From Pine View Farm

Republican Hypocrisy category archive

When the Truth Hurts, Hurt the Truth, Chapter Eleventeen 0

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Both Sides Don’t 0

Steven M. explains.

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Fringe with Benefits 0

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When the Truth Hurts, Hurt the Truth Redux 0

At The Philadelphia Inquirer, a Philadelphia history teacher comments on the coverup. Here’s a bit of what she has to say; follow the link for the rest.

As a white woman teacher who has taught mostly Black and brown students in Philadelphia for 20 years, I know I would be committing educational malpractice if I did not teach the complete history of this nation to my students. As we approach the 4th of July and 245th birthday of this nation, it is only right to acknowledge that by the same year the Declaration of Independence was read in Independence Square, all 13 colonies had legalized slavery.

(snip)

If the anti-critical race theory and anti-truth forces have their way, many Americans — particularly my fellow white people — will not know what historically has been done in our name, and we will be denied the opportunity to acknowledge, understand, and repair it.

Those who know not the truth will live lies.

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Freedom of Screech 0

Florida Man told to leave Twitter alooooooone.

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A Universe of Parallels 0

The Arizona Republic’s E. J. Montini sees the similarities.

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The True Deceiver 0

Frame One:  Republican Elephant shouting,

Click to view the original image.

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Limitations of Statues 0

The Arizona Republic’s Laurie Roberts remarks on the hypocrisy of Republicans who would deny America’s history of racism while honoring those who fought to preserve race-based chattel slavery. A nugget:

The same Republicans who lay awake nights, worried that the schools might teach kids that America has a history of racism, are worried that history will make like a tumbleweed and bounce away unless we continue to pay homage to a selection of Confederate and white supremacy leaders.

Follow the link for her complete article.

And, while on the topic . . . . F. T. Rea reflects on Confederate statues and the removal thereof in the estwhile capital of the Confederacy.

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“It Can’t Happen Here” 0

Au contraire, argues Gwynne Dyer. Here’s a bit of her article, from the Bangor Daily News:

Patrick Cockburn is a well-known Irish journalist, currently writing a column in ‘The Independent’. . . .

Writing just after the G7 summit, he warned that “the most dangerous threat (facing the world) is the transformation of the Republican Party in the US into a fascist movement.” Almost every journalist alive has toyed with this analogy – and then avoided it because it sounds like partisan rhetoric rather than hard analysis.

Cockburn points out that Trump’s presidency had many of the attitudes and behaviors of a fascist regime – extreme nationalism, racist hatred of minorities, disregard of the law and constant denial of the truth – but that it failed one crucial test. It did not include automatic re-election, and so Trump lost control.

Follow the link for a discussion of Republican strategies to remedy that last failing.

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When the Truth Hurts, Hurt the Truth 0

At The Hartford Courant, a history professor muses on Republicans’ fear of historical fact. A snippet (emphasis added):

Students are smart. If they sometimes develop new opinions as a result of their history classes, it is not because we push them in a particular direction. Students are perfectly capable of reading a bombastic nationalistic speech by Mussolini and hearing the echoes in modern political discourse. Those students who are aware of efforts in Georgia and elsewhere to restrict voting and to allow state legislatures to overturn electoral results they don’t like may very well connect those changes to the tightening grip of authoritarian parties in the 1920s and 1930s. And I have no doubt that when we study the Beer Hall Putsch the next time I teach my class on Hitler’s Germany, students will want to talk about the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and wonder about its long-term implications. They will raise questions about ongoing GOP efforts to whitewash that history and to reject the label of “insurrection.”

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Dialectic 0

PoliticProf.

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Lowering the Barr 0

Above the Law’s Elizabeth Dye isn’t buying Bill Barr’s attempts to resurrect his reputation. A snippet:

This man thinks you are stupid. He thinks if he comes out against Trump’s excesses now and blames the former president’s bad advisors for leading him astray, he can somehow weather the eleventy-seven insider accounts that are about to flood the bookshelves and salvage his reputation as a good and noble conservative.

Follow the link for details.

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Gutting Out the Vote 0

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports on cancel culture, Republican style. A snippet:

Federal law requires states to remove ineligible people from voter rolls, but Georgia’s voter registration cancellations go further by canceling registrations of people who have chosen not to participate in a few elections or whose election mail was mistakenly returned to sender, said Saira Draper of the Democratic Party of Georgia.

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Raging against Reality 0

The phrase, “white rage,” has been bandied about lately in the wake of General Milley’s takedown of the racist fulminations of Matt Gaetz.

At Psychology Today Blogs, Rupert Nacoste offers a definition of what exactly that is. Here’s a bit (emphasis added); follow the link for the full article.

Unlike any other historical period in America, neo-diversity is a part of the life of everyday Americans. Neo-diversity, you see, is the new interpersonal situation of America in which we all have to encounter and sometimes interact with people “not like us” on some group dimension. . . .

“White rage” is racial neo-diversity anxiety catching that fire. Imagine being made to feel safe by a false sense of racial superiority and then suddenly having to deal with real information that made it clear that your beliefs about “them” were false; they were stereotypes that had nothing to do with real people. Panicked distress; violent emotions; erratic, irrational (lashing out) behavior (call the police); all that occurs because of having to face the now-very-real member of that group — one of “them” standing up to you demanding respect.

Afterthought:

If all you’ve got on which to hang your identity is the color of your skin, you are poor and hollow person indeed.

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A Quibble 0

Methinks that what Michael Corrigan thinks “will be interesting if” it happens has already come to pass.

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Old Wine, Just a New Barrel 0

At The Roanoke Times, John Kitterman takes a long and thoughtful look at the who-shot-john around critical race theory. He points out that, for persons who pay attention to history, there is really nothing new or surprising about it, except, perhaps, its name.

He also finds nothing surprising about some of the attacks being levied against it. For example (emphasis added):

. . . I’m not as startled to find that CRT is popularly linked to Marxism, because if you don’t have good evidence or cogent arguments just trot out that old war horse and the cultural militias will erupt in gunfire.

I commend the entire article to your attention.

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The Creature from Another World 0

Caption:  Speaking of Unexplained Phenomena from Outer Space . . .  Image:  Republican Elephant as ET standing before a flying saucer proferring a book titled,

Via The Bob Cesca Show Blog.

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The Republicans’ Wall 0

U. S. Capitol covered behind a brick wall.  On the portico is written,

Via Job’s Anger.

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If One Standard Is Good, Two Must Be Better 0

Frames One through Four:  Image showing Donald Trump kissing Putin's shoes in 2017, 2018, 2019. amd 2020.  Frame Five:  In 2021, Republica Elephant charges,

Click to view the original image.

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Shadows of the Fall 0

Archaeologists excavating a site.  On the wall is written,

Click for the original image.

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