Political Theatre category archive
Hey! Rubio! 0
At our Drinking Liberally gathering Thursday, one of our members who follows the numbers predicted that the Republican establishment, to such an extent that there is such a thing anymore, would eventually unite behind Marco Rubio as the anti-Trump.
He may on to something.
The next morning, my local rag reported that our Congressman, (who, like our previous governor, has the ability to hide his very right-wing positions under a veneer of mild-mannered behavior) endorsed Marco Rubio in the face of overwhelming evidence that Marco Rubio is as dumb as a post and incapable of original thought is neither capable of nor qualified for governance.
And don’t pay no never mind to the predictions of a “brokered” convention. As Michael in Norfolk points out, there ain’t no brokers any more.
The Mouth Roars . . . 0
. . . but the skin is thin.
Suffer the Children 0
In Florida, it’s a policy.
Twits on Twitter 0
Big twits. Really big twits.
The Man Who Would Be King 0
Michael D’Antonio tries to understand Donald Trump’s megalomania.
Chris-Crossed, Profiles in Discourage Dept. 0
Alfred P. Doblin notes how Chris Christie stood for truth copped out (emphasis added).
Governor Christie would, to borrow an analogy from Jimmy Fallon, “Hulk out.” Certainly, Christie, who has demonized union officials, critics and the little people who occasionally made their way to the microphones of his faux town hall meetings in New Jersey, would give it to Trump good. Instead he said Trump was factually incorrect and left it at that. He is avoiding a head-to-head, Predator vs. Alien showdown.
The man who says, if elected president, he would stand up to Vladimir Putin couldn’t take on a billionaire developer and television personality who disparaged the reputation of thousands of Muslims living in New Jersey.
Read the rest.
Legacy, Tricky Dicky Style 2
At The Nation, Max Berger analyzes how Nixon’s and the Republican Party’s odious Southern Strategy has finally reached to the point of backfiring upon its creators and of threatening to backfire upon the United States. (My two or three regular readers will know that the long-term effect of Nixon’s decision to appeal to racism and bigotry for short-term electoral support has long been a recurring theme in these electrons.)
Here’s a bit; do read the whole thing.
(snip)
The emergence of fascism has always depended upon democracy’s failure. The growing proto-fascist, white-supremacist movement in the Republican Party is preying upon non-rich white people who are literally dying of despair, turning to drugs and suicide to deal with a reality they can’t bear, and a society they believe doesn’t care for them. Over the past 15 years, the death rate for white men has actually increased?—?an unprecedented rise in modern times that’s comparable to the emergence of the AIDS epidemic. White people are right that they are under attack?—?they’re just pointing to the wrong culprits. For the wealthy elite who fund the political operatives and media companies that tell white people who to blame for their plight, the race war is a very useful substitute for the class war.
What’s new in this moment is the Republican establishment’s losing control of the grassroots for the first time in the post–civil rights era.
Hollow Points 0
Jonathan C. Rothermel points out that the “gun debate” is a tinkling cymbal, a sounding bell, signifying nothing, for it falls on empty ears attached to empty heads.
Dis Coarse Discourse 0
Helen Ubinas is tired of inappropriate language.
“No comment.”
Follow the link for examples.
A Picture Is Worth 0

Via Political Prof, who points out that one of the characteristics of irrational fear is that it is–well–irrational.
“The Smart One” 0
Jeffrey Gillespie thinks that Jeb! is twisting slowly, slowly in the wind. A snippet:
He has also, inadvertently, become the poster boy for a lack of resistance to the far-right elements that have propelled Trump’s bid so far. That’s unfair to Jeb — God knows, the lunatic fringe isn’t about to take a chill pill administered by anyone who they might consider to be a “mainstream” candidate — but it does show the voting public that Bush’s campaign is stuck in a 1990’s time warp; it is not operating with the lusty visibility that almost always translates to a win in the news cycle.
The Trump Cycle 0
Jack Ohman spots a pattern:

1. He lies again.
2. He questions the motives of the people who caught him in the lie.
3. He repeats the lie; then he goes up two points in the polls.
More cycling at the link.
Image via Job’s Anger.







