DL Open Thread: Monday, November 18, 2024
The Fault, Dear Brutus, Is Them:
Mr. Trump’s election demonstrates how American tolerance for the unacceptable is nearly infinite. There are hundreds of absolutely mind-boggling things I could point to from the past decade — the suggestion of bleach injections to potentially treat the coronavirus and the wild QAnon conspiracy theories infecting millions of Americans, including politicians, and insulting veterans and making fun of the disabled. But three elections in a row, Mr. Trump has been a viable presidential candidate and our democracy has few guardrails to protect the country from the clear and present dangers he and his political appointees will continue to confer upon us.
Mr. Trump’s voters are granted a level of care and coddling that defies credulity and that is afforded to no other voting bloc. Many of them believe the most ludicrous things: babies being aborted after birth and children going to school as one gender and returning home surgically altered as another gender even though these things simply do not happen. Time and again, we hear the wild lies these voters believe and we act as if they are sharing the same reality as ours, as if they are making informed decisions about legitimate issues. We act as if they get to dictate the terms of political engagement on a foundation of fevered mendacity.
We must refuse to participate in a mass delusion. We must refuse to accept that the ignorance on display is a congenital condition rather than a choice. All of us should refuse to pretend that any of this is normal and that these voters are just woefully misunderstood and that if only the Democrats addressed their economic anxiety, they might vote differently. While they are numerous, that does not make them right.
Read the whole thing. Highly-recommended.
Southern Segregation Academies Getting Bleeploads Of Taxpayers’ $$’s. You know, because of ‘vouchers’:
Private schools across the South that were established for white children during desegregation are now benefiting from tens of millions in taxpayer dollars flowing from rapidly expanding voucher-style programs, a ProPublica analysis found.
In North Carolina alone, we identified 39 of these likely “segregation academies” that are still operating and that have received voucher money. Of these, 20 schools reported student bodies that were at least 85% white in a 2021-22 federal survey of private schools, the most recent data available.
Those 20 academies, all founded in the 1960s and 1970s, brought in more than $20 million from the state in the past three years alone. None reflected the demographics of their communities. Few even came close.
Called Opportunity Scholarships, North Carolina’s voucher program launched in 2014. At first, it was only for low-income families and had barely more than 1,200 participants. Then last fall, state lawmakers expanded eligibility to students of all income levels and those already attending private school, a move that sparked furious debate over the future of public education.
“We are ensuring that every child has the chance to thrive,” Republican Rep. Tricia Cotham argued. But Democratic Rep. Julie von Haefen pointed to vouchers’ “legacy of white supremacy” and called the expansion “a gross injustice to the children of North Carolina.”
Only slightly off-topic: It’s long past time for Delaware’s governor, legislators and key policymakers to focus almost all of their efforts on addressing the needs of Delaware’s public schools and the students who attend them. Enough of these fucking Tower Hill legacies imposing their vision on what education should look like in Delaware. Consign them to the elite fringes where they belong. And reside.
A $60 Billion Climate Solution. It’s complicated, but doable. They’re doing it in Nigeria:
Only 22 percent of…e-waste is collected and recycled, the UN estimates. The rest is dumped, burned, or forgotten—particularly in rich countries, where most people have no convenient way to get rid of their old Samsung Galaxy phones, Xbox controllers, and myriad other gadgets. Indeed, every year, humanity is wasting more than $60 billion worth of so-called critical metals—the ones we need not only for electronics, but also for the hardware of renewable energy, from electric vehicle (EV) batteries to wind turbines.
In all of human history, we have extracted some 700 million tons of copper from the Earth. To meet our clean energy goals, we’ll have to mine as much again in 20-odd years. By 2050, the International Energy Agency estimates, global demand for cobalt for EVs alone will soar to five times what it was in 2022. Demand for nickel will be 10 times higher. Lithium, 15 times. “The prospect of a rapid increase in demand for critical minerals—well above anything seen previously in most cases—raises huge questions about the availability and reliability of supply,” the agency warns.
How one man in Nigeria is making a difference:
TJ is Tijjani Abubakar, an entrepreneur who has built a thriving business turning unwanted electronics into cash. His third-floor office, in a dingy concrete building across a roaring four-lane road from the Ikeja market, is a charnel house of dead mobile phones. At one end of the long, crowded room, two skinny young men with screwdrivers pull phone after phone from a sack and crack them like walnuts. Their practiced fingers pull out the green printed circuit boards and toss them with a clatter onto a growing heap at their feet.
Abubakar handles all manner of e-waste, but the phones are his specialty. There is just shy of one mobile account for every one of Nigeria’s 220 million people. “What do I see here?” he asks, indicating his roomful of workers. “I don’t know whether any of these people have a computer. But I know all of them have a phone.” And all of those phones will one day wear out, malfunction, or get tossed by someone eager for a newer model. In 2022, an estimated 5.3 billion mobile phones were discarded worldwide. If you put them end to end, they’d reach almost to the moon and back.
Abubakar handles all manner of e-waste, but the phones are his specialty. There is just shy of one mobile account for every one of Nigeria’s 220 million people. “What do I see here?” he asks, indicating his roomful of workers. “I don’t know whether any of these people have a computer. But I know all of them have a phone.” And all of those phones will one day wear out, malfunction, or get tossed by someone eager for a newer model. In 2022, an estimated 5.3 billion mobile phones were discarded worldwide. If you put them end to end, they’d reach almost to the moon and back.
OK, just read the whole thing. It’s lengthy, but fascinating.
Goodbye, Springfield. There goes the economy:
For companies in Springfield and in nearby communities that depend on Haitian labor, Trump’s comments could prove damaging. The Haitians who filled thousands of jobs at area packaging and auto plants have helped rejuvenate once-blighted neighborhoods and contributed to the local economy in myriad ways.
While many food products lining the shelves of Springfield’s Caribbean stores are imported, many items – bread from Florida and pinto beans from Nebraska – are American. Chicken, beef and eggs served at Haitian restaurants are regularly sourced from local farms.
Recently, a Haitian community organization bought a former fire station it hopes to turn into a facility for English language classes, drivers’ education and a meeting spot.
“I pay thousands of dollars in income and property taxes every year,” said Payen, “and – because I work with Haitians to file their taxes – I see their W-2s and so on. If these people leave, that money is gone from the city and the local economy.”
What do you want to talk about?
Much of the results of the election can be attributed to the US expansion beyond the original 13 colonial states. Only 4 of the 13 voted for Trump. Conquering and expansion into large areas comes with consequences.
Wow. A Steely Dan reference.
Relatively obscure, but there nonetheless:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KeBLVqFaGUw
Oh, the reference? From ‘Glamour Profession’:
” Jive Miguel
He’s in from Bogota
Meet me at midnight
At Mr Chow’s.”
Whatever nonsense Trump’s voters believe or don’t believe, perhaps a productive way to counter it would be offering an alternative rather than just saying they believe absurd things. Liberal Democrats also believe absurd things! Hence the top line argument of “we’re not him” doesn’t work.
I think the outrage would be better directed at building a platform people like. Apparently, a majority of people don’t like Democrats. Maybe focus on that.
Let’s take your comment at face-value.
How would one establish how a “platform people like” might differ from the Democrat’s current platform? Maybe we could take each of the planks and poll on the popularity of each one to find weaknesses in the platform as a whole.
Luckily, that has been done dozens (maybe hundreds) of times. Each of the elements of the Democratic vision of America is quite popular.
I am coming to the opinion that while armchair warriors want to focus on “bad policy” or some other form of rational argumentation, much of it boils down to Republicans efficiently expressing who to blame for problems (even if they don’t exist). Usually, this is immigrants, people of color and Democrats. There were literal signs on people’s lawns that said “Kamala – Crime Trump – Safety” or some such bullshit. That’s caveman campaigning.
What is the Democratic vision for America?
Does it matter? Do you need a bunch of specifics to know it won’t be as bad as the Republican vision for America?
Are we complaining about the product or the sales division?
It clearly does matter because we just lost.
I don’t think there really is a vision outside of the provision of political stability with some social equity mixed in. That’s fine, I guess, but it’s not a vision.
People want chaos because they’re willing to take their chances when the pieces fall back onto the board. Keeping the game set the way it is – a game they’re losing – doesn’t do much for them. Can’t blame them I guess.
Just my opinion!
yea it matters becuase all trump said was – lower prices, close the border, less crime – no policy but statements the general public was interested in. the dems ran on – we will lose democracy – what is that? its an existential threat. obviously not many people care about the real threat only the concern of today.
It’s not a secret. It’s published on the website:
https://democrats.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/2024_Democratic_Party_Platform_8a2cf8.pdf
Whereas the Republicans seem to have outsourced theirs to Heritage with Project 2025. BTW, the elements of Project 2025 are very unpopular.
But ” Kamala is for they/them, Trump is for us” is a very clear way to say, we hate what we’ve convinced you to hate.
Introspection score 0% Get your position papers ready for the next no holds barred cage match, I plan to hitch my wagon to best and brightest young leaders in the mold of AOC and here , Marie, Madinah,Sophie, Eric, Shane’ and others and do my limited senior bit to power through this mess.
Consider this. The majority of Hispanic Latino men in the US voted for Trump. The majority of Hispanic Latino men in Mexico just voted for the socialist Jewish lady because people like AMLO/Morena’s platform.
Not enough Americans like the Democrats vision of America. I suggest looking for other visions nearby that people seem to like. Or continue to tell people that the stuff they don’t like is actually good. Demand that they like it! Propose more of the stuff they don’t like than act confused and mad.
This also explains why people like the WFP locally and the Dem caucus is confused. Democrats refuse to take the L and it’s putting us all at risk.
When you propose and then follow through on things people like the stupid they/them shit doesn’t matter.
Should have maybe kept doing this, for instance:
https://www.npr.org/2022/01/27/1075299510/the-expanded-child-tax-credit-briefly-slashed-child-poverty-heres-what-else-it-d
You left out the part where Democrats DID try to keep “doing this” but couldn’t get the votes. Americans don’t want expanded child tax credits badly enough to elect a Congress that will pass them.