PEOPLE NEEDING PEOPLE: Whatever became of the war with Iran?

THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 2026

The speed of our failing discourse: "Back out of all this now too much for us?"  

Isn't it true that we the people are now caught in such a place? With that impression in mind, we restate this week's basic questionthe question which should be torturing Americans' dreams:

Under current circumstances, do we the people have what it takes to create a more perfect Union? I Even to attempt to do so? 
Indeed, are we the people living in any sort of Union at this point in time?   

Are we the people built for the task of finding our way "back out of all this now too much for us?" We'd say the answer tilts toward no. Consider the past five days:   

Last Saturday night, at the Washington Hilton, the national discourse suddenly changed. A 31-year-old Californian staged an attempt at an assassination attempt. We were surprised by the (unhelpful?) way Bret Stephens described this man in his recent New York Times column:

The Banality of Evil, Again

President Trump erupted in anger at the CBS journalist Norah O’Donnell after she read him excerpts from what is said to be a manifesto written by Cole Tomas Allen, the man charged with trying to kill Trump at Saturday’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Some conservatives seem to think no good can be served from reading these words, but that’s a mistake: It’s always useful to be reminded, again, of the banality of evil.

The distinguishing feature of the manifesto is its insipidity. “I am a citizen of the United States,” Allen writes. “What my representatives do reflects on me.” Later, he justifies the possibility that he might harm the people in the ballroom “on the basis that most people chose to attend a speech by a pedophile, rapist and traitor, and are thus complicit,” although he adds that “I really hope it doesn’t come to that.”

The manifesto lays out five objections to what he is about to attempt—starting with “As a Christian, you should turn the other cheek”—followed by his brief rebuttals. The impression is less of a person struggling with an anguished conscience than of someone not bright enough to come up with objections that would force anything but glib self-justification.   

It's true! Allen did create a type of "manifesto." It offers nothing like a convincing justification for the enormity of the act he haplessly attempted to attempt.  

To Stephens, Allen isn't especially bright. He's glib, insipid, banal, eviland, without any doubt, a person can see it this way. 

A person can see it that way. Or does Allen more closely resemble the portrait painted in the passage below? 

Headline included, we show you what a Dartmouth professor said about people like Allen in an interview with Sabrina Tavernise of that same New York Times:  

Is the U.S. in a Politically Violent Age? What the Data and History Say

A question that seems to be on everyone’s mind after the third assassination attempt on President Trump on Saturday is whether the country has entered into a new, dangerous phase of political violence, and what that would mean for the country.

I talked with Sean Westwood, a professor of government at Dartmouth College and fellow at the Hoover Institution who tracks acts of violence and the reaction to them. Our conversation has been edited for clarity and length.   

[...]

WESTWOOD: The individuals who commit these acts are lone wolves. Largely mentally ill, largely male, largely younger. The thing that seems to connect them is not ideology—it’s anger. Most do not leave a manifesto. We’re left to reconstruct it from their internet history, from their social media, from text messages with friends.

A really good example is Thomas Crooks, the first one to try to assassinate President Trump. He was searching for candidates on both sides of the aisle. He just seemed to be lashing out against society. So in that way, Cole Tomas Allen is a bit of an outlier because he did provide a clear explanation for his actions. 

 What should we think about Cole Allen? Is he "banal, insipid, not especially bright?" Or might he instead be viewed as being "mentally ill?"  

In truth, when it comes to "not especially bright," we all tend to fit that description, at least on certain occasions. 

As we've noted in recent weeks, our American discourse features extremely limited comprehension of the basic concept of "mental illness." We're amazed to see someone as smart as Stephens offering an instant portrait of Allen without seeming to imagine the possibility that he may be "mentally ill."  

(The alleged January 6 pipe bomber, Brian Cole Jr., is said to be severely autistic. Reportedly, he was influenced by President Trump's rhetoric about the 2020 election being stolen when he staged his own failed attempt at a violent act.)

With respect to the branch of medical science concerned with "mental illness," we apply its concepts in certain situations, run from it in others. As a people, "we the people" aren't especially bright when it comes to that sprawling branch of modern medical science, as we may even see when Stephens says this about the sitting president, then say nothing more:

[Later in Stephens' column]
The degree to which facts have become hard to disentangle from conspiracy theories is one of the depressing hallmarks of the age. So is the relentless hyperbole about the president’s alleged destruction of democracy. But conservatives should be wary of pointing fingers here. Who is it, after all, who tried to delegitimize not one but two Democratic presidents, the first through preposterous claims about a fake birth certificate, the second through outrageous falsehoods about a stolen election? 

Tomorrow, we'll turn to our society's "depressing" conspiracy theories. As for the sitting president, has spent more than five years advancing the unfounded claim that the 2020 election was stolen. Before that, he spent five years insulting the American project by claiming that Barack Obama had been born in Kenya.  

Millions of people in our flailing nation still believe those claims. We'll take a guess: 

Cole Allen was, in fact, bright enough to know that those endless claims are false. But being some form of "mentally ill," he took a train across the country and tried to settle the matter right there.  

Allen's attempt at an assassination attempt was instant major news. It quickly replaced the war in Iran (remember that?) in the forefront of American discourse.   

In that sense, it came at a propitious time for supporters of the sitting president. On the Fox News Channel, Allen's attempt seemed to be seized upon as a way to push Iran out of the discourse. 

The channel's army of messengers also seized upon a joke by Jimmy Kimmel from last Thursday night. They have seized upon 1) the latest indictment of James Comey and 2) an indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center as topics whichor so the channel's flock of birds sayshow that the American project is deeply endangered by what "the Democrat [sic] Party" and its handmaidens have persistently done.   

Yesterday, along came the Supreme Court decision about Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Hopelessly complicated attempts at explanation have crowded Blue America's major news orgs in the wake of that decision.   

The topic is almost surely too complex to be explained by American journalists, none more so than the overmatched people we saw yesterday on our own Blue American cable news channels. 

(Concepts were too hard to explain. Some thumbs did get placed on some scales.)

Long ago and far awaywe take you back to March 2000Mickey Kaus wrote a series of columns in Slate about the astonishing speed of the evolving public discourse, under then-current arrangements. Here's something Kaus said at the time:   

The news cycle is much faster these days, thanks to 24-hour cable, the Web, a metastasized pundit caste constantly searching for new angles, etc. As a result, politics is able to move much faster, too, as our democracy learns to process more information in a shorter period and to process it comfortably at this faster pace. 

Part of that was true! Even way back then, the news cycle was already much faster, thanks to 24-hour cable news and thanks to the very early rise of the Web.

The cycle was already much faster! By now, though, the "current circumstances" to which we've referred include some monsters of discourse as thes

Fruits of democratization: 
Totally partisan, round-the-clock talk radio
Totally partisan "cable news" channels 
Totally partisan Web sites
Podcasts run by every manner of "influencer." A podcast culture within which, for better or worse, it's "Every flyweight a king."

The Fox News Channel floods its air with "wrestlers" and comedians. Blue America's major orgs refuse to report or discuss what happens on the Fox News Channeland our own absurd behaviors have contributed to the general meltdown.   

Are we the people built for the task of handling this conceptual chaos? Are we built for the task of creating a more perfect Unionof creating any Union at allin the face of this non-stop American Babel?

Are we the people built for that task? At 7 o'clock on Sunday morning, C-Span's Washington Journal opened its phone lines to us the people, and the calls which came in about the previous night's events helped show the challenge we're facing.

What did we the people think Cole Allen's assassination attempt? C-Span viewers shared their ideasand n our view, on conclusion was quickly apparent: 

We the people need the guidance of wise, intelligent gatekeepers. We're people badly needing people, as people always have been.

Whatever became of the war with Iran? On Fox, it was sent away.

The claims and topics and talking points come amazingly thick and fast at this point. Most of these claims are hapless, inane. At this very late date, is anyone among us the people really sufficiently "bright?" 

Tomorrow: We promise! What we the people said!


79 comments:

  1. "Under current circumstances, do we the people have what it takes to create a more perfect Union? I Even to attempt to do so?"

    Somerby should proofread his own work. "I Even" makes no sense and I cannot imagine what he meant to say with that.

    It does seem like Somerby is questioning the value of adhering to our Constitution, which begins "We the People, in order to form a more perfect union...". Of course we should attempt to do so and is Somerby actually suggesting we should not?

    We have too many senile old men making public statements and at least two of them need to move away from their keyboards and find a different hobby. No one wants to hear Somerby accidentally suggest the overthrow of our country. Somerby is an old fart who has said a lot of racist and sexist things, railed against immigrants and scoff at our best presidents, but this is a bridge too far. Time for Somerby to go watch TV from a recliner. He proves today that he has nothing to say to any of us.

    Toward the end he says this:

    "What did we the people think Cole Allen's assassination attempt? C-Span viewers shared their ideas—and n our view, on conclusion was quickly apparent: "

    How many letters can you leave out of a sentence and still make any sense?

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  2. "At this very late date, is anyone among us the people really sufficiently "bright?""

    I can imagine Somerby giggling at this sentence, as he deliberately uses bad grammar to suggest that his readers are the stupid ones.

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  3. Two explanations are suggested as motives for Cole Allen:

    1. He is not very bright
    2. He is mentally ill

    There are others not considered:

    3. He is making a political statement
    4. He is testing security in preparation for someone's later attempt
    5. He is engaging in a staged event on Trump's behalf
    6. He is engaging in a staged event as a political stunt on someone else's behalf
    7. He is trying to show that Trump is too disabled to continue in office, given his response in the moment
    8. He is seeking attention to himself, making a grand gesture for some as yet unidentified person
    9. He is seeking free room and board at government expense
    10. He is trying to impress Jodie Foster

    We don't know Cole Allen's motives yet. Neither does Stephens and Somerby certainly doesn't know them. The catch-all "mental illness" is lazy and stupider than Stephens view that Allen is stupid. Stephens sounds as racist as they come, given that Allen has an advanced engineering degree and cannot be considered stupid by anyone's assessment. Stephens never considers the possibility that Allen was writing his manifesto at the level of comprehension of his audience, including Stephens himself who shows no ability to escape the banality of explanation. Was Allen perhaps mocking the assassination efforts of previous shooters, or the format of their manifestoes or is he playing 10-dimensional chess or was he being sincere in his desire to disassociate himself from Trump without actually shooting anyone?

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    1. 10 dimensional chess? - end game life imprisonment

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    2. AC/MA, please keep in mind that we still do not know whether he had a weapon in hand, much less shot anyone. Actual lawyers are saying he may not be convicted on the charges because they cannot prove he did anything threatening. The security officer may have been shot by friendly fire. Attempting to take a gun through a magnetometer is something a few of our Republican congress members have done without any prison time at all.

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    3. It is a good rule of thumb to be skeptical of everything this “DOJ” says.

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    4. Keep in mind, when the fucking media refers to the "DOJ", the fucking media really means trump's fucking lawyers.

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    5. Then there's the obvious: an ad for taxpayer funding for the ballroom so Trump can pocket the private donations.

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  4. It is too bad that Somerby and others have forgotten the context in which the phrase "The banality of evil" was applied to Hitler's bureaucratic henchmen. It certainly doesn't fit here. There is little that is banal about Trump, no matter how evil he has become. There is nothing banal about Epstein, his cabal of horrible old men raping young girls. There is nothing banal about that kompromat ring being run to blackmail prominent men on behalf of Russia and Israel. There is nothing banal about Musk with his flamboyant drug abuse and destruction of our government. Whatever Hegseth is, he is not banal, nor is ICE or Noem or Patel or Bondi, in their in-your-face violence and flaunting of our laws and the public good.

    We all want our government back, except Somerby who wants Mary Trump to diagnose her brother (a conflict of interest in medicine) so Somerby can reassure himself that even if Trump has dementia, he (Somerby) is not like Trump and thus OK. Meanwhile our nation is not doing well and all Somerby can think to call for is despair -- we are all too stupid to fix what is wrong with our nation, he claims.

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    1. banal definition: "something boring, unoriginal, or drearily commonplace"

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    2. flouting of laws, not flaunting

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    3. Mary Trump is the niece not sister of Trump, but licensed clinicians are still not supposed to treat their relatives.

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  5. "We the people need the guidance of wise, intelligent gatekeepers. We're people badly needing people, as people always have been."

    We the people do not need gatekeepers. We need leaders.

    A gatekeeper is someone who locks people in or out of a structure. That implies that others are being kept either inside or outside. It is a good description of what ICE has been trying to do, and it describes what is going on at Ghislaine's jail, but it is inappropriate as a description of our lives in a free society. We the people do not need to be locked up nor do we need to be protected from others seeking to live side by side in our society. Perhaps Somerby is longing to be carted off to memory care or a senior home, but the rest of us are not in those circumstances.

    We, the rest of the people besides Somerby, see ourselves as active participants in our nation's commerce, voters and citizens who are working to create a better society in which we can all thrive. We don't want to be taken care of, benignly or not.

    So, I find Somerby ongoing theme about "we the people being too stupid to live independently" to be offensive. He seems to be suggesting fascism, authoritarianism, rule by a select few non-stupids who wield power and plunder our wealth, while we sit by and gape. And I really have to wonder what is wrong with Somerby that he continually suggests giving up our freedoms like this. He is sounding more evil himself, whether paid to pacify the public or expressing his own bent views. Somerby is what banal evil looks like. He should know better than to say this stuff, so why is he doing this?

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    1. “He seems to be suggesting. . .”

      Another entry in the ever-popular genre of “Criticize Somerby for What He Seems to Say!”

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    2. DG, it has been explained to you repeatedly that Somerby rarely says anything directly. What do you think he means by gatekeepers? Yes, he is referring to the press, but what would it mean to have such wise people filtering what we the people are allowed to hear and know? How does that relate to what happens in managed authoritarian states?

      Why don't you think instead of just attacking other commenters here?

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    3. Another entry in the “Somerby Doesn’t Say Anything Directly!” apologia.

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    4. Somerby’s favorite word is “seems”

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    5. "He seems to be suggesting fascism, authoritarianism, rule by a select few non-stupids who wield power and plunder our wealth, while we sit by and gape."

      This is the only place where @10:14 applies the word "seems" to Somerby's essay. Doesn't the suggestion of gatekeepers to guard the press, which Somerby explicitly stated, fit the description of what an authoritarian state does with its censored news? Somerby might say he doesn't intend it to go that far, but how is gatekeeping of the media not fit that description?

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    6. "A gatekeeper is someone who locks people in or out of a structure."

      True but misleading since it's blindingly obvious Somerby uses the term to refer to information gatekeepers, not people gatekeepers. So the rest of your ramble is way off the mark.

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    7. 2:33: WTF is an “information gatekeeper” if not someone who controls access to information?

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    8. If you think our current government is only concerned about information gatekeeping and not physical gatekeeping of our nation's borders, you are naive. Perhaps you have not read the essays where Somerby himself says Biden/Harris did not show enough concern about controlling our borders, and where he said Democrats were not sufficiently concerned about attacks by criminal migrants, and so on. It has been obvious for a long time that Somerby shares the right's xenophobia and wants physical gatekeeping not just information gatekeeping. @10:14 understands that focus by Somerby, even if it was not his main point today.

      Does anyone really think that if the government imposed information gatekeepers, it would not also impose physical gatekeepers? It has already been doing both. I think they go hand-in-hand and support the notion that we are drifting toward authoritarianism.

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    9. we done drifted, pal

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    10. Pity the Somerby-Whisperer.

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  6. You could consider our elected representatives to be the wise intelligent gatekeepers, who have been corrupted by Trump, MAGAs like Mike Johnson, and Russian/billionaire interference. In that case, the problem isn't the lack of gatekeepers but the corruption. So, we need a reform government that will sweep out the bad actors, as occurs periodically with our form of government. Obviously, the Republicans are not the reform party, so it is up to "we the people" to elect Democrats to root out the bad guys, the self-interested looters and mentally ill assholes now in power.

    Thank you to Somerby for stating the obvious. Trump must go because he is not wise and not intelligent and doesn't belong in the presidency.

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  7. Republicans, including Stephens, seem to like to use the word stupid to describe those they dislike, while considering themselves at the top of the heap. Even our president has delusions of mental ability (and physical ability) while being incompetent. Tiedrich nails this today:

    "first item: Preznit Fuckwit held an Oval Bordello playdate with the Artemis II astronauts, because of course he did. basking in the glory of someone else’s accomplishments is one of his favorite pastimes.

    listen to this delusional dipshit run his rancid anus-mouth.

    “[to be an astronaut] you have to be very smart. you have to do a lot of things physically good. so I would have had no trouble making it. I’m physically very, very good. we’ll have to try it sometimes. is a president allowed to go up in one of these missions?”

    my god, he’s like a toddler, jealous because some other kid got a cool new toy, and he didn’t.

    Donny is so fucking broken inside that he can’t let these phenomenal astronauts who broke the record for distance traveled into outer space enjoy their amazing accomplishment without bragging about how he could have done it, too.

    let’s see, is Donny physically fit enough to go into space? let’s do a quick fact check:

    [picture of Trump in his golf outfit looking especially unfit]

    oh, sure — go for it, bro.

    tell me, do spacesuits come in size roly-poly?

    I know I keep saying this, but it never stops being true: oh, to have the supreme and serene self-confidence of a mediocre imbecile like Donny. it must be nice."

    The same goes for other posturing right wingers calling people stupid because they lack the vocabulary to nail down what is actually true about their opponents.

    Whatever Case Allen is, he definitely is not stupid. It takes skill to attack the president without anyone getting injured, including himself, which is a stated goal in his manifesto (sent before his attempt to breach security). It is not clear whether he was actually attempting to shoot the president or any White House officials, or just making a statement with his actions.

    But genius Brett Stephens knows only one word to apply to Allen, "stupid," and he seems not to know the meaning of the words banal and evil. When do evil people take concern for bystanders, apologize to their families, and align themselves against the truly evil people who have hijacked our government? Stephens is looking very stupid this morning, and so is Somerby, whose fingers suddenly are not working properly as he types.

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  8. Fads have swept the nation from time to time. Fads may be one way to understand what happened.

    Hula hoops. Beanie babies. Flash mobs. Fidget spinners. Now there is a fad to assassinate Trump and other conservatives.

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    1. Maybe there is a fad to loot and steal from the American people, start unnecessary wars? Or maybe it is just all the Republicans know how to do.

      If shootings were a fad, there would be an increase in the murder rate, not decreases everywhere.

      Was Gabby Giffords a conservative? Were those Democratic politicians in MN conservative? Are the targets of hate crimes conservative? When the facts don't fit your thesis, David, stop typing and think up something else offensive to say.

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    2. You think you are being cute, dickhead? You're not cute or amusing. You're a fucking racist old man. Die already.

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    3. I believe the word is "self-assassinate". I prefer "go away, now" or shut up you fucking troll.

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    4. Here is a fad that Robert Reich has observed. He attributes it to the bad example set by Trump as president, to a "greed is good" mentality:

      "CEOs of hugely profitable firms are now laying off large numbers of workers — not because they have to, but because they figure they can make even more money that way. Until recently, highly profitable corporations didn’t do mass layoffs; it was considered bad form.

      A Wall Street Journal story calls the past few months “the era of the mega-layoff,” citing Amazon’s recent reduction of its workforce by 30,000 and Oracle’s laying off many thousands of its employees. As the Journal reports,

      “Instead of laying off people in more incremental—and less disruptive—waves, employers are seizing on the potential financial upsides of severing swaths of their workforces at once. That is a departure from not long ago, when mass layoffs registered as a sign of trouble or mismanagement and that a company needed to take drastic measures to right its performance. Now, such a company is more likely to get a big stock bump and praise from investors for acting boldly.”

      Wall Street, meanwhile, is investing in crypto and private credit, in apparent disregard for the dangers they pose to the financial system. It’s as if the Street is saying: Who cares, if there’s money to be made?

      We’re in a wave of selfish assertiveness even worse than the “greed is good” days of Gordon Gekko.

      Trump is not singularly responsible for every such breach of public morality, of course. But a president inevitably influences the character of a nation. We’re continuously bombarded by how he acts, what he says and does, the ways he treats others, his style, his attitude."

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    5. https://robertreich.substack.com/p/please-tell-me-im-not-becoming-a

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    6. @12:32 - Selfishness is a human characteristic and it's a part of every economic system. Government employees are happy to get a raise and unhappy to be fired, just like non-government employees.

      The nice thing about capitalism is that human selfishness is channeled into ways that do a better job of making life better for people than other economic systems do. That's validated by actual experience.

      There's a tendency among many to take for granted all the benefits capitalism brings us.

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    7. People visiting soup kitchens and standing in bread lines during the Great Depression were probably taking the benefits of capitalism for granted. If not, they were probably just Negative Nellies who didn’t understand it well enough. So what if their families were starving? Some CEO was eating well.

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    8. Economists are taught about the common good in their training. How did you escape that lesson, David?

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    9. Like so many Republicans, David quotes Ayn Rand and pretends it is Adam Smith. Ayn Rand was a sociopath, like Trump.

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  9. Trump was supposed to hold still during the Butler shooting, but he is incapable of doing that. At the very least, he sways. The planners of that event never anticipated that a member of the crowd might show heroism. That isn't something the right typically does, so it caught them by surprise and a bystander was killed protecting his wife (and trying to protect Trump?). What a fool they must have thought him to be.

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  10. "Whatever became of the war with Iran? On Fox, it was sent away."

    Earth to Somerby. Maybe this would be a good reason to stop watching Fox obsessively.

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    1. He's a media critic.

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    2. Being a media critic doesn’t necessitate watching Fox obsessively. The war in Iran was major news last night on MSNOW.

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  11. Somerby's thesis today: Randos on CSpan couldn't explain Cole Allen's shooting attempt so none of us are sufficiently intelligent to live in a free country without "gatekeepers".

    Of course, that makes perfect sense.

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  12. The question is what people need people for. As an example, Republicans are determined to preserve the right to abuse others sexually. Case in point:

    "The MAGA movement is reportedly calling on President Donald Trump to pardon a former “sex cult” leader.

    Yes, really.

    The controversy and legal case involving Nicole Daedone, former CEO and founder of OneTaste, was the subject of the recent Netflix documentary, “Orgasm Inc.”

    According to PBS News, OneTaste’s lawyer Alan Dershowitz is working behind the scenes as part of an effort to get Trump to pardon Daedone.

    Lawyer Alan Dershowitz listens as President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after his criminal trial on May 20, 2024.
    Dershowitz represented Trump during his 2020 impeachment trial and was widely condemned in the legal world for arguing that a president could not be impeached for doing something “in the public interest” that “he believes will help him get elected.”

    He has also been a fixer for multiple people seeking pardons and clemency from Trump, using his access to the president in exchange for money. Dershowitz even argued for clemency on behalf of a man who was convicted of possessing child sexual abuse materials and sex trafficking."

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/4/29/800030216/news/maga-trump-pardon-sex-cult-leader/

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  13. Republicans classify people in terms of intelligence (stupid, smart) because they think about society hierarchically. Smart and rich and beautiful on top, dumb and poor and repulsive on the bottom. Our American caste system assigns whole groups of people to levels in a hierarchy. White means smart, beautiful and wealthy and on top. Brown means average, unattractive, hardworking but poor and beneath all white people. Black means stupid, ugly, criminal or homeless or on welfare. So when Republicans call people stupid, they include all of that caste-linked baggage, so stupid people are also the dregs with no redeeming value. It is the new n-word, often expressed as retard because that word too is offensive in polite gatherings. Name-calling is their way of bolstering their own self-esteem by reminding themselves and others that they are top dogs, even if it is just in an obscure internet comment section. And Somerby does the same thing when he calls us all too stupid to have nice things, such as a democracy and a government of and by and for the people not Musk and Trump.

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    1. Republicans classify people in terms of intelligence. By Intelligence, not by Race. That's why the leading Republican thinker is black.

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    2. Some Republican men classify women in this dominance hierarchy too. White women are below white men and so on within each caste. No women are smart, but they get classified by how sexy they are, by age and by marital status and whether they have kids (grandkids). Men then rank themselves against other men by the value assigned to their wives or any girlfriend they get to dominate. Within groups of white men there are levels. Chads are the alpha males, on the top among white, rich, smart men. They are buff and get whatever women they want (including cheating and getting away with sexual abuse). Cucks are the beta males (aka Soy Boys). They are still above all men of color but cannot compete with alpha males and thus are despised even though of higher caste. They are not buff. There is a lower category of girly men who have feminine traits such as being able to read. Black men who are physically attractive compete with white men for women and the men who think these terms consider them their competition. Those who hate women believe that all women want black men because they have large male appendages and are sexy, even if stupid.

      Men idealize women to increase their own stature. The better woman he "owns" the higher his own status. Any man can comfort himself when he feels diminished simply by reminding himself that at least he isn't a woman. That is the main function of denigrating women. The free labor is a secondary function. Women do most of the emotional labor in our country as well as nearly all of the child care and housework, even now.

      There is an intersection between racism and sexism and it is no coincidence that most Republicans are both sexist and racist.

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    3. Both Somerby and Stephens call Case Allen stupid because he is black. Objectively, he cannot be stupid and have earned a degree in mechanical engineering from Caltech (the Harvard of technical universities). His test scores were only 30 pts below perfect (800).

      Anyone can do something stupid, but to BE stupid is namecalling. Calling an obviously intelligent black man stupid is racist.

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    4. The leading Republican thinker is not black. For one thing, Republicans don't think and don't admire thinkers. For another, David doesn't speak for all Republicans, most of whom cannot name a single Republican "thinker" and would answer "Trump" to anyone who asked who their favorite thinker is.

      Elsewhere on the internet, in response to "Who is the leading Republican thinker?" Sowell's name is not even mentioned.

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    5. Sowell? He’s 95 years old. And: “Thomas Sowell has expressed a deeply critical view of Donald Trump, particularly regarding his personal character, economic policies, and trade actions. … Sowell has called Trump a "spoiled adolescent" lacking the temperament for the presidency. Sowell also strongly criticized Trump's trade policies as "ruinous"”

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    6. In that case, I wish Sowell actually were the leading Republican thinker.

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    7. By Intelligence, not by Race

      It is just a coincidence that everybody Pistol Pete
      "dry drunk" fired from the Pentagon is either black or a woman, and for the twofers a black woman.

      Go fuck yourself, dickhead.

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    8. All those voters who left the Democratic Party to vote Republican after the passage of the civil rights act were just economically anxious.

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    9. 2:16, exactly, or as "Grand Wizard" John Roberts says, they are completely colorblind.

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    10. GPT says
      There’s no single definitive “leading Republican thinker”; influence depends on context (policy area, intellectual movement, or media). Prominent contemporary figures often cited include:

      George W. Bush (modern compassionate conservatism; former president)
      Ronald Reagan (iconic conservative policymaker and rhetorical leader)
      Thomas Sowell (economist and author influential in conservative thought)
      John Yoo (legal scholar on executive power and national security)
      ...

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    11. No one considers George W Bush a leading thinker on any subject.

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    12. Ronald McDonald - the only president to give weapons to the Iranian mullahs! fucking brilliant

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    13. "No, John Yoo was not disbarred. While the Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) originally recommended disciplinary action for his role in authorizing "torture memos", a top Justice Department official later ruled that Yoo demonstrated "poor judgment" rather than ethical misconduct, allowing him to avoid disbarment or official censure."

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    14. GW Bush is busy painting paintings, rarely speaks publicly, and refused to vote for Trump.

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  14. Mary Trump, clinical psychologist, is on her way to Pakistan to hammer out a diplomatic solution in Iran. Her work keeping the Ayatollah regime sane is underreported.

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  15. Somerby refers to a conceptual chaos that he thinks we are unable to navigate. I disagree. I do not feel threatened by the views of people who hold different ideas about the world. I have my own grounding in my own beliefs and values. Others may express this as having a sense of right and wrong, a moral center. I think it also comes from reading widely, interacting with different cultures both here in the US and overseas, and thinking about history and politics over a lifetime.

    If someone had a theory like Somerby's, about why we the people are being overwhelmed by a "fast news cycle" or too many ideas, he should test it by seeing whether people he knows feel adrift that way, lost, uncertain about their own beliefs and values, lacking in goals and swept along by currents. If he finds some people do feel that way but others do not, he might try to figure out what differentiates those groups.

    I find that people who feel overwhelmed tend to reduce distress by limiting their exposure to the things that upset them. I know people who do not follow politics at all (most eligible voters in our nation do not vote). I know some who avoid news involving Trump because he just makes them mad, afraid, sick. Some will vote against him but do not follow his daily exploits. That is their right, no matter what Somerby says. I know some people who focus their efforts and energy on their own extended families. Others dedicate themselves to church or causes they care about, which anchors them and makes the sense of chaos less. Somerby might try that himself. Somerby has no right to call such people stupid. They have simply found their own method of "gatekeeping." Personally, I find it superior to Somerby's idea that we should all have our exposure to chaos limited by wise gatekeepers of someone else's choosing, especially given that he has not said who should do that choosing.

    This is like when Somerby calls for Trump to be evaluated by a "carefully selected" medical specialist. Who will do the selecting, and for what purpose? He never says that. But his attraction to authoritarian limits seems clear. Just like when he approved of banning books from school libraries without any stated concern about which books were being banned, by whom, and for what purpose.

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  16. Somerby has just concluded that Case Allen is mentally ill, without any evidence. If Case Allen saw himself as part of a citizen army protecting our democracy, our institutions, would that make him mentally ill, or would it make him similar to those who overthrew the British tyranny to establish the United States of America? Was Sam Adams a patriot, a criminal, or mentally ill?

    Sometimes I read Somerby and think he would call us all mentally ill, if that weren't such a stupid conceit, an obvious dodge to avoid thinking about our nation's problems.

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  17. Reading the "Manifesto" on TV did help the public understand the shooter, but it also spread malicious lies about Trump. Trump was right to complain. If a similar situation had occurred to Barack Obama, a TV person would not have read the assassin's words.

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    1. What are the malicious lies, DiC?

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    2. Even the Unabomber's manifesto was published by the press. I don't believe they would have suppressed a manifesto against Obama under the same circumstances.

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    3. OK 1:14 - I will take your snark seriously. Can you please demonstrate that it is a fact that Trump is a traitor?

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    4. You believe calling someone a traitor without factual basis is a malicious lie, DiC?

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    5. but you do agree fucking orange chickenshit is a rapist and pedophile, eh dickhead. Donny McRapey lost his appeal on E. Jean Carroll sexual assault and defamation, fuckface.

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  18. If Somerby read different media, he would be aware that many in Blue America are concerned about what Trump is doing in Iran. For example, Thom Hartmann said today:

    "The Wall Street Journal reports in an article titled “Trump Tells Aides to Prepare for Extended Blockade of Iran” that:

    “President Trump has instructed aides to prepare for an extended blockade of Iran, U.S. officials said... In recent meetings, including a Monday discussion in the Situation Room, Trump opted to continue squeezing Iran’s economy and oil exports by preventing shipping to and from its ports. …

    “For now, Trump is comfortable with an indefinite blockade, which he wrote Tuesday on Truth Social is pushing Iran toward a ‘State of Collapse.’”

    So, Putin — who Trump took orders from for a full 90 minutes yesterday — and America’s billionaires who religiously read the WSJ are officially tipped off to prepare for what may well be a worldwide repeat of the Republican Great Depression of the 1930s. Or at least a revisit to the GOP’s infamous Nixon-era crises of the 1970s, Reagan’s “Black Monday” 22% market crash, Bush’s 2008 “Great Recession,” and Trump’s 2020 massive botched-pandemic-response economic melt-down.

    Trump and his people didn’t bother to say one word to average Americans — no press conference or warning — but they sure made certain that their billionaire buddies are informed.

    And, of course, they’re not at all worried by this; recessions and depressions are when the morbidly rich like Trump and the 13 billionaires in his cabinet make their greatest fortunes. Businesses are failing, stock prices collapsing, and people are losing their homes, all fantastic buying opportunities for wealthy, cash-rich predators investors."

    https://hartmannreport.com/p/is-the-next-economic-crash-being-0c4

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  19. What does Barbra Streisand's song about People who need people have to do with anything Somerby has written today? Why did he borrow it? Streisand is a staunch Democrat and would endorse nothing that Somerby has said here.

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    1. When Somerby borrows things like that, it strikes me as a literary equivalent to stolen valor.

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    2. And the Democrats did a good job of exposing that.

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  20. “Whatever became of the war with Iran?”

    It was the focus of much of MSNOW’s reporting last night. Hegseth appeared before Congress yesterday.

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    1. Hegs fucking lied to the parents of the 6 soldiers killed by drone attack. He fucking hung them out exposed to attack.

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    2. And the Democrats did a good job of exposing that.

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  21. “We the people need the guidance of wise, intelligent gatekeepers.”

    This was the origin of the term “aristocracy” in Ancient Greece.

    Who would these wise intelligent people be? How would they obtain and maintain their status as gatekeepers? Would they be insulated from the people and their opinions? Did America have such people during the 18th and 19th century? Did we ever have them? Would they select and restrict our access to information?

    I have questions.

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  22. "Trump Says Iran Has to ‘Cry Uncle’ to End Strait of Hormuz Standoff"

    If that doesn't bring Iran back to the negotiating table, I don't know what will.

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    1. The fucking "art" of the fucking "deal". That's why we pay King Chickenshit the big bucks.

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  23. The U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of 2% in the first three months of 2026, a rebound from weak growth in the previous quarter, new government data shows.

    Economists polled by FactSet had projected the nation's gross domestic product — the total value of goods and services produced in the U.S. — to rise at an annualized rate of 2.2% for the January to March quarter.

    "The core of the economy remained solid in Q1, driven by the AI buildout and the tax cuts beginning to feed through," Michael Pearce, chief U.S. economist with Oxford Economics, said in a note to investors. "Those factors will continue to drive growth over the rest of the year."

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    1. It’s the golden age, I tell you.

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  24. from Digby:

    All six conservative members of the Supreme Court attended President Trump’s state dinner Tuesday honoring King Charles, the night before they heard an important case about Mr. Trump’s immigration policies. None of the three liberal justices were present.</em.

    because fuck us, what are we going to do about it

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