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Author: Bartleby

why addicts never get anything done

why addicts never get anything done

they never get anything done because they are so desperate for the moment, for believing that they can keep the moment and not have to face the next one.

it’s a sad truth, but addicts always lose because they can’t handle a fundamental tenet of Buddhism: everything flows: everything keeps changing; no moment stays.

An addict, he’ll want to hold that moment forever when he’s drinking the same drinks and nodding to the same tunes he’s drunk and nodded to a million times before.
He tells himself that this time it is different.
He tells himself that this time it’s gonna last, this time the escape is complete.
The pain that he’s running from and that is waiting inside of him — that it won’t catch up with him this time. Because he’s careening into infinite expansion. Because he’s breaking free. he’s winning

An addict, he’s a victim of circumstances — of his own circumstances, of the hurts he’s decided he can only run from.

An addict, he’s getting older but can’t admit it.

An addict, he’s serious but not really.

different people have different problems
we’re not here to judge
if he’s being a baby
or he’s a man broken by forces that would break any man
we’re not here to tell him who he is

but we can tell him that
if he carries on like this
he won’t get anything done
and he’ll die sorry
that he didn’t give and get more love
that he didn’t give and get more joy
that he didn’t give and get more

Various authors and editors
copyright AM Watson

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

come on

come on

i know there are difficulties
i know there are things you can’t talk about and they can’t hear
i know you are alone with some of this
but in the end
it is your life
and you will be happy and helpful and alive
or not
so why not
push a little more
for a little more Light?
I’m saying to you: come on

Various authors and editors
copyright AM Watson

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

the hurt you cannot beat

the hurt you cannot beat

there is a hurt you cannot beat
there is a monster you cannot stop
there is a hurt inside your gut and spreading all through
it wraps around your shoulders and pulls you in over
over your belly
you cry out in pain
from being hit again from the inside
by the secret shovel that wacks you in your gut
whenever you get too deep within yourself

you can’t make it stop
you can’t deal with it
you can’t tell anyone about it
you can’t beat it
it will drag you down
down to the bottom of the sea
where it is cold and heavy
where it is dark and hard
to move
it will drag you
down and down
you will lose
you have known
since the beginning
that you will lose
that this is all
just one last heroic stand
before the bad thing finishes you off
this is what you have known
this is what you have carried within
this is what no one hears
this is what you want to not be true
but how can you make it untrue?

Various authors and editors
copyright AM Watson

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

On slipping into alcholism

On slipping into alcholism

I’d uh
wanted to
help
wanted to uh
be somebody
meet somebody
have something
stop the Evil

But i uh
just can’t
just can’t stop
drinking

and the days
slip by
so quick and sure
so empty and lonesome
so blank and sorry

the fools will win
I know they are wrong
but I don’t know
how
to control myself
how
to make things right
how
to find and share
the Light

stop drinking and your lungs will clear up
stop drinking and you’ll be well again
stop drinking and you’ll be able

why won’t you?
what are you looking for?
lonely
but everyone’s lonely
broken
but everyone’s broken
so much strength
so many possibilities
so what then?
what’s the story?

people I know who have died
it is starting to add up
people that were old and
I expected to die
people who were young and
I expected to live

broken down by the evils, not even strong enough to face the Evil
this is what it is
to succumb to drink

author: Arthur C. Smidtty
editors: bartleby willard with amble whistletown
copyright: always andy watson

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

love and empire

love and empire

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

[written after watching a very informative “Soehne der Sonne – die Inka” (“Sons of the Sun – The Incas”) documentary on ZDF]

It’s just you and me babe.
Please.

The Incas overtook the Andes.
It was quick — less than 100 years to go from pretty-big to HUGE.
They were the sons of the Sun, so that’s why.
So they reasoned.
There was the capital in Cuzcos and, later, a second in Quito.
They didn’t read and write; they did their accounting on knotted strings, and possibly with miles and miles of a rectangle about 30 yard-wide & -deep holes foxholes across, forming a kind of eternal snake lumbering up and down a narrow sandy rocky Andean mesa.
The Incan leader was the son of the Sun God Intl.
And he was also a God.
They won and won; the losers had to pay tribute, and generally admit that they and their gods were second-rate.
In like 1470, they conquered Chan Chan (near Trujillo in Peru) from the Chimú. They sent the Chan Chan goldsmiths to Cuzcos. Gold was a symbol of the Sun.

I wasn’t there, but I can tell you that the whole thing was largely bullshit.
Well, the Sun God Intl had created the world out of Chaos and Darkness, and he made the Incas so that they could bring order to the disorder — like he’d done. Except they were to do it politically while he did it existentially. So that was good, they argued, and some might yet argue on their behalf.
Except there had been order already — just not all under the rule of Cuzco and paying tribute to the Incas. So that’s why one might raise one’s eyebrows.

I don’t know if I told you about the time when the Romans smashed the Celts.
Well, it kept happening, actually.
The Celts wouldn’t stop drinking.
They couldn’t get themselves organized.
They couldn’t adapt.
The Romans figured out how to beat them and the Celts didn’t figure out shit.
The way for Romans to beat Celts was to be more disciplined and to throw short spears with weighted ends that tear down the Celts’ shields, and then you — shorter, because you are a Roman and the Celts are giant barbarians — run in and hack them up in that moment of confused exposure.
The Romans had that one idea; the Celts didn’t come up with a counter-idea; so they kept losing. For hundreds of years until it was over for the Celts on the Mainland.

I don’t know if I told you about the time when the English smashed the Celtic tribes in Britain.
They kept doing it.
It seemed easy for them.
And the Scots became British and learned English and toured the globe, enforcing policies of the Empire, making some money, getting some love from some babe here and there, and so spreading themselves about.

I don’t know if I told you about the Atlantic slave trade.
The British brought Africans to the New World, where the Africans were slaves and had to admit they were less than white people, who kept all the books to themselves as best they could.

There are other things I may or may not have mentioned.

Did I tell you that I love you?
Did I tell you that I don’t want any more empires?
But empires will be.
They will be heavy stones rolling down upon little people.
Everyone ends up being little people sooner or later.

There are better and worse power structures and better and worse decisions within power structures.
We should do what we can to speak and act in ways that help us all build and enforce better power structures and make better decisions.

But I only ever just want to be with you.
I just want to go someplace safe and quiet with you.
Someplace where we can catch our breaths and hear our hearts.
Someplace where we can be together.

Pizarro met the Incas in 1527.
Then he went away for a while and the plagues that the Spaniards carried inside them swept along the empire and the leader of the Incas was one of the very many who died.
He’d not named an heir to the throne.
So then came a civil war on top of the plagues.
And in like 1532 Pizarro comes back with 200 soldiers; they see abandoned cities; they capture the Incan leader, who you weren’t even supposed to look into his eyes because he was a GOD.
And they hold him for a year.
The Incas fill a room with gold to buy him back.
Pizarro leads a sham trial and the Incan Emperor is found guilty of something or other and executed.

They’d sacrificed like 200 people — the Incas.
To fix the problem.
Sometimes kids.
The sacrificial children were chosen a year before their deaths.
And they got cocaine and alcohol and traveled far and went on and on, getting ready to save the people and become Gods.
But they didn’t really — they just died at seven or fifteen, as the case may be.
We know that now; but they didn’t then. It was a great honor if your child was chosen for ritual sacrifice.
You could argue that upon death we all return to the Light and so in a sense become Gods, but there’s no need to be sacrificed for that.

Anyway, the gold went from the Incas to the Spaniards.
That happened in the 1500s.

But the main thing is that I love you and want to slip away with you, to get away from all the noises with you close to me in every way.

Yes: I’ve done a lot of small to medium bureaucracy for a lot of small to medium to large empires. And I would’ve done things differently if I’d been wiser than my times and places, and sometimes I was, but often I wasn’t, or at least not enough so that now, looking back from here, I can feel fine and dandy about who I was then, looking out at this or that wide-dawning day. And I do believe that some order is needed. And I now of course support representative democracy with universal adult suffrage, freedom of speech and religion, and all that. And I acknowledge that unless these forms of government thrive, the world is noose tightening around us all. And so protecting representative democracy is as necessary as protecting one’s healthy home.

But all I can think of is how nice it would be to slip away with you. I want to go some place quiet with you. I want to love you. I want to be close to you. I want to know you. I want to be good to you. I want to forget about all the empires that I’ve absorbed into and fallen in and out of. I want to forget about all the great conquests and terrible defeats, none of which could ever mean much to me — not when you have such soft-flowing darkriver hair and such a bright and gentle smile.

I want to forget about everything that isn’t the light in your eyes and the laughter of our children safe and sound in the playing fields far from all killing fields.

Is this allowed?

Can a man who is just a man be happy with a woman who is just a woman in a world that is just a world?
Well, if you want to, and the heavy lumbering momentums don’t forbid it, then I ask for your hand and for the strength to hold it right.

Author: Isaac McAbraham, last of the Scots Loser Brigade
Editors: B Willard & A Whistletown
Copyright: AM Watson

[Part of A political writer falls apart, which is somehow part of NYC Journal – Politics]

Executive Power Grabs

Executive Power Grabs

[This is part of our Trump’s Threat to Democracy project.]

From the Protect Democracy Executive Power Grabs Page

[Go to the page to see election-security measures they are working on.]
[I inserted the numbers and refer to them in the below supporting documentation.]

“A strong democracy depends upon the separation of powers within government. When the system works properly, the legislature and courts prevent the executive branch from amassing too much power. This balance has shifted in recent years, with (2) Congress abdicating its role, and President Trump is now undermining checks and balances by (1) attacking the judiciary, (2) withholding information from Congress, and (3) punishing states that have opposed his policies. We are working to maintain a strong separation of powers, and fight executive power grabs.”

1. Attacking the Judiciary

Brennan Center Article with “… examples of Trump’s public statements attacking individual judges and questioning the constitutional authority of the judiciary …”

Trump’s Twitter on Feb 24, 2020:
[“Sotomayor accuses GOP appointed Justices of being biased in favor of Trump.” @IngrahamAngle @FoxNews This is a terrible thing to say. Trying to “shame” some into voting her way? She never criticized Justice Ginsberg when she called me a “faker”. Both should recuse themselves..

….on all Trump, or Trump related, matters! While “elections have consequences”, I only ask for fairness, especially when it comes to decisions made by the United States Supreme Court!]

That’s the first example.
The page is very long.

Executive summary of Alliance for Justice’s Trump’s attacks on our justice system from 1/14/2020:

“Today, Alliance for Justice releases its comprehensive report Trump’s Attacks on Our Justice System: 2017–2019, cataloguing the unprecedented number of judges Trump has appointed, their ultraconservative views, and the various norms Senate Republicans have abandoned to fast-track these confirmations.

“The numbers tell the story. Compared to Obama’s first three years in office, Trump has appointed as many Supreme Court justices (two), twice as many appeals court judges (50 vs. 25), and significantly more district court judges (133 vs. 97). In fact, the Senate confirmed 80 district court nominees just this past year. Trump has already flipped three circuit courts of appeals.”

The executive summary also discusses the litmus tests Trump applies (a willingness to gut the Affordable Care Act, etc)

Trump is at war with the whole idea of an independent judiciary by Garrett Epps (Professor of constitutional law at the University of Baltimore) for the Atlantic on 3/4/2020:

“He is at swords’ points with the federal courts generally, with individual judges who have displeased him, with private citizens who as jurors defy his preferences, and now with the Supreme Court.”

The author gives many examples like these two beginning ones:

“The war goes back years. Even before he was elected president, Trump attacked Gonzalo P. Curiel, the trial judge in a civil-fraud case against Trump University, as a ‘Mexican judge’ who should not be permitted to hear cases about Trump, because ‘I’m building a wall.’ (Curiel was born in Indiana.) When Judge James Robart of the Western District of Washington halted Trump’s first travel ban, the president dismissed him as a so-called judge,’ and when the Ninth Circuit agreed with Robart, the president actually threatened to dismantle that court.”

Per Epps, Trump is clearly seeking to intimidate the courts into doing his bidding: “… both judge and jury; participants in the nominally independent judicial process must now fear not only his criticism but threats or even violence from his supporters.”

“This is, in historical terms, unheard of. The worst that Jefferson did to hostile Federalist judges was support their impeachment—an entirely constitutional process that was soon abandoned as unprincipled. Roosevelt sought to pack the Court but studiously refrained from calling out its individual members.”

2. Congress Abdicating its Role / President withholding information from

Congress has lost its power over Trump [Kim Wehle for the Atlantic on 2/4/2020]

The setting is Trump’s impeachment trial. The author quotes defense attorney Patrick Philbin: “Congress has numerous political tools it can use in battles with the executive branch—appropriations, legislation, nominations, and potentially in some circumstances even impeachment.”

Wehle argues that (in Feb 2020) Congress is about to abdicate its responsibility by acquitting Trump “despite ample evidence of serious misconduct” and has effectively no tools left to rein Trump in.

She goes through each one of Philbin’s listed tools with which the legislative can control the executive:

a. Appropriations (power over spending).
Here she sites the (nonpartisan) Government Accountability Office’s finding that Trump violated the law by withholding $391 of aid from Ukraine after the Senate had approved the aid.

“With an impending acquittal, the Senate is saying to Trump and all future presidents that they can ignore Congress’s appropriations decisions without consequence. Trump can withhold or spend money as he likes—even if Congress has already said otherwise.”

She also cites Trump taking money that Congress had not earmarked for his border wall project and using it for his border wall project (this after Congress had refused to give him the funds he’d requested for his border wall project).

b. legislation (power to make laws)

Congress has the power to make laws and it is the executive branch’s job to enforce the laws congress makes. She argues that in the Ukraine-aid case, Trump “treated the Impoundment Control Act as optional—not binding.”

Another example: “Trump’s team kept the whistle-blower complaint from Congress as well, despite a clear statutory obligation to hand it over.”

[In the above quote, the author links to a letter from the House Intelligence Committee, stating that the Acting Director of National Intelligence was required to hand over the whistle-blower complaint no later than 9/2/2019.
Here’s a PBS article from November 27, 2019 dealing with the issue: Trump was briefed on whistle-blower complaint before Ukraine aid was released]

c. nominations

Congress has the power to refuse a president’s nominations for federal offices and judgeships.
The author points out that Trump has repeatedly circumvented that process.
She sites the case of Rudy Giuliani: “A former New York mayor serving as the president’s private lawyer, Giuliani conducted foreign policy in Ukraine on Trump’s behalf without enduring the confirmation process or even going under contract with the U.S. government.”

Trump also perverts the will of Congress by refusing to fill vacancies: “leaving the Federal Election Commission unable to take any enforcement actions for violations of federal campaign laws in the lead-up to the 2020 election, for example.” Then there’s his practice of filling key positions with temporary appointees, not subject to Senate review and confirmation.”including giving Mick Mulvaney the dual titles of acting White House chief of staff and acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Of course, Trump isn’t the first president to appoint acting officials. But he has explicitly defended his extensive use of this stopgap tool because of the flexibility it gives him.”

[See also the “Also from this article” section at the end of #3 below]

3.

Trump escalating his war on blue America by Ronald Brownstein for the Atlantic on May 14, 2020

“Long before the outbreak started, Trump pursued a broad array of policies meant to pressure or punish Democratic-run local governments, such as ending the federal deductibility of state and local taxes in the 2017 tax bill and seeking to revoke the authority California has wielded under the Clean Air Act since the 1970s to set its own air-pollution standards.”

Trump’s argued that blue states and cities have to make concessions in exchange for life-saving corona-aid from the federal government–requirements such as: “states and cities to cut taxes; indemnify businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits; end sanctuary-city policies in locales that don’t readily cooperate with immigration authorities; and adopt other conservative priorities.” [here the author links to Trump’s twitter feed.

“Standing at the White House podium, he famously acknowledged that he had told Vice President Mike Pence not to return calls for help from governors who have criticized him. He’s repeatedly encouraged the ‘liberate’ protesters, primarily targeting Democratic governors.”

And so on.

Also from this article:

“Trump’s announcement last week that he would not allow Anthony Fauci or other administration experts to testify before Congress—because ‘the House is a bunch of Trump haters’—followed the similar defiance he displayed during the impeachment inquiry.”

“Most sweepingly, Barr’s decision to drop charges against Michael Flynn, the former Trump national-security aide who admitted to lying to federal investigators, marked another step in the attorney general’s long campaign to discredit the investigation of possible collusion between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign.”

“Barr has assembled copious legal theories to support each element of his campaign. But what binds it together is the delegitimization of any oversight of the president, especially from institutions controlled by members of the opposite party. ‘This whole pattern of events is a systematic effort to cut off all meaningful checks and balances,” Donald B. Ayer, the former deputy attorney general under George H. W. Bush, told me. “If you look at each piece in isolation, then you misunderstand what is going on.’”

Articles to read later:
Reason.com: Did Trump just admit to withholding information from the impeachment process
Brookings.edu: All the Presidents Privileges
Lawfareblog: discussion of charges of obstruction of Congress in Trump’s impeachment process

[This is part of our Trump’s Threat to Democracy project.]

[NYC Journal – Politics Page]

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Corrupting Elections

Corrupting Elections

[This is part of our Trump’s Threat to Democracy project.]

From the Protect Democracy Corrupting Elections Page

[Go to the page to see election-security measures they are working on.]
[I inserted the numbers and refer to them in the below supporting documentation.]

“In recent years, we’ve seen a disturbing trend in which elected officials have abused their powers to tilt that playing field for their own advantage. (1) In 2018, for instance, Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp used his authority over elections to restrict voter registration and participation in order to improve his own chances in a bid for governor. President Trump has also shown a willingness to undermine our elections for his own advantage, (2) using U.S. aid to Ukraine to pressure that country’s leaders to pursue a politically advantageous investigation; (3) attempting to undermine the legitimacy of elections by repeatedly calling into question the results; and (4) exaggerating the prevalence of voter fraud in what appears to be a prelude to restricting the franchise.”

(5) In addition to the concerns raised by Project Democracy, we’d like to investigate the ways in which the 2020 election might be stolen.

Below we provide details about each of the above concerns.

1.
From an American Public Media article on former Georgia Secretary of State, now Georgia Governor Brian Kemp:

“On a single day in late July 2017, Kemp’s office had removed from the rolls 560,000 Georgians who had been flagged because they’d skipped one too many elections. Abrams would later call the purge the “use-it-or-lose-it scheme.” An APM Reports investigation last year estimated 107,000 of the people purged under the policy would otherwise have been eligible to vote last year, . . .”

[See CNN Elections Results: Abrams lost by a little less than 55,000 votes]

The (invariably Republican) politicians who support such voter roll purges say that the practice prevents election fraud. There is little evidence to support this claim [see final quote from APM article below]. What it ends up doing is make many otherwise eligible voters, a majority of whom favor Democrats [in the APM article, there’s a graph showing that almost 57,000 more voters from the rolls in strong-Abrams precincts than in strong-Kemp precincts], ineligible to vote. The current (right-leaning) Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of these practices by a (surprise, surprise) 5-4 margin:

“Last year, the Supreme Court upheld the practice on a narrow 5-4 vote just months before the 2018 midterm elections. That paved the way for officials in Georgia and at least nine other states, most led by Republicans, to continue with the purges, which typically happen in each odd year after a federal election. More purges are planned in the coming months, ahead of the 2020 election, and they have the potential to knock hundreds of thousands from the rolls, helping to shape the electorate in some key battleground states, including Georgia and Ohio, for the coming presidential election.”

“Just how the purges guard against voter fraud is unknown, election experts say. A database of election fraud investigations compiled by the conservative Heritage Foundation identified just one case of voter fraud in the past two years among Oklahoma, Ohio and Georgia. That case involved the fraudulent use of an absentee ballot.”

2.
From a Buzzfeed Summary of the Trump impeachment evidence:

“President Trump faces two articles of impeachment against him: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.”

The article recaps the evidence presented in the trial as follows:
[The article gives a details about each item, which are worth reading]

“Trump’s administration offered Ukraine a White House meeting in exchange for an investigation into energy company Burisma and the Bidens, an ambassador said.”

“Trump’s special envoy to Ukraine said it was critical for Ukraine’s president to support the investigation.”

“Ukraine’s president was concerned the investigation put his country in the middle of domestic US politics, a US ambassador said.”

“Thirty minutes before Trump’s July 25 call with Zelensky, Volker texted a Ukrainian official that the investigations were key to arrange a White House visit.”

“In the phone call, Trump told Zelensky to “do us a favor” and investigate a company the Democratic National Committee hired in 2016, Hunter Biden, and Joe Biden.”

“Ninety minutes after the phone call, the Defense Department was told to hold off on military aid to Ukraine.”

“The day after the phone call, Trump was overheard personally asking if Ukraine was going to follow through on investigations, an embassy worker said.”

[“David Holmes, counselor of political affairs at the US Embassy in Ukraine, testified he overheard a phone call between Sondland and Trump.

Holmes: “Ambassador Sondland replied yes, he was in Ukraine, and went on to state that President Zelensky quote, ‘loves your ass.’ I then heard President Trump ask, ‘So he’s going to do the investigation?’ Ambassador Sondland replied that, ‘He’s going to do it,’ adding that, ‘President Zelensky will do anything you ask him to do.'”]

“But Trump’s attorneys said the Bidens deserved to be investigated for corruption.”
[“Former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi implied Joe Biden forced Ukraine to fire a Ukrainian prosecutor investigating Burisma, the energy company tied to his son, Hunter Biden.

Democrats, however, argued that the removal of the prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, was widely considered to be corrupt and removed in accordance with US policy and after prompting from many other western nations as well. Shokin also was no longer investigating Burisma at the time he was ousted.”]

“Ukraine’s president later said, Nobody pushed me.'”

“Giuliani said that Trump himself wanted Zelensky to make a public statement about an investigation into the 2016 election, the DNC server, and Burisma, Sondland testified.”

“Zelensky’s top adviser wanted a firm date for the promised White House visit before any formal statement on the investigations was made.”

“Giuliani, Volker, and Sondland edited the Ukrainian statement to specifically mention the 2016 election and Burisma.”

“Taylor testified that Sondland said Trump told him everything — a White House visit as well as military aid — depended on Ukraine announcing its investigation into Burisma and the 2016 election.”

“Trump then said he didn’t want any quid pro quo from Zelensky.”
[“Republicans have pointed to that statement as proof that the president was not looking for a quid pro quo. But Democrats pointed out that at the time the conversation took place, Trump knew a whistleblower complaint had been filed regarding his call with Zelensky and the investigation request.”]

“Trump told reporters in October he thought Ukraine and China should start a “major investigation” into the Bidens.”

“And Trump previously said he’d accept foreign help if it would win him reelection.”

“Trump’s acting chief of staff said military aid to Ukraine was indeed held up in connection to investigations into corruption, the DNC server, and the 2016 election.”

“Even if Trump had withheld the aid from Ukraine in exchange for help in the 2020 election, it didn’t merit impeachment, his lawyer said.”
[there’s a legal question; we have now a political choice]

3.
Trump refuses to say if he will accept 2020 election results

NBC News: Trump says it could take “months” or “years” to know 2020 election results

“‘You know what? You’re not going to know this — possibly, if you really did it right — for months or for years. Because these ballots are all going to be lost, they’re all going to be gone,’ Trump said, repeating false claims about vote-by-mail ballots.”

Washington Post: How to prepare for Trump rejecting election results in November [July 27, 2020; by Brian Klass]:

“President Trump is laying the groundwork to do something that no previous president has ever done: falsely claim that an election was fixed against him in order to discredit the vote. Trump has repeatedly — and incorrectly — claimed the election will be ‘rigged’ against him. By promoting a series of wacky, debunked conspiracy theories, he has primed his supporters to wrongly believe he is the victim of some unknown, shadowy “deep state” plot. In an interview that aired last week, he refused to commit to accepting the results in November.” [see WP article for links]

The article quotes Nic Cheeseman of the University of Birmingham, an expert on contentious elections:

“There are five warning I always look for,” he told me. “Organized militias, a leader who is not prepared to lose, distrust of the political system, disinformation, and a potentially close contest. Right now, the U.S. has all five.”

The article lists five steps to counteract this threat: (1) “a bipartisan pact endorsing election results”; (2) “Second, shore up public confidence with oversight. State election officials can conduct quick randomized audits and release results that demonstrate the integrity of the process. Many states do not automatically mandate such audits, but there is still time to expand them before November.”; (3) media should do more to educate the public about election procedures — he gives the example of Trump saying mail-in ballots are problematic but absentee ballots are fine, but mail-in ballots = no-fault absentee ballots; (4) “state and local election officials should do more contingency planning for a pandemic election”; & (5) “it would help if the margin was clear and court rulings were swift and decisive to uphold democracy” [SO VOTE FOR BIDEN]

New Yorker: What happens if Trump fights the election results?

4.
Brennan Center: Myth of Voter Fraud

“Extensive research reveals that fraud is very rare. Yet repeated, false allegations of fraud can make it harder for millions of eligible Americans to participate in elections.”

“The Brennan Center’s seminal report The Truth About Voter Fraud conclusively demonstrated that most allegations of fraud turn out to be baseless and that most of the few remaining allegations reveal irregularities and other forms of election misconduct. Numerous other studies, including one commissioned by the Trump administration, have reached the same conclusion.”

ACLU Video: Experts Debunk Trump’s Voter Fraud Claims

Atlantic: The Damage of Trump’s voter-fraud allegations can’t be undone [June 19, 2020; David A. Graham]:

“To test the effect of statements such as Trump’s, an interdisciplinary team of researchers showed research subjects statements from Trump and other GOP politicians and commentators alleging fraud in elections, either in small or great amounts. The results were distressing, if not altogether surprising: Republicans, as well as independents, saw their faith in the election system decrease. (Views among Democrats did not meaningfully change.) The effect was especially pronounced when subjects were split between approving or disapproving of Trump.”

5.
Greg Palast in Salon: Here’s how Trump will steal the 2020 election
From this June 15, 2020 interview with investigative reporter Greg Palast:

“One of the primary things the Republicans tested in Georgia would be to see if the news media or others would try to find out just why the lines to vote were so very long. Forty precincts in Atlanta had no voting machines. That creates long lines especially when there are no paper ballots. If the machines break, they are supposed to have backup paper ballots. Of course, there were no paper ballots.”

He also sites the purging of voter rolls.

And the power of political operatives over the election booth:

“We are the only nation other than the recognized fake democracies such as Russia and China and Iran where the vote-counters are chosen by the political operatives.”

” … Even the Wall Street Journal said that Brian Kemp holding that title [as Georgia secretary of state) while running for governor was unethical. Having politically appointed voting officials in the United States is something that must be put to end.”

He discusses how the 12th Amendment could be used to steal the 2020 election:

“The 12th Amendment states that if the Electoral College does not reach a majority, which is 270, the election then goes to the House of Representatives. How could that possibly happen with Trump and Biden in 2020? The answer is the rabidly right-wing legislatures in Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida say that there is so much voter fraud and that the mail-in ballots are not to be trusted. Trust me, those states are going to do things such as misprint ballots. Many ‘mistakes’ are going to occur in those red states.”

“So the result could be that Wisconsin, Ohio and Florida do not certify their electors, and Biden has lost those three states’ votes. There are still not enough votes for Trump, but Biden does not hit the 270 threshold in the Electoral College to be elected president.”

“The 2020 election now goes to the House of Representatives, where every state gets a single vote. … Most state delegations are majority Republican, even though the Republicans don’t control the House and have far fewer voters in America.”

He also cites concerns about intimidation and other vote-suppression methods:

“But even more important than intimidation of Democratic voters are demands for proof of residence and proof of citizenship. There are other ways to keep people from voting, such as checking to see if a person has paid their alimony or court fines. … ”

“There will be a massive official contesting of votes. In almost every state, the political parties are allowed to assign official poll workers who have the right to challenge a vote. … ”

READ THIS ONE:
“Unfortunately, many of the poll workers will just go along with it and say, ‘OK, we’ll give you a provisional ballot.’ One million provisional ballots were thrown in the garbage in 2016. It is very important for people to talk to other poll workers and summon the election judge and demand that you are allowed to vote. Do not accept a provisional ballot. They are effectively useless. … ”

Per Palast, the UN could not monitor this election, because the US does not meet the UN’s minimum standards.

“… The biggest single problem with voting in the United States is the massive purging of voter rolls, and that has already been done before Election Day. …”

He notes also that the US State Department uses exit polls to verify the legitimacy of foreign countries’ elections, but in many states in 2016, the exit polls showed Hillary winning, but the final vote went to Trump:

“For example, in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, exit polls show that Hillary Clinton won a huge victory over Trump. But the official count shows Trump squeaking by in those states. If such a thing happened in Ukraine or Peru or Serbia — I cite those three countries because exit polls there conflicted with the official tally and the United States refused to recognize those governments. Our government actually declared those victories to be phony. Yet in 2016, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Iowa, and several other states showed Donald Trump losing in the exit polls. By the State Department’s own rules regarding elections, Donald Trump lost.”

Slate – Mark Stern – Aug 3. 2020 – How Trump could steal the election

Also about the possibility of Trump stealing the election, but with a slightly different scenario than the one in the Greg Palast interview:

“It is the late evening of Nov. 3, 2020—Election Day. The race is tight. It’s come down to the three states that President Donald Trump barely won in 2016: Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Most in-person votes have been counted, and Trump holds a small lead in each state. But there are millions of mail-in ballots that election officials have not yet processed. Hundreds of thousands of voters dropped their ballots in the mail days ago, but they haven’t been received. Meanwhile, thousands of ballots that were mailed in time have been rejected due to alleged technical defects. The outcome of the election turns on all these outstanding votes. But Trump, on the basis of the results so far, declares victory and dismisses the remaining mail-in ballots as fraudulent and illegitimate. The Republican-controlled legislatures of all three states agree, assigning their electoral votes to the president. Trump has secured a second term in the White House.”

He cites Trump’s pre-election doubts of its legitimacy. And states: “The Republican Party has largely backed the presidents’ schemes, and the courts have resisted intervening to protect voting rights.”

He also discusses the Trump administration’s defunding of the US Post right when we most need them to meet the demands of mail-in voting during a pandemic. What happens if the votes don’t get to the election office by Election Day?

“As the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent has pointed out, every swing state except North Carolina counts only those mail-in ballots received by Election Day. If a ballot is postmarked by Election Day but delivered late, these states will not count them. Democratic election lawyer Marc Elias has filed lawsuits challenging this practice. But the U.S. Supreme Court’s five conservative justices made it clear that they do not think states are obligated to count late ballots postmarked by Election Day—even if the ballots were delayed by forces beyond a voter’s control. Elias has turned to state Supreme Courts for relief, but he has not yet had much luck. Indeed, by a 4–3 vote last Friday, the Michigan Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to the nullification of late ballots with a timely postmark. Its decision effectively ensures that the policy will stay in force through November.”

And then even if they do get the ballot in on time, they are usually verified by matching the signature to one on file:

” … These officials typically have little or no training in handwriting analysis—but even if they did, the procedure would be useless: Forensic document examiners have testified that even an expert requires at least 10 signature samples to account for normal variations. Election officials have two. This method is discriminatory, too: Voters who are disabled, young, elderly, or non-native English speakers are disproportionately disenfranchised by signature mismatch laws.” In some states, the would-be voters will also never be informed that their vote has been tossed, or be informed too late.

He also notes that because states have the right to appoint electors, the following scenario is possible:

“The legislatures of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin are all controlled by Republicans. These bodies could quickly pass resolutions declaring Trump the victor, then appoint electors who will cast their votes for him. This gambit has never been tested in court, but it is possible to imagine the Supreme Court’s conservatives permitting it as a valid exercise of state legislatures’ constitutional authority.”

The Intercept – Aug 2020 – What if Trump won’t leave?

Atlantic – 3/29/2020 – How Trump could steal the election

9/3/2020 – Lawsuits that could decide 2020 election. Interview with law professor Justin Levitt.

Further Reading:

The Intercept – Aug 2020 – What if Trump won’t leave?

New Yorker – Aug 2020 – What if Trump fights the election results?

Atlantic – 3/29/2020 – How Trump could steal the election

Bartleby Willard, Amble Whistletown, and the SAWB crew have put this together.

[This is part of our Trump’s Threat to Democracy project.]

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RDiaSG / Come Here

RDiaSG / Come Here

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Another attempt on this theme: Representative democracy is a spiritual good

See also “Shared Something Deeperism” and “The Duties of a Republic’s Citizenry” on Something Deeperism Institute (they’re also linked to on the NYC Journal – Politics page).

Representative Democracy is a spiritual good.

1. Growing in spiritual health = organizing ones ideas and feelings better and better around the Light.

Spiritual health is possible because a conscious space consists of ideas and feelings communicating imperfectly but still meaningfully, and because the Light is everywhere, including within and shining through each conscious moment, and because ideas and feelings can also relate imperfectly but still meaningfully to the Light.

If there was no Light that actually Knows what is really going and what really matters and what should really be done, or there was no way for our ideas and feelings to relate meaningfully to this Light; then our ideas and feelings would be ultimately aimless. They could adopt this or that principle, but deep inside they’d know they were just trying to force well-founded meaningfulness atop an unproven assumption. And they’d wander lonely through hopeless meandering lurches from romanticisms (“oh, this is the Truth!”) to nihilisms (“oh, there is NO Truth!”) until death did them part.

The Light is infinite and eternal. It has no limits. Our ideas and feelings are limited. We cannot describe the Light in a definitive/literal/1:1 way. Our feeling/thinking/acting points towards and flows from It better or worse. That is a fundamentally different relationship with the Truth than one finds in literalism, which claims that some ideas and feelings are Absolutely Literally True. It is not that we non-literalists claim there is no Truth, or that human beings cannot relate meaningfully to the Truth. We’re just pointing out that what is True is not going to fit into specific human ideas and feelings; therefore, the best we can do is organize our ideas and feelings around It so that they have enough of a gist of It that they flow out into life in adequate accord with It. There can never be a “We’ve got this figured out; the Truth is ABC; agree and you are saved; disagree and you are lost.”

Pretending that we can have literal insight into the Light (including statements about how there “is no Light”) misdirects our focus. We should be fundamentally focused on an ever-improving engagement with the Light within, not on clenching ideas and feelings about “Truth!”, “No Truth!”, and “Who Knows?!”. Of course, ideas and feelings are a big part of how we think and act. We cannot relate meaningfully to human life without ideas and feelings. But they must most fundamentally hear and follow not themselves, but the Light. The more we clench onto ideas and feelings as if they were things that could provide us the Certain Safety that only the True Good could provide (ie: the more we confuse ideas and feelings for the “Truth”), the more we fall away from engagement in the True Good (ie: the Light), and the less wise we feel/think/act.

We must balance our thought’s need to accept and follow specific ideas and feelings about what is really going on and what really matters and what we should really do with the insight that ideas and feelings can only ever approximate Reality. Literalism undermines that insight and therefore undermines spiritual progress. However, pretending we can effectively engage with this life without ideas, feelings and a True Good all relating meaningfully together also also undermines spiritual progress. We need to continuously observe our feeling/thinking/acting, critique it, recalibrate, and try again.

Luckily, we have some guidelines to help keep our spiritual development on the right path.
We know the above sketch of our relationship to the Light more fundamentally than we know our doubts about and our explications of the gist of things that that sketch points towards and (as must be!) imperfectly explicates.
We know the below universal values/insights more fundamentally than we know our doubts about and our explications of them.
Universal values/insights (a rough general sketch–the only description possible for mortal thought and action):
We must push to feel/think/act ever-more aware, clear, honest, open-hearted/-minded, accurate, competent, compassionate, kind, joyfully sharing, joyfully together, joyfully present, joyfully grateful, joyful.
We are all in this together now and forever.
We are all children of the Light.
Kindness is the Way.
The above sketch of our relationship to the Light.

A whole conscious moment is like this:
Ideas, vague notions, feelings, etc-inhabitants of a conscious moment, and the Light shining through all things (including each conscious moment) all occupying the same conscious moment and relating imperfectly (they do not speak the same exact types of “languages”) but still to some degree (and the goal is to increase this degree) meaningfully with one another.

To the degree a whole conscious moment knows that and in what way the universal values/insights, that conscious moment is — at that moment and time and space — feeling/thinking/acting wisely. More wisdom is better.

This is why we meditate, pray, listen, practice loving kindness, ask the Light to guide us, work alone and in faith communities (where people share a language about relating to the Light and where they agree to work on putting the Light and Its relentless, effective Kindness first). Or some of us don’t believe in all that, but still try with all our might to be aware, clear, honest, open-hearted/-minded, accurate, competent, compassionate, kind, joyfully sharing, joyfully together, joyfully present, joyfully grateful, joyful. We do these things. We try to follow this path because to the degree succeed here (in understanding that and in what way it is True to say “We are all in this together”) our feeling/thinking/acting is meaningful to us. And the degree to which we fail here, no matter how grand our feelings, how clever our insights, how poised and graceful our motions: none of it means anything to our hearts/minds, which are human and which therefore need to KNOW that KINDNESS is REAL and is the WAY. To the degree we lack this insight, we just don’t care, can’t believe, can’t follow, can’t even care. And so our own ideas and feelings are just so much noise, driving us here and there like angry bees that we of course do not inhabit, do not control, do not relate meaningfully to.

Please note that understanding these universal values/insights implies following them and putting them into action. Because they have within themselves both knowledge and direction: it is not just theoretically True that we should be kind.

Please note that understanding these universal values/insights is a matter of whole-being organization around the Light; so it is very possible that there exists a person A who disagrees with or “just doesn’t get anything out of” this essay who is wiser than a person B who agrees with this essay and thinks it is all “so true!”. This essay can only point the best it in its limited wisdom can point towards the gist of what we all know. It may have value. It may be able to help–I don’t know how much–readers organize their approach to wisdom. But agreeing or disagreeing with this essay is not a litmus test for wisdom.

– – – –

Please come here
I’m so tired of
pretending

that I’m happy on my own
that I’m strong enough
that I’m good enough
that I’m solid

come here and let me love you
a man is only a person

– – – –

Why do we join together in groups? So we can work together to get more of the goods that we all need: shelter, safety, nourishment, friendship, affection, love.

Above we pointed out that we people can only relate meaningfully to our own feeling/thinking/acting to the degree we understand that and in what way the universal values are True; and also that insight into the universal values implies following them — living them.

We now ask ourselves what sort of government best allows citizens both internal and external meaning.

What do we mean with “internal meaning” and “external meaning”?

Internal meaning: Meaning within one’s own conscious space; and perhaps also in some sense and to some degree within one’s small intimate groups — like families, close friends, spiritual communities — these groups where we bare our souls and try to grow as whole beings together. (I’m particularly talking to you, baby)

External meaning: The meaning an individual shares with a group. In a large, non-intimate group, external meaning is pretty much all there is. The best we can hope for is a shared language that points adequately well to the universal values. We don’t have much if any insight into how other individuals in this large group truly think and feel. We have to go by what they say and what they do.

In smaller, more intimate settings, there’s mostly external meaning, but there’s also a little internal meaning in the sense that you let these intimates into your inner thinking/feeling. That works like this: we understand one another to some degree via empathy: you make a face and my mind maps your expression, recreating a facsimile within my mental space–like I was making the same face. Because we are fundamentally the same kind of thing, that mapping recreates the gist of your experience within me (that to the degree I catch the natural elements within a face you make). In this way, it is little like I am inside your conscious space. It also works like this: if we are very close, then we are more forthcoming and honest with one another about how we really feel, and in this way we also in some sense and to some degree enter into one another’s conscious spaces. In the end, no one can read anyone else’s mind, but we also never perfectly understand our own conscious spaces, so when we are close to people, they can help us to understand our own thinking and feeling, particularly if they are wise and gentle as the morning light. (here, again, I am thinking most of all of you, baby)

How am I internally meaningful? That’s what we were discussing above. A person is internally meaningful to the degree they organize their ideas and feelings around the Light. The Light alone knows what is really going on, what really matters, and what should be really done. It alone should rule our feeling/thinking/acting. It alone can show us that and in what way the universal values are True. And a person’s own feeling/thinking/acting is only inhabited by and meaningful to the degree that person understands that and in what way it is True to say “We are all in this together”. (and here I am not thinking of you, baby; I mean, maybe yeah kind of a little — but thatt’s not really the highest way; it’s due to the frailties of your narrator, not to the Nature of things)

How is a small group of close friends internally meaningful? That group is internally meaningful to the degree they share a common language for and insight into the Light and It’s relationship to their individual and shared feeling/thinking/acting. You can tell your friends what you feel and think and how the Light is hard to distinguish from the things you want to believe are True. And they kind of understand, and kind of help you understand yourself. Well, that’s what I’ve heard, anyway — from people who have friends.

How is a nation state internally meaningful? That’s done to the degree the various individual members share external meaning: to the degree their language points towards the same universal goals, and to the degree they agree on the universal values. On a stage of this size, we cannot reliably read one another’s thinking/feeling. In an intimate setting, I know who you are; I know what that face means and what it is hiding; if I see you on TV or the stage, I don’t figure that out. Heck, often I don’t figure it out with people I know who mean to share themselves — how am I supposed to figure out the spiritual state of a distant politician who is trying to trick me into believing in them?

And do I even really want to know what my politicians souls look like? Do I have time and energy for such knowledge? Is it really the question? What do we want out of my politicians? Obviously, to the degree that we’re not being total jerks, we want us all to grow in wisdom together. BUT: What do we NEED out of my politicians? we need them to protect and serve the universal values.

Maybe they’re faking it: maybe they don’t really care about speaking clear and honest and acting kind and gentle. Maybe they don’t really like transparent, open, uncorrupted government. Maybe at night alone in their sordid PJs, they dream of lying, cheating, getting rid of all rival voices.
OK:
(a) If they are speaking and acting clear, honest, gentle, kind, and uncorruptible, and if they are working to keep those kinds of thoughts and actions at the center of our shared decision making process — by supporting openness, civility, power-sharing, accuracy, competence, win-win/we’re-all-in-this-together and transparency in government (NOT power-consolidation, disinformation, and other ways of preferring power to the process of together thinking aware … joyful) — then they are helping to preserve and grow a space of shared meaningfulness.
A shared space that prefers aware, clear, honest, accurate, competent, compassionate, kind, joyfully together thinking/acting is meaningful to all of us because the space is centered around the universal values that we ALL must serve if we are to have any hope for making sense to ourselves. We as individuals can only believe in our own feeling/thinking/acting to the degree we f/t/a aware … joyful. Therefore, our government can only be meaningful to an individual to the degree that government rewards aware … joyful f/t/a with prestige and power; and refuses power and prestige to unaware … unjoyful f/t/a. BUT we can’t read each other’s souls. What we can do is preserve and support a structure that prefers the fruit of spiritually wise feeling/thinking/acting. We can preserve a debate sphere that rewards clarity, honesty, accuracy, competence, and civility. We can preserve a decision-making process that demands openness, accuracy, competency, transparency, and power-sharing. And if this is the setting, we can meaningfully participate in the shared conversation, and meaningfully ask one another, “how do we do what is best for everyone? how do we win in a way where everyone wins? how do we share joy?”
AND
(b) You can’t fake it forever — in time forcing yourself to speak clear and honest and act kind and gentle makes you clearer, more honest, kinder, more gentle.

. . . . .

In a representative democracy, the job of citizens is to (a) help shape the policies of the government and most fundamentally (b) to serve as a final check on madness and corruption in the government. Madness is absolutely stupid policies like, for a Trumpian example, encouraging a nuclear arms race (there is no winner in a nuclear war; what there is is death and misery for everyone; only the most evil of dictators win nuclear wars; if you have even a little sliver of a soul left, you see nuclear war as a lose-lose-lose). Corruption is politicians making decisions for the sake of money, prestige, and other selfish desires, rather than making them for the sake of the collective good.

The people need help. They need a free press and the right to speak their mind to help them keep an eye on politicians and the government. They need separation of church and state so they can focus on what politicians actually do and say rather than having to nod along with whatever the Holy Leader decides. They need love. And in this last point, I think only of you, baby. Where are you? When you gonna come round?

….

To the degree one feels/thinks/acts aware … joyful, one’s ideas and feelings are meaningful to oneself. To the degree an intimate group shares aware … joyful feeling/thinking/acting, that group’s f/t/a are meaningful to the individuals in the group and to the group as a whole. Whatever insights may be possible within one’s own conscious space and perhaps even within a small intimate group; in a big, impersonal government, we cannot read the souls of our leaders. And pretending we can tempts voters and leaders alike into lying about the most sacred things. But we can demand that our shared conversation and decision-making process prize honesty, clarity, accuracy, and competence; and we can demand they adhere to the outward forms necessary for us to be able to watch and choose clarity, honesty, accuracy, competency, fairness, and win-win (I don’t know that we can publicly administer kindness; but we can refuse cruelty and you can seek and prefer policies where everyone wins): clear, honest, and accurate conversation; and regulations to keep government transparent and free of corruption. This much we can do, and if we do, we can all stand together, hand in hand around our shared government, participating in it while staying true to those values without which none of our thoughts can mean anything to any of us.

So first and foremost, every morning, let’s get up and work to shore up our representative democracy. Let’s remove dishonest politicians. Let’s remove politicians willing to hurt the integrity of the system and its power-sharing. Let’s remove politicians willing to act as if the ends justified the means. The ends do not justify the means. They don’t! To the degree we have a healthy representative democracy, we can meaningfully think and act together. To the degree we don’t, we can’t: we have no rudder and the power at the top will choose more power and more power and more power, and power in and of itself is not a Good, and pretending it is makes all kinds of trouble.

So.

. . .

When you gonna come round?
Huh?

Author: Lovey Cobwebs
Editors: BW/AW
Copyright: AMW

There’s a little more detailed philosophizing at the very end of this page (in the Skip This Part For Now part).
This is a Something Deeperism essay.
The Something Deeperism Institute tab has some introductory essays. Those essays are also included in First Essays & A Readable Reader.
Which brings us to:
If you like our essaying, First Essays has a lot of essays.
And of that lot, A Readable Reader has a selection of the most readable ones.
And Superhero Novella has more philosophical asides than some believe it should.

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Alcohol

Alcohol

Time waster?
A way to relax?
A way to contemplate?
A door to a different perspective?
Health waster?
Necessary for success?
Necessary for freedom and insight and art?
A self-BSer?
Vow: Never More than 1 drink in 1 day in 2020
See what happens