From Pine View Farm

Political Theatre category archive

Antifa 0

Title:  Antifa.  Image:  Allied soldiers storming the beach at Normandie saying,

Thank carefully: When persons identify anti-fascists as their enemy, what are they telling you about themselves?

Image via The Bob Cesca Show Blog.

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The Crisis Actor 0

David argues that he has identified an actual “crisis actor.” And it’s not who believers in “crisis actors” would have you think it is.

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“Follow the Money” 0

Hal Crowther tries to “listen outside his bubble” and understand why some of his college classmates–mostly highly-educated professionals–support Donald Trump. He offers a hypothesis that may take you aback; follow the link for his reasoning:

As I see it, there are only three reasons why one of my classmates would support a demented racist clown. One would be senility, which doesn’t need to explain itself. A second would be almost total ignorance, the sole reliance on Fox News and similarly tainted sources of Republican propaganda that has rendered a large section of Trump’s base impossible to reach or teach. This one we can eliminate, in the case of my classmates. Most of them are or were doctors, lawyers, professors, corporate executives, investment bankers and the like, and it would be grossly insulting to imply that any of them rely on Tucker Carlson for ideology. The third possibility is selfishness and cynicism — an affluent classmate might be among the viciously greedy Americans who know that Trump is mad and destructive but always vote for the candidate who promises to protect and enhance their fortunes.

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Contact Tracing 0

The Seattle Times’s Danny Westneat tracks the trail of a Facebook falsehood from a Washington state chiropractor in the Seattle suburbs to Donald Trump and Fox News.

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Remind You of Anyone? 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Claire Jack explores five reasons why narcissists are dangerous. Here they are; follow the link for a discussion and examples of each one.

  • They do not respect experts
  • They act without consulting others’ opinions
  • They’ll put other peoples lives in danger if it meets their needs
  • They have low empathy
  • They like drama

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Elephant? What Elephant? 0

Title:  The Elephant in the Hall.  Image:  Donald Trump standing at podium crowing about

Click to view the original image.

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Lessons Learned 0

At the Bangor Daily News, University of Maine Professor Amy Fried recalls that, after the U. S. Senate acquitted Donald Trump refused to act on the impeachment of Donald Trump, Maine Senator Susan Collins opined that Trump had learned his lesson. Professor Fried agrees that he did.

. . .the lesson Collins taught Trump is that she, along with nearly all Republicans in Congress, will not stop his law-breaking and corruption . . . .

Follow the link for her reasoning.

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Tithes and Offerings 0

Warning: Farron gets a bit heated.

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All the News that Fits 0

Margaret Sullivan talks with Brian Stelter about his new book on Fox News. A snippet:

I asked Stelter what he found most surprising as he reported the book. (We overlapped briefly when I was The New York Times public editor, and I have been an occasional guest on his Sunday media show.)

(snip)

The second surprise, Stelter told me, was the number of Fox News staffers who acknowledge the harm it has done and its frequent failure to meet basic standards for truth-telling — and who struggle with whether to remain at the network. Some hesitate because they fear they are tainted by having worked at Fox News; others because the money is too good to walk away.

Follow the link to find out what the first surprise was.

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Tripping the Light Fatalistic 0

At the Hartford Courant, Thomas Cangelosi suggests a metaphor for the United States’s incompetent and uncoordinated response to COVID-19. A snippet:

During a recent power outage in Connecticut, I stopped my car at a busy intersection where the traffic signals were blacked out. While I was relieved to see the majority of drivers following the safety protocol of a four-way stop, each taking their turn, I was disturbed by a number of drivers that saw the situation as a license to blow through the intersection.

(snip)

The scene seemed to be a microcosm of the national crossroads America faces as it negotiates the COVID-19 pandemic, which has become nothing less than a crucible of our national character.

Follow the link for his explanation.

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The Rally 0

Donald Trump on a balcony in a brownshirt style uniform, fronted by police in riot gear as crowd gestures a stiff-arm salute, says,

Click for the original image.

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“But Everybody Says . . . .” 0

Writing at Psychology Today Blogs, Jennifer Latson explores how exposure to constant repetition can wear down skepticism, cater to credulousness, and foster falsehoods, so that truth gets lost. Here’s a bit (emphasis added):

The marketing term “effective frequency” refers to the idea that a consumer has to see or hear an ad a number of times before its message hits home. Essentially, the more you say something, the more it sticks in — and possibly on — people’s heads. It doesn’t even have to be true — and that’s the problem. What advertisers call “effective frequency,” psychologists call the “illusory truth effect”: the more you hear something, the easier it is for your brain to process, which makes it feel true, regardless of its basis in fact.

In her piece, she goes on to explore other human tendencies that make us susceptible to such subterfuge, while also pointing out that, in these days of digital deluges of dubious diatribes and a blatherscape of blaring botnets, staying aware of facts and identifying falsity is increasingly important.

Aside:

I suggest “Fox News Effect” as shorthand for this phenomenon.

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Mailing It In, Reprise 0

Sam talks with Mike Dimondstein, President of the American Postal Workers Union.

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Chaos Agent 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Charles Johnston muses on what seems to be the political strategy of the current occupant of the White House. A snippet:

With the election polls trending poorly for the current president in the U.S., there is really only one kind of strategy that remains if he is to be reelected. It might seem exactly backwards, but it has always been much of the current president’s strategy (though just how conscious this has been I am not sure). And Democrats seem always ready to play along. That strategy is to generate maximum discord and polarization.

Follow the link for his thoughts on why and how this just might–and he metaphorically emphasizes “might”–work.

At the Inky, Will Bunch weighs in.

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The Villages People 0

Experiments fail, even noble ones.

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One Can Hope . . . . 0

Donald Trump behind a podium labeled

I find myself bemused when persons refer to Trump’s “accomplishments.” He neither is accomplished nor has he accomplished anything in any way, unless incoherent blather counts as an “accomplishment.”

Image via Job’s Anger.

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Republican Platform 0

Two Republican Elephants looking a royal throne on a raised dias.  One says to the other,

Image via Juanita Jean.

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USADammerung? 0

Tony Norman is disturbed by the devolution of the discoarse.

Experiments fail, even noble ones.

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Recommended Listening 0

Bob Cesca interviews Carl Hoffman about the magickal, reality-free world of MAGA rallies and ralliers.

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The Stock Market Is Not the Economy, Reprise 0

Donald Trump as a one-man band beating the drum for the stock market, as he marches past a graveyard with gravestones reading

Click to view the original image.

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