From Pine View Farm

“That Conversation about Race” category archive

“This Is What Racism and Xenophobia Look Like” 0

San and the crew discuss how the right-wing spins lies about immigrants and how Trump seizes on and amplifies the lies. (The post title is a quote from the video.)

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Various right-wing commentators operatives have been criticizing Kamala Harris for “code-switching.”

At Above the Law, Mark Herrmann notes the fatuousness of that attack. He writes

. . . don’t blame Kamala Harris for code-switching.

We all code-switch in endless situations.

Follow the link for his reasoning.

Afterthought:

Of course, to anyone who can decode de code, this criticism of Harris is a coded–you will pardon the expression–attempt to appeal to racists without sounding overtly racist.

Read more »

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DJT and DEI 0

David makes a strong case that, if there is a DEI (In this case, Discrimination, Exclusion, and Inequality) candidate running for president, that candidate is Donald Trump. Along the way, he eviscerates Republicans’ claims that Kamala Harris is somehow a “DEI hire.”

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Republican Family Values 0

Michael in Norfolk decodes de code.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

In a letter to the editor of The Charlotte Observer, Dan Busch describes a sign of the times.

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The Fifth Columnist 2

The Arizona Republic’s Laurie Roberts is less than pleased at how Arizona state senator Wendy Rogers has embraced fascism.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

At AL.com, Roy S. Johnson decodes de code.

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A Notion of Immigrants 0

At the Roanoke Times, Jeanne Larsen highlights Republicans’ hypocrisy.

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Misdirected Play 0

At The Colorado Sun, Mike Littwin notes that, in their recent interview, Dana Bash asked Kamala Harris about Donald Trump’s racist attacks on her, to which Harris responded, “Same old tired playbook. Next question, please.” .

Littwin goes on to argue that the question was directed to the wrong person:

I hope he (Trump–ed.) gets asked about his racism and misogyny at the Sept. 10 presidential debate. It’s Trump who should have to answer these questions, not Harris. It’s the racist who should be called out.

Follow the link for his reasoning.

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A Tune for the Times 0

Rita Brent comments at the Youtube page:

Levity is my specialty, but know that I find it sad and disgusting how particularly Black people’s identity, heritage, and actual existence are always questioned because some don’t think we’re worthy of sharing space with them. Well— we are worthy, and the world does not belong to YOU. We won’t be silenced or sit by idly allowing blatant lies, disrespect, or birtherism claims! Vote decency, competence, and humanity— Kamala Harris for President!

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

As I have mentioned before in these electrons, Dr. William Shade, one of my history professors back in the olden days when I was a young ‘un, was found of saying, “History is irony.”

In the midst of a larger column focusing on a notion of immigrants, AL.com’s John Archibald notes such an irony (emphasis added):

The history the (Confederate–ed.) battle flag represents is less about the Civil War than it is the rebellion against civil rights and Alabama’s rewriting of history. It was flown as a way to fight desegregation, to glorify the past and justify the actions of ancestors who went to war against their own country rather than to release people from slavery.

Alabama is so afraid of “divisive concepts” that it won’t let students study the sins associated with that flag. But counties can run ‘em up the flagpole and call that history.

Follow the link for context.

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Foxy Shady 0

Emma and the crew take another look at Fox News’s attempt toe make birtherism great again.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Grung_e_Gene notes that coarse discoursers dislike it when others remind them of the coarseness of their discourse.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

Today’s Secesh are phoning it in.

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American Taliban 0

Armed Muslim militant labeled

Click to view the original image.

H/T Juanita Jean.

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Karen Karen-Like 0

Batwoman.

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The Bully’s Puppets 0

Robert Reich looks at how the rich and powerful use misdirection plays to get even more rich and powerful and expresses hope that persons are finally catching on. An excerpt; follow the link for the rest.

The bullied are still there; Trump is still exploiting their anger.

For nearly a decade, Trump has channeled that anger into racism, nativism and misogyny. He has encouraged his followers to feel powerful by bullying those with even less power: poor Black and Latino people, immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, Muslims, families seeking asylum, undocumented workers, pregnant women who can’t afford to travel to a state where abortions are legal.

This bullying game has been played repeatedly in history by self-described strongmen who pretend to be tribunes of the oppressed by scapegoating the truly powerless, but who are actually fronting for the rich and powerful.

In reality, Trump and his lackeys work for the oligarchs — cutting their taxes, rolling back regulations that protect the public but that cost the oligarchs, and dividing the rest of us into warring factions so we don’t look upward to see where most power and wealth have gone.

The good news is that Americans are catching on.

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The Master Strategist 0

Man on cell phone says,

Via Job’s Anger.

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“History Does Not Repeat Itself, but It Often Rhymes”* 0

At Der Spiegel, Lothar Gorris und Tobias Rapp hear a disturbing rhyme.

______________

*Mark Twain.

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The Unswayables 0

Werner Herzog’s Bear offers a theory as to why Donald Trump’s cult is so loyal to a man who has repeatedly demonstrated that he is loyal to no one and nothing. Here’s a bit (emphasis added):

What I have come to realize in my interactions with Trump voters is that they don’t really care about anything he does. I know that sounds obvious, but the reason isn’t. They don’t care not because they are hypocrites (a tired accusation) but because they believe in what he SYMBOLIZES, not who he actually is.

Trump and his MAGA slogan symbolize the maintenance of all kinds of hierarchies. His name on a sign means support for men in charge, white people in charge, LGBTQ people in the closet, Christianity assumed, and immigrants deported. While not all Trump supporters fit all of these categories, each has at least of one these hierarchies in mind when it comes to their support. Trump could indeed shoot someone on 5th Avenue and not lose support because what he does is literally meaningless. All of his meaning is symbolic.

I commend the entire piece to your attention.

(Missing link found.)

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