an American over the past couple of decades is that this debate—one that history seemed to have settled in Locke’s favor—is alive again. Barack Obama was a Lockean through and through—insisting, repeatedly, that if citizens were just given accurate information and a fair hearing, they would converge on something like the common good. Then came Donald Trump, Hobbesian extraordinaire, who has often portrayed life under anyone’s leadership but his own much as Hobbes describes the state of nature: “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” (Nasty is even one of Trump’s favorite words.)

Comments this week from Stephen Miller, the influential deputy chief of staff often cast as the president’s “brain,” only reinforced this impression. Miller might have been Hobbes in a skinny tie as he confidently articulated what he understood to be the “iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.” His monologue was like something out of the English philosopher’s 1651 political treatise, Leviathan: “We live in a world, in the real world,” he said, “that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power.”

But his is the dog-eat-dog world that the idealists, from Jesus to the Founders, sought to overcome. There *can* be a better way. Yet base human nature is never going away.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Nature, Morality, Politics, The Gays | Leave a comment

The Paradox of MAGA

My fascination with this ICE killing in Minnesota is, again, that it’s a perfect example of the paradox of MAGA, if not of conservatives in general. They claim to be Christians, and to revere the Constitution and the US Founders, yet behave in ways that utterly contradict those philosophies. Rather, they act like xenophobic tribalists to whom everyone else on the planet is evil or subhuman. I conclude that the Bible and the Constitution are to them merely totems that mark tribal solidarity; they don’t actually understand, or follow, them.

Sampling today’s posts.

Slate, Molly Olmstead, 9 Jan 2026: They Didn’t Even Need a Deepfake, subtitled “A.I. was going to be what broke our shared reality. It turns out, it wasn’t needed.”

Cf. the Jessie Bering quote yesterday. Covered here: partisan loyalties. The rewrite of January 6th.

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There was another video of the event released today.

Slate, Christina Cauterucci, 9 Jan 2026: In the Horrifying New Video Filmed by Renee Good’s Killer, Her Real “Crime” Is Clear, subtitled “New footage of her killing at the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement isn’t exculpatory—but it sure serves a purpose for MAGA.”

She was cheerful, before she drove away, despite the order to “get out of the fucking car.”

There is no rule of proportionality in the MAGA universe: Any left-leaning protest activity or civil disobedience is grounds for assassination.

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The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 8 Jan 2026: First the Shooting. Then the Lies. subtitled “The Trump administration has perfected the smear campaign.”

There’s a lot we don’t know about the shooting of Renee Nicole Good, who was killed yesterday by federal immigration agents deployed to Minnesota. But in the chaotic aftermath of the shooting, one thing became immediately clear: The Trump administration was lying about what happened.

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Media Matters, 8 Jan 2026: A look at how Fox used its coverage of the Minneapolis ICE shooting to push the administration’s propaganda

With a timeline about how Fox News kept changing their story as evidence came in. They jumped to conclusions, obviously.

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Boing Boing, Jason Weisberger, 8 Jan 2026: “We executed one of you”: MAGA cheers ICE killing of a mother of three

The simplistic, savage, MAGA mindset.

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Slate, Molly Olmstead, 7 Jan 2026: Trump Isn’t Just Defending ICE for Killing a Woman. He’s Taking It a Chilling Step Further., subtitled “The president is blaming his political rivals—and possibly opening the door to more repression.”

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One somewhat longer piece.

Slate, Christina Cauterucci, 9 Jan 2026: ICE’s Killing of Renee Good Is Part of a Bigger Project, subtitled “The right is waging, and winning, a war on empathy. The country is poorer, and more dangerous, for it.”

Among their base, today’s GOP is trying to drum out any natural impulses toward compassion, such that there is no imperative to feel—let alone express—any dismay at the killing of an ideological adversary. If Good wasn’t on Trump’s side, the party line goes, she got what was coming to her. The rush to defend Ross is more than a political move to justify Trump’s personal militia run amok. It’s another round in the right wing’s mounting war on empathy.

For the past few years, influential Christian conservatives have been loudly proclaiming that empathy is toxic, a sin, and a tool of the devil. In their view, progressives use the human inclination sas already caused the deaths of 500,000 children worldwide. The innate desire among well-adjusted people to wish their neighbors happy, healthy lives is a political liability for the party of Medicaid cuts, SNAP freezes, ICE raids, refugee bans, and forced childbirth. Elon Musk has called empathy “the fundamental weakness of Western civilization.”

Is that what Jesus said?

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Last item on this subject for now.

NY Times, guest essay by Jacob Frey, 8 Jan 2026: I’m the Mayor of Minneapolis. Trump Is Lying to You.

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My eternal question is, why don’t the MAGA folk realize that Trump is lying to them all the time? Because they’re paranoid and think the mainstream media is out to get them? Or simply because they’re dumb?

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Let’s try to get this bad MAGA taste away. And find a couple positive stories.

First, getting back to the ancient argument about whether people are basically good or basically bad — Christianity assumes the latter, unless they’re “saved” — and despite the presumption in Hollywood films and TV then when society fails, everyone will turn savage (because that’s more dramatic) — real-world evidence suggests the former. (Again, I’ve read that book by Rutger Bregman, HUMANKIND, that I haven’t written up here yet.) Obviously attitudes are situational. But, despite the conservatives who assume the worst in other people, civilization has in fact advanced through cooperation among larger and larger groups. That’s why we have a de fact world culture.

Vox, Bryan Walsh, 27 Dec 2025: The 2025 stories that prove people still run toward danger, subtitled “Five strangers who risked everything to save someone else.”

Sure these are anecdotes.

The daily news cycle, with its bias toward negativity, seems to have its own implicit question: How bad can people be? It’s an easy story to tell, because outrage quickly spreads across the social media landscape. But, if you pay attention — really pay attention — another story keeps surfacing, stubbornly, in the margins: the stories of people who run toward danger. They don’t workshop it. They don’t calculate odds. They don’t ask if they’re the “right person” to do something. They just move, on instinct, because someone else’s life is suddenly in front of them.

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And despite the conservative that everything worth knowing was known centuries ago and captured in the Bible, human culture does, in fact, keep discovering new things, and making society and life better every year.

The Atlantic, Science Desk, 27 Dec 2025: 55 Facts That Blew Our Minds in 2025

A list, with links. “In a year defined by slop, we hope these nuggets of reality inspire some genuine awe.”

Items about how women’s hands are more sensitive to warmth than men’s, sterile flies, a new color called “olo”, how potatoes are descended from an ancient tomato plant, how AI is 92% of American’s GDP growth, how insects make up more than half of all animals species yet most of them have never been documented, how tennis players live longer than swimmers, cyclists, and joggers.. and much more.

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Politics, Psychology | Leave a comment

ICE Thugs

  • Today’s posts are about the Minnesota ICE killing and the responses, from Trump and Vance to Jesse Bering, Jonathan V. Last, and others.
  • An essay by Elay Shech about why we should trust science even though it keeps changing. (Because there is no alternative.)
– – –

So yesterday an ICE agent shot and killed a woman in her SUV in Minneapolis, and the usual suspects were quick to say the shooting was justified because the woman was obviously a left-wing radical terrorist, or something, without of course having any evidence to support that charge. Fortunately there were people there who took videos of the event — in fact there are volunteer groups who attend ICE raids specifically to capture evidence of what they’re doing — which undercut the knee-jerk accusations of Tramp and Vance and others. Here’s a current status:

CNN, analysis by Aaron Blake, 8 Jan 2026: JD Vance just sharply undercut the Trump team’s ICE shooting narrative

Mere hours after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent killed a woman Wednesday in Minneapolis, the Trump administration staked out a maximalist position.

It wasn’t just that the agent was justified in shooting 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good because he legitimately feared her running him over. It was that the woman “willfully and viciously ran over” the agent, President Donald Trump said. It was an act of “domestic terrorism,” according to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

The videos didn’t show that at all; the woman in the SUV attempted to drive off, turning her wheels to the right to pass by, not run over, the ICE agent who nevertheless shot her dead. Faced with the video evidence, Vance, at least, sorta tried to backtrack.

In a press briefing Thursday at the White House, Vance mostly toed the administration’s line in standing strongly behind the ICE agent and even suggesting the woman was part of some kind of left-wing “network.”

But when a reporter challenged Vance on how he knew this was deliberate, Vance conceded that it wasn’t 100% clear, allowing that maybe she was indeed just scared and perhaps wasn’t actually targeting the agent.

“Look, I don’t know what’s in a person’s heart or in a person’s head,” Vance said. “And obviously, we’re not going to get a chance to ask this woman what was going on. What I’m certain of is that she violated the law. What I am certain of is that that officer had every reason to think that he was under very serious threat for injury or, in fact, his life.”

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Here again I think this is evidence that ICE agents, hired with virtually no qualifications and with an obvious enthusiasm to go out onto the streets and rough-up perceive enemies, automatically perceive *everyone* as enemies, especially those who will not immediately comply with their illegal orders. More broadly, conservatives, as I’ve noted, tend to assume the worst about other people. If ICE shot some woman, then surely she was a radical leftist who deserved it; they live in a black and white world, in which only their side is white.

Jesse Bering on Facebook, this afternoon:

Murder or self-defence? Whatever your ‘perception’ of the MN ICE shooting video, the fact that the same footage — remember, we are all looking at exactly the same thing — is so instantly polarising is a sad psychology experiment playing out in real time. At best, it’s an emotionally fuelled, nuclear version of the blue dress/gold dress (where “objective truth” is muddled by genuine perceptual biases). At worst, it’s Asch’s famous social conformity line tests (where there really is a clear objective truth, but powerful social forces make people refuse to see it for what it is).

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An analysis from earlier today:

CNN, Holmes Lybrand: DHS said a woman attempted to run over ICE officers before being shot in Minneapolis. Here’s what videos show

Trump claimed she ran over the ICE agent. She didn’t. She was turning to drive away. At worst, she disobeyed the officer’s demand to exit her car. Is that worth being shot to death? Do these ICE agents have even the training of an ordinary police officer? No, I suspect; they are thugs.

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A comparison between yesterday’s victim, Renee Good, whom conservatives automatically think is a violent insurrectionist, and Ashli Babbitt, part of the mob on January 6, 2021, who was killed and has been made into a conservative martyr.

The Bulwark, Jonathan V. Last, 8 Jan 2026: The Distance Between Renee Good and Ashli Babbitt Is Fascism, subtitled “It’s not a hypocrisy. It’s a coherent worldview.”

The killing of Renee Good is, as the saying goes, senseless. There was no need for ICE officers to be on that street in Minneapolis yesterday. There was no need for them to escalate their encounter with Good, screaming obscenities at her, attempting to force open the door of her SUV and assault her. There was no need for them to unholster their weapons. There was no need for them to shoot her three times.

There was no need for the entire apparatus of the federal government, from the DHS press flack, to the secretary of that department, to the president and vice president of the United States, to lie about the events and slander Renee Good as a “domestic terrorist.”

There was no need for Renee Good’s 6-year-old son to wake up an orphan this morning.

He then goes on to describe what would have happened in a sane world. Beginning with officers asking the driver “What seems to be the problem, ma’am?” or somesuch.

And then to the right’s reaction to the killing of Ashli Babbitt. What she a domestic terrorist?

She was part of an armed mob that beat and assaulted police officers as it broke into the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.1 She was then part of a breakaway mob that attempted to force its way into the Speaker’s Lobby. Inside the Speaker’s Lobby at the time was a group of elected officials and their staffs who were barricaded in to hide from the people who were rampaging through the complex calling for the hanging of the sitting vice president of the United States. Babbitt’s section of the mob broke through a window to breach the room. It is unclear what her intentions were. Perhaps she wanted to hug the people inside and thank them for their service.

Nevertheless, a police officer inside the room gave Babbitt specific instructions to stop her attempt to breach the window. One of them said “Get back! Get down! Get out of the way!” Babbitt did not comply with this instruction. An officer shot her once, in the shoulder; she later died from the wound.

Later, it was discovered that Babbitt was carrying a “Para Force” knife—a “tactical” folding knife—though the officer who shot her did not know this fact at the time.

And then comparing reactions to the two killings. Trump, on both. Then the writer goes on about In-Group/Out-Group:

The purpose of this discussion isn’t to play gotcha or to expose hypocrisy. It’s to understand a worldview: The people who run this regime do not understand law enforcement as an institution to be stewarded. The view it as a tool for the domination of their enemies. And their “enemies” include about half of America.

Again: This is not hypocrisy.

Hypocrisy is when someone holds to a set of values but applies them selectively. You can work with hypocrites because they share your values, even if they do not always adhere to them. Hypocrisy is, famously, the tribute that vice pays to virtue.

No, what we are seeing is a worldview for which the only value is the domination of enemies. There is a name for that. It is fascism.

And

In this worldview, Ashli Babbitt was committing violence on behalf of the regime; so she was justified, even if that violence was directed toward government agents. And because Renee Good was opposing the regime, violence against her—this time carried out by government agents—was likewise justified.

I’m sorry to keep repeating myself, but this is not hypocrisy. It’s illiberalism.

The liberal view is that violence is not acceptable unless it is carried out by the state under strict sanction of the law. The illiberal view—the fascist view—is that violence is a tool for domination of the out-group.

That’s why Renee Good was killed.

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This event has absorbed most of my attention today. There are always other, better, things to pay attention to. Here’s one for today.

It’s a golden example of simplex, black and white thinking, and how the world is not black and white or simplex. This is about a limitation of human cognition, among a portion of the population.

NY Times, guest essay by Elay Shech (a professor of philosophy who specializes in the philosophy of science), 5 Jan 2026: Science Keeps Changing. So Why Should We Trust It?

Beginning:

As popular mistrust of expert opinion grows, we increasingly encounter the following skeptical argument about science: Historically, even well-established theories and findings have been overturned; therefore, science can’t be trusted because it will eventually change again.

Of course, the obvious rejoinder here is, what is the alternative? Deference to religious faith, whose metaphysical claims have been debunked for centuries? Science is like learning throughout one’s life. You never know everything, but if you keep learning, you always know more than you did before.

The skeptics are right that science does not progress uniformly and steadily toward truth. Once, scientists believed in the four humors as the key to health, in phlogiston as the essence of fire and in the ether as the carrier of light. Eggs were bad for you, then fine, then maybe bad again. Even Newtonian physics, once considered unshakable, was revised by Einstein. If so many widely accepted theories have been discarded, why should we trust the ones we have now?

It’s a sobering question but also a misleading one. It implies that the only possible attitudes toward science are naïve faith and wholesale pessimism. It assumes that science is a single global entity that rises or falls all at once, when in reality, science is an array of local domains of inquiry, each with its own standards of evidence and degrees of reliability.

Then,

Fortunately, there is another attitude to adopt toward science — one you might call disciplined trust — that would serve us much better. It just happens to require some actual knowledge of science and some intellectual humility.

A standard response here is that science is not about “faith,” as religions are, it’s about confidence based on previous results. The essay concludes,

What I’m proposing is neither global pessimism nor naïve faith. It’s local skepticism, or disciplined trust, which is precisely what science needs to improve itself. The history of science is indeed a graveyard of theories, but the fact that science keeps changing is a mark of its strength. It keeps changing because the world is complex and full of wonder. That isn’t a problem; it’s the engine that drives scientific progress.

Posted in Politics, Psychology, Religion, Science | Leave a comment

Our Outlaw Nation

This popped up on Facebook, but I don’t subscribe to the magazine and can only see this much of the article. It’s about the new book by Johan Norberg, which came out in September. It’s on my TBR shelf.

The Economist, 1 May 2025: How golden ages really start—and end, subtitled “The greatest civilisations of the past 3,000 years were the opposite of MAGA”

The way to start a “golden age” is to erect big, beautiful barriers to keep out foreign goods and people. That, at least, is the view of the most powerful man on the planet. Johan Norberg, a Swedish historian, makes the opposite case. In “Peak Human”, Mr Norberg charts the rise and fall of golden ages around the world over the past three millennia, ranging from Athens to the Anglosphere via the Abbasid caliphate. He finds that the polities that outshone their peers did so because they were more open: to trade, to strangers and to ideas that discomfited the mighty. When they closed up again, they lost their shine.

Just in case anyone still has delusions of grandeur concerning MAGA, or Trump.

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Whereas the US has become an outlaw nation.

The Bulwark, Mona Charen, 6 Jan 2026: We’re the Bad Guys Now, subtitled “America has become the kind of country it used to oppose.”

THE EDITORIAL BOARD OF THE Wall Street Journal has delivered its share of idiocies over the past few years, but its response to the capture of Nicolás Maduro has set a new standard. Calling the military intervention “justified” because Venezuela had allied with “Russia, China, Cuba, and Iran,” the board then declared triumphantly that “Mr. Trump is pursuing the Bush freedom agenda, at least in the Western Hemisphere. Are we all neocons now?”

Also living in a dream world is Sen. John Fetterman, who told Fox News that “We all wanted this man gone, and now he is gone. I think we should really appreciate exactly what happened here.” Fetterman then offered a benediction, saying that he just wanted to “remind everybody that America is a force of good order and democracy, and we are promoting these kinds of values. We are the good guys.”

That’s delusional, and I say that as someone who believed in humanitarian interventions abroad, who supported the Gulf War, the Iraq War, the bombing of Serbia, and the invasion of Grenada. American power has been used for bad ends at times (the Mexican War was unadulterated aggression), but it’s hard to think of a country that has more often extended itself for good purposes around the globe. We had losses and failures—South Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya—but tens of millions of people in places like Taiwan, Germany, South Korea, Kosovo, Kuwait, Bosnia, and, yes, Iraq owe their freedom and prosperity to American arms. Hundreds of millions more live free from oppression only because the United States armed them against aggressors or threatened to use force if they were attacked. Damn right we were the good guys! As Colin Powell put it in 2003: “We have gone forth from our shores repeatedly over the last hundred years . . . and put wonderful young men and women at risk, many of whom have lost their lives, and we have asked for nothing except enough ground to bury them in.”

To imagine that Trump is doing anything remotely like those interventions in Venezuela is risible. …

The writer goes on with examples of what Trump’s said in recent days. And:

Trump has hardly bothered to offer a reason for his intervention in Venezuela, and when his team has come up with some, they don’t bear scrutiny. Was it drugs? That seems unlikely since Trump just issued a pardon to Juan Orlando Hernández, former president of Honduras, who was convicted of drug running. Was it communism? Not if Trump is content to leave the regime intact. Was it immigration? Not when the Trump camp is forgoing a clear chance to restore democratic stability in that country, which would reduce emigration.

The sheer pleasure of bullying seems to be the likeliest explanation, but here again, Trumpland is another planet. None of the reasons that Venezuela is truly guilty seem to interest Trump, but he’s obsessed with the fantasy that they somehow emptied their prisons and insane asylums and shipped the inmates to America.

This. Is. Not. True.

And then concludes:

The United States under Trump is an outlaw nation, threatening excellent neighbors like Canada with economic devastation, blasting people in fast boats to pieces, withdrawing from international agreements, bullying friends and foes alike, and now kidnapping foreign leaders (however evil). We are becoming the kind of nation against which America used to defend others.

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Again reflecting the Economist item above:

The Bulwark, William Kristol, 7 Jan 2026: MAGA’s Lust for Fascism, subtitled “Trump’s ideologues want a smaller, meaner, whiter America.”

Then scroll down to: The Spirit of Fascism

MAGA is a vulgar, cartoonish, cultish, and incoherent movement.

So, a century ago, was fascism.

And as today’s MAGA more openly and explicitly embraces the spirit of yesteryear’s fascism, it’s perhaps worth noting that it is the era of the rise of fascism to which MAGA looks back with nostalgia and yearning.

In her most recent newsletter, the historian Heather Cox Richardson reminds us of this 2009 statement by Peter Thiel, who as much as anyone could be considered the theorist of Trumpism as an intellectual movement.

In which Thiel claimed that freedom and democracy are incompatible. And so on, about Thiel, and Stephen Miller (“MAGA’s chief propagandist”). And concluding:

As the political scientist Nicholas Grossman remarked, “Imagine looking at the period after WWII and especially after the Cold War as an era of American weakness.” But Grossman sees what lies behind Miller’s complaint: “Unless, I suppose, if becoming the strongest, wealthiest country in history sounds bad to you because some brown people were a part of it, and you’d rather be weaker if it means being whiter.”

The more liberal nation and the liberal world order that we were able to construct after World War II made us stronger. Miller and Thiel—and MAGA—reject that.

So MAGA does not want to make America great again. MAGA does not simply want to correct some of the excesses of modern America or the modern world. MAGA embraces what was most illiberal about the old order. The theorists of MAGA look back longingly to, they yearn for, the ideas and policies that produced the worst of the 1930s.

Or to put it simply: It is fascism that they yearn for.

Yes, the brown people part is the key.

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Authoritarians tend to rewrite recent history to their own advantage.

CNN, 6 Jan 2026: White House rewrites January 6 history and blames police for deadly attack on 5-year anniversary

The White House rolled out a new website Tuesday with a full-blown recast of the historical record of January 6, 2021, hailing the pro-Trump mob who stormed the US Capitol five years ago as “peaceful protesters” who were provoked by law enforcement.

The new site baselessly claims the violence on January 6, 2021, was instigated by law enforcement and then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It recasts the rioters as the victims that day, and depicts President Donald Trump as a hero for granting sweeping pardons for the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the deadly attack.

Nonsense, of course — WE SAW IT ON TV, LIVE. But if you repeat a lie often enough, people begin to believe it. Thus has history been rewritten and rewritten through the ages. What of history can we trust? Maybe not very much, except for the broad outline of specific facts. Yet it doesn’t stop the religious, who believe that their holy books are literally true. OK, sure, God did it.

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Robert Reich looks at the big picture.

Robert Reich, 6 Jan 2026: This is the Real Danger Posed by Trump subtitled “A direct line connects Trump’s attempted coup five years ago with his incursion into Venezuela last weekend — and his current threats to Colombia, Cuba, and Greenland.”

Trump’s domestic and foreign policies — ranging from his attempted coup against the United States five years ago, to his incursion into Venezuela last weekend, to his current threats against Cuba, Colombia, and Greenland — undermine domestic and international law. But that’s not all.

They threaten what we mean by civilization.

The moral purpose of civilized society is to prevent the stronger from attacking and exploiting the weaker. Otherwise, we’d be permanently immersed in a brutish war in which only the fittest and most powerful could survive.

This principle lies at the center of America’s founding documents: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. It’s also the core of the post- World War II international order championed by the United States, including the UN Charter — emphasizing multilateralism, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.

But it’s a fragile principle, easily violated by those who would exploit their power.

In contrast to Stephen Miller’s view of the world (quoted here): “We live in a world in which you can talk all you want about international niceties and everything else, but we live in a world that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world since the beginning of time.”

This is the tribalist’s view of the world. The uncivilized, barbaric view of the world. Something the species has been trying to overcome — and has made great progress doing so in the past few centuries — despite the inevitable regressives. They will always be with us; it’s base human nature, absent education.

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Just the headlines, and brief comments.

  • Salon, Amanda Marcotte, 7 Jan 2026: Sorry, GOP. There’s no Christian revival, subtitled “Republicans are betting the midterms on mass conversions that aren’t happening”
  • The thing about religion is, you can be wrong over and over and over again, but it’s fine because you still have ‘faith’.

Posted in Culture, History, Human Nature, Philosophy, Tribalism | Comments Off on Our Outlaw Nation

Five Years Since a Day that Will Live in Infamy

  • Articles about the anniversary of January 6th.
  • MAGA cognitive dissonance.
  • Loyalty over expertise — CBS Evening News.
  • Headlines about whether narrative defeats reason, conservative hysteria over Chick-fil-A and a gay couple, and the Pentagon’s petty attack on Sen. Mark Kelly.
  • Umberto Eco’s list of traits of fascism.
  • And Springsteen’s “Soul Driver.”
– – –

Once again, the MAGA crowd, and their glorious leader Trump, don’t care about law and order or principles, only tribal loyalty.

Slate, Russel Payne, 6 Jan 2026: We learned nothing from Jan. 6, subtitled “Evidence Trump tried to overturn the election 5 years ago is ‘overwhelming.’ There haven’t been any consequences”

After a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, it appeared the attack would result in a rare moment of reckoning in American politics — at least for a moment. Even hardline GOP politicians had distanced themselves from Trump, then President Joe Biden was in charge and Congress and the Department of Justice were investigating both the attack and the plot to overturn the 2020 election behind it.

Five years later, any accountability, political or legal, that Trump and his allies faced has been erased.

With a recounting of events since then. Pardoning the rioters, and so on. Conspiracy theories. How partisan alignment doesn’t change despite that one event.

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NY Times, Editorial Board, 31 Dec 2025: Disgust Over Jan. 6 Is No Longer Bipartisan

It was a day that should live in infamy. Instead, it was the day President Trump’s second term began to take shape.

Five years ago, on Jan. 6, 2021, a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol, hoping to overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election. After the sun set that day, Congress reconvened to certify Joe Biden’s victory. The rioters lost, and so did Mr. Trump, who had summoned them to Washington and urged them to march to the Capitol. The Trump era seemed to have ended in one of the most disgracefully anti-American acts in the nation’s history.

And now he’s worse.

That day was indeed a turning point, but not the one it first seemed to be. It was a turning point toward a version of Mr. Trump who is even more lawless than the one who governed the country in his first term. It heralded a culture of political unaccountability, in which people who violently attacked Congress and beat police officers escaped without lasting consequence. The politicians and pundits who had egged on the attack with their lies escaped, as well. The aftermath of Jan. 6 made the Republican Party even more feckless, beholden to one man and willing to pervert reality to serve his interests. Once Mr. Trump won election again in 2024, despite his role in encouraging the riot and his many distortions about it, it emboldened him to govern in defiance of the Constitution, without regard for the truth and with malice toward those who stand up to his abuses.

Tragically, America is still living in a political era that began on Jan. 6, 2021. Recognizing as much is necessary to bring this era to an end before it has many more anniversaries.

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And so MAGA keeps making excuses for glorious leader, no matter how extreme his behavior.

Slate, Jill Filipovic, 5 Jan 2026: Trump Is Going Full Dick Cheney on Foreign Policy. MAGA Is Twisting Itself Into Knots to Defend It., subtitled “It’s not easy to defend the president’s promise to ‘run’ Venezuela after years of criticizing foreign wars. But his lackeys are sure going to try.”

Donald Trump’s moves to invade Venezuela, abduct its president and first lady, invite global corporations to exploit its resources, and leave the nation’s feckless authoritarian regime largely intact range from blatantly illegal to facially insane. And the MAGA response to them is the most illustrative yet of the movement’s utter ideological and moral bankruptcy.

— Pause here. “Utter ideological and moral bankruptcy.” Resuming —

This is a president who promised to put America first: He ran on isolationism, as well as an end to the era of wars of choice, foreign quagmires, and the U.S. as the world’s police officer. What Trump has offered instead: wars of choice, with America as the world’s plunderer—and his followers not only cheer but invent ridiculous pretexts to defend this utterly unjustifiable move.

Once again, my interest in following stories like this isn’t about politics so much as human nature. How despite our pretenses at constructing idealistic standards of fair behavior, e.g. the US Constitution, most people, even when they claim allegiance to such standards, don’t follow them for a moment. They’re much more motivate by tribal loyalty and leadership by an authoritarian would-be dictator. They don’t want to think, they want to be told what to do. This is just how most people work. The article proceeds with things Trump promised, and instead did the opposite. But that’s OK with MAGA!

The usual MAGA defectors—Thomas Massie, Marjorie Taylor Greene—offered their usual criticisms that this isn’t what MAGA stands for. But the protests are starting to ring a little hollow after the 456th time the president said he would do something, then did the opposite. What is now apparent to anyone willing to see it is that there is no MAGA ideology. There is no moral core. There is no organizing philosophy. There is simply a reckless and self-interested president who desperately wants to be admired, who is a master of distraction, and who sees the White House as a very fine way to enrich him and his family.

There’s a lot of cognitive dissonance going on here. The piece concludes:

“Start a war for oil to distract from problems at home” is the dumbest plot, but it seems to be our current storyline. And most of MAGA, a hollowed-out movement of unprincipled and morally vacant shills and sycophants, seems keen to play along.

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And this. MAGA-friendly Bari Weiss has taken over CBS News, despite inexperience in broadcasting, with promises to promote the perspectives of average Americans over those of academics or experts. (See yesterday’s post.) Last night’s CBS Evening News, with a new host, did not go well. Again, it’s easy to see this as the promotion of loyalty over expertise.

Slate, Luke Winkie, 6 Jan 2026: The Disastrous CBS Evening News Debut Was at Least an Apt Metaphor for America Right Now

Generally speaking, when presenting oneself as the vanguard for a radical new editorial direction—one that supposedly cuts through the ossified liberal bromides that have long dominated the nightly news—you do not want your debut broadcast to be reminiscent of an infamously botched campus newscast. Unfortunately, Tony Dokoupil, the newly installed anchor of CBS Evening News and the face of the company’s nouveau regime-friendly rebrand, was not so lucky. Monday was Dokoupil’s inaugural shift at the desk. How did it go? Well, to quote the man himself, “first day, big problems here.”

With a video and description.

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Let’s catch up on some “just headlines.”

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One more, beyond the headline.

And let’s end with this. Umberto Eco, the great Italian novelist, once wrote an essay about fascism. Its points are captured in this Wikipedia post. (I saw this via a Facebook post.) I’ll summarize. It would be interesting to compare these points to those in Timothy Snyder’s ON TYRANNY (review here).

  1. The cult of tradition
  2. The rejection of modernism
  3. The cult of action for action’s sake
  4. Disagreement is treason
  5. Fear of difference
  6. Appeals to a frustrated middle class
  7. Obsession with plot [i.e. conspiracy theories]
  8. Casting enemies at both too strong and too weak
  9. Life is permanent warfare
  10. Contempt for the weak
  11. Everybody is educated to become a hero
  12. Machismo
  13. Selective populism
  14. Newspeak

How many of these are obvious qualities of the current Trump administration?

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And what I happen to be listening to this afternoon. One of my favorite Springsteen songs.

Well then here’s to our destruction…

Posted in authoritarianism, History, Human Nature | Comments Off on Five Years Since a Day that Will Live in Infamy