MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2024
Flashing on Camus: In yesterday's offering, we reported a statement by Fox News contributor Lisa Boothe—a statement we regard as truly remarkable.
Boothe made the statement on Saturday evening's edition of The Big Weekend Show, a clown car-adjacent Fox News Channel production. This was the statement in question:
BOOTHE (11/30/24): Joe Biden took a stage at the end of July [2021], CNN Town Hall, telling Americans that if you got the vaccine, you wouldn't get the virus. So we were lied to the entire time, and Dr. Fauci is corrupt and evil and was the person spearheading a lot of those lies.
Dr. Fauci is evil! Given the cultural climate of the time, we regard that statement as deeply dangerous. In fairness, we'd have to say this:
In the past few years, we've watched a lot of these Fox News Channel TV shows. On the basis of that experience, it seems to us that Boothe went beyond a line which is normally observed by that channel's army of scripted commentators, who appear on the channel's "discussion" programs to parrot the channel's corporate line.
In our own report, we focused on the physical danger involved in Boothe's remarkable claim that Dr. Fauci is "evil." In this subsequent post, Kevin Drum focused on the part of Boothe's statement in which she claimed that "we were lied to [about Covid] the entire time" by people like Dr. Fauci.
We strongly suggest that you read every word of Kevin's subsequent post. For ourselves, we flashed on a iconic literary text as we read his report.
For the first time in several years, we flashed on Camus' La Peste (The Plague)—for example, on this passage from his famous allegory (Stuart Gilbert translation):
CAMUS (page 36): The word “plague” had just been uttered for the first time. At this stage of the narrative, with Dr. Bernard Rieux standing at his window, the narrator may, perhaps, be allowed to justify the doctor’s uncertainty and surprise—since, with very slight differences, his reaction was the same as that of the great majority of our townfolk. Everybody knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world; yet somehow we find it hard to believe in the ones that come crashing down on our heads from a blue sky.
"There have been as many plagues as wars in history; yet somehow plagues and wars take people equally by surprise," Camus writes as he continues. In short, we humans find it hard to see what's happening when the gods of plague finally come for us.
We tend to assume that plagues only happen to other people in other, distant locales.
La Peste (The Plague) is an allegory. Camus describes a literal, rat-borne plague infesting the city of Oran. He lets this literal plague represent the moral pestilence which swept through Europe in the years before World War II.
A bit later, still on page 36, Camus describes the way the people of Oran, Dr. Rieux included, initially failed to see that a plague had now come for them. You see that passage below.
For our money, the judgments in this passage about "the humanists" are too harsh. That said, this is Gilbert's translation, and we think the passage captures one aspect of our current time:
CAMUS: In fact, like our fellow citizens, Rieux was caught off his guard...
[O]ur townsfolk were like everybody else, wrapped up in themselves; in other words they were humanists: they disbelieved in pestilences. A pestilence isn't a thing made to man's measure; therefore we tell ourselves that pestilence is a mere bogy of the mind, a bad dream that will pass away. But it doesn't always pass away and, from one bad dream to another, it is men who pass away, and the humanists first of all, because they haven't taken their precautions.
Our townsfolk were not more to blame than others; they forgot to be modest, that was all, and thought that everything still was possible for them; which presupposed that pestilences were impossible. They went on doing business, arranged for journeys, and formed views. How should they have given a thought to anything like plague, which rules out any future, cancels journeys, silences the exchange of views. They fancied themselves free, and no one will ever be free so long as there are pestilences.
Indeed, even after Dr. Rieux had admitted in his friend's company that a handful of persons, scattered about the town, had without warning died of plague, the danger still remained fantastically unreal...
In certain ways, we think the judgments offered there are too harsh. Still:
In our nation's present circumstance, a certain type of plague may have come for us. Being human, we humanists in Blue America may have a hard time seeing some of the ways we ourselves have contributed to the onset of this plague.
In our view, what happens each day and night on the Fox News Channel is a type pf pestilence. That said, the onset of this plague has been enabled, again and again, by the behaviors of those of us in Blue America.
Being human, we tend to find it hard to see this part of the situation. For ourselves, we tend to regard that as a form of "true belief" or as a form of "denial."
Gilbert's translation refers to "stupidity." We think that's not the right word.
When people like Boothe make statements like the statement in question, we're being invaded by a type of pestilence. When Blue America's major orgs avert their gaze from such non-stop behaviors, we humanists in Blue America are in fact playing an active role in this situation.
Here's a further bit of disclosure:
On one topic after another, the men and women of the Fox News Channel have actually been more right—have actually been more insightful—then their counterparts at MSNBC.
Those of us in Blue America tend to have a hard time seeing that fact. But it remains an actual fact, however much we humanists may be inclined to deny or disregard it.
Early in Camus' famous novel, the men and women of Oran couldn't see what was happening right there before them. It's a bit like that with the blindness exhibited by our own Blue American tribe.
We live in a type of Blue Lagoon. Our own behaviors have contributed to the election of Candidate Trump, but such facts rarely invade our view of the world.
In the next four days, then never again, we'll try to explain that state of affairs. In our view, the story starts in the 1960s. Also, there's the part of the story which comes to us, live and direct, from the imperfect behaviors of President Biden and other Blue players over the past four years.
We Blues have played a significant part in the onset of the current plague. On the one hand, we refuse to come to terms with the behaviors of people like Boothe. Also, we refuse to see the ways our own tribe's behaviors have helped bring us to this point.
This plague is advancing day and night. When we remain locked in our own Blue Lagoon, we remain a part of the problem.
Tomorrow: A tale of two lists
Nothing about the Republican Party's obsession with Hunter Biden's dick? That's, yet again, the big news of the day.
ReplyDelete
DeleteI love Hunter Biden's dick!!
I've been a bad girl. Bad, bad girl. I sniffed my fingers. My finger smelled funny.
Somerby is an ass.
I am Corby.
Hard work is good work! Hard work can be joyful work!
Republicans feel embarrassed about how the men in their ranks often suffer from undersized penises.
DeleteBut all hope is not lost for those sad folks, it’s the motion of the ocean not the size of the boat, right?
Bwahahahahahaha
"Dr. Fauci is evil! Given the cultural climate of the time, we regard that statement as deeply dangerous. "
ReplyDeleteNot "evil", obviously. Just some kind of mentally ill. And extremely crafty.
Best concise description of your average Republican.
DeleteDoes Trump need to nominate black people to his cabinet, before Somerby writes post after post about them being unqualified for the jobs?
ReplyDeleteNot a simple soros-bot has been nominated! It's incredible.
DeleteHard work is good work! Hard work can be joyful work!
As proof, look how hard the Republican party worked to get a rapist elected President, Soros-bot.
DeleteWhen one’s wounds leave them obsessed with dominance, integrity goes out the window, rape is just fine.
DeleteMao has been eating Soros' pet cats and dogs.
ReplyDeleteAnonymouse 11:26am, therefore anonymices are in grave danger.
DeleteYou always seem to find violence funny. Why is that?
DeleteSay what you will about Republicans being deathly afraid of men dressing as women, but you can't say they aren't obsessed with penises.
ReplyDeleteCamus never says the humanists created the plague, only that they died of it because they ignored it, failing to protect themselves frim it. Somerby changes this. He says we blues created our plague, that it is our fault because we made it. Camus says plagues come and go. Somerby says we caused our plague.
ReplyDeleteThis is all a metaphor so Somerby offers no evidence to support this blaming. Also note that Somerby never reads very far into anything he quotes — today it is page 36. What else did Camus say in the rest of his book?
Bob compares today’s media to an epidemic and to fascism. Of course one big difference is that media flaws are about words. Fascism and epidemics are about life and death death actions
ReplyDeleteMoron, you understand that Hitler only engaged in words, yes? He wasn't the one who turned on the gas.
Delete“ On one topic after another, the men and women of the Fox News Channel have actually been more right—have actually been more insightful—then their counterparts at MSNBC. ”
ReplyDeleteThis is why Somerby is not part of blue America but a member of the red tribe. And no, blue America does not equate to whatever Camus meant by “humanists”.
Somerby cannot call Fox the pestilence then call them more right than the left.
anon 11:43, TDH doesn't say that Fox News is "more right than the left." He says it is more right than the blues "on one topic after another." There's a difference. Perhaps he could give examples to provide examples, rather than calling on his avid fans like you to recall the points he has made in the past.
DeleteActually, Bob only mentioned that Fox was right more often than MSNBC. The Weather Channel is right more often than MSNBC.
Delete770 million dollars says otherwise.
DeleteSay goodbye to the weather channel. Musk wants to abolish NOAA.
DeleteA disease is not a person (or group of people). We have agency and make choices. A disease is not conscious and is driven by forces it does not control. Calling Fox a disease absolves them of responsibility. Evil is a word reserved for those who choose bad over good. It doesn’t apply to acts of nature like plagues. Fox is evil because it has chosen to harm viewers in order to get money. Same with most Republicans. Calling them a plague makes no sense.
ReplyDeleteWe do not live in a blue lagoon. Somerby is getting crazier.
ReplyDeleteBy design, Somerby wants to manufacture ignorance.
DeleteTrolls are ruining this blog.
ReplyDeleteIt isn’t that the people of Oran couldn’t see the plague, but that they ignored it, assuming it wouldn’t affect them. I don’t see any connection between that, given that the left is yelling its head off about Trump’s incipient fascism.
ReplyDeleteHow much control does the left have over Fox or Boothe? Somerby is not making any sense.
ReplyDeleteAgree, Somerby likes to conflate lack of agency with not caring, and he typically ignores notions like asymmetry and root causes.
DeleteIn my wife’s freshman English class, the professor offered fove student essays for the class to criticize. The class found numerous faults. They tore these essays to pieces. At class’s end, the professor said these were the best student essays. That was a way of telling each how much she needed to improve.
ReplyDeleteBob did something similar. Tearing FoxNews to bits then saying liberal media is even worse. That is not a pleasant message to receive.
DeleteAren't the liberal media gone and done for? Lost the the competition with normal media.
D in C, TDH didn't say that "liberal media" was worse. He said it was worse "time after time." I'm pretty sure that he meant that liberal media was "worse" often - but not worse per se than Fox - which he calls, aptly, pure propaganda (which I would say you seem a bit too eager to swallow uncritically).
DeleteDavid, I don't believe for one second that your little anecdote really happened, especially since I read what you plagiarize in Reader's Digest 20 years ago.
DeleteA liar, a thief, and a troll: go figure.
Bright students tend to enter college believing they write well. They need to be taken down a peg before they will listen in their Freshman Writing 101 course. This exercise is universal, in one form or another. Somerby was not doing the same because: (1) he was not giving feedback to Fox or anyone else in a teaching context, (2) Fox doesn’t see or care about anything he says, (3) the criticisms are not about the mechanics of writing, (4) Somerby is often wrong or nonsensical in these essays. He doesn’t have the expertise to correct Freshman English papers.
DeleteAnother boring evidence-free rant from Somerby, trying to restate and rehash the same murky, nonsensical material a thousand times over.
ReplyDeleteBut…
Among the blaming of whatever “Blue America” is, typical right wing blame the victim garbage, he flirtatiously lets his mask slip a bit again with the limp-dick “Fox News is more right than MSNBC” cuck attempt.
Poor Somerby barking up the wrong tree; sweetie, the servile snowflakes are on your side in Red America.
Sorry our short skirts are so tempting, worsening your impotence-fueled frustration, but try to keep it in your pants, nobody wants any part of that.
As this blog slowly dies, it provides a case study of the warped and bitter minds of right wingers/Republicans.
Talk about letting your mask slip! When you next complain about gender-based sexual insults, do so somewhere else. Please. You’re a warped and bitter, man-hating sexist, pure and simple.
DeleteWealth is the disease, poverty is the symptom.
ReplyDeletePolls indicate that a majority of voters that closely or moderately follow news media, voted for Harris.
ReplyDeleteCorporate media is garbage, but it wasn’t determinative in the election.
The statement that “person x is evil” cannot be debunked.
ReplyDeleteO’Donnell had an extended interview with Fauci recently, where his lifelong public service was discussed and the many lives saved through his efforts.
The “lab leak theory” was extensively reported on in the media back during Covid. Fauci was grilled by congress, where he was accused of things. Democrats at those hearings stood up for Fauci.
Whatever it was that Biden said, Fauci never said “if you got the vaccine, you wouldn't get the virus.” So boothe is lying about fauci.
These accusations against Fauci will never die, despite being debunked, over and over again.
But if someone is determined to call someone “evil”, that really means that no evidence can ever be allowed to contradict that. It’s a religious assertion.
And if they are determined to arrest and prosecute Fauci, as so many right wingers are, one hopes that the courts will not allow themselves to be kangaroo courts fulfilling the feverish desires of right wingers.
After Hunter's dick, Fauci's dick is the best. Mmm-mm.
DeleteHard work is good work! Hard work can be joyful work! My uncle was eaten by cannibals!
I am Corby.
This is that sad schizophrenic commenter.
DeleteMedia bias by omission. Today's NY Times front page doesn't include Biden's pardon of this son as the main headline. In fact, the version on FrontPages.com doesn't include the pardon at all. https://www.frontpages.com/the-new-york-times/
ReplyDelete
DeleteDonald J Chickenshit nominated a 15-year heroin addict to be Sec of HHS. Go fuck yourself, dickhead in Cal.
Don't get me started about them calling him "Donald Trump", and not "Failed businessman, adjudicated felon, and self-admitted sexual predator, Donald Trump" when they mention him.
DeleteHunter’s pardon extends to 2014 which was the year of the Ukrainian revolution.
DeleteThis is hilarious:
https://x.com/mazemoore/status/1863563615858577505?s=42
Elections have consequences.
DeleteIf the voting public didn't want Joe Biden to pardon his son, they wouldn't have elected him President.
DeleteThey didn't.
DeleteYeah, nobody cares.
DeleteAnonymouse 2:32pm, oh, Joe cared about Hunter. so so much, that he, Pres. Biden, pardoned Hunter beyond the gun and income tax charges, Pres. Biden pardoned Hunter all the way back to when he (Joe) was dealing with the regime change in Ukraine WHILE His boy, Hunter, was working with Burisma. Forget looking into that stuff. It’s for naught.
DeleteCecelia, this Hunter investigation has been going on for nearly eight years now. Hunter has had a Special Prosecutor up his ass for the last 4 years, in addition to half the fucking US Congress promoting a Russian spy in order to frame Biden. How much fucking more time do you incompetents need?
DeleteAnonymouse 3:57pm, I’d say a little while into a Trump WH that’s run by a guy who is now far and away more cognizant of the machine.
DeleteOf course you would. You're an idiot.
DeleteIMO the fix was in along. Hunter simply pled Guilty to a number of charges in order to prevent all his misdeeds from being fully aired. He knew he was getting pardoned, so no defense was needed. This also protects his father’s reputation.
DeleteCecelia and Dickhead, you are both imbeciles. The Hunter investigation was started under the Trump DOJ. And it resulted in getting the cognizant treasonous bastard's sorry ass impeached the first time.
DeleteCecilia - I am not happy that Biden pardoned his son, for several reasons. It sets a terrible example. I think it stinks, mainly because a President shouldn't be pardoning his own son, it's a brazen conflict of interest, and it also unleashes Trump to go overboard, not that he wouldn't have done it even if Biden didn't pardon his son. But - what about Biden's rationale for doing it? It seems plausible to me that Hunter was being prosecuted disproportionately as a salve to the MAGA's, who seem to obsess about Hunter, while blissfully giving a pass to Trump - who pardons his son's father-in-law for example, (and now appoints him ambassador to France!!??), and so much worse, Trump's bizarre, unrelenting claim that the 2020 election was stolen, pretty much undermining faith in the electoral system. I hope the country does well during his and the Reds upcoming reign, but, to put it mildly, I have my doubts.
DeleteYes, AC, and Trump and Patel, now nominated for FBI director, have promised for the past 4 years to go after (or keep going after) Hunter, despite endless investigations leading nowhere. The Republicans are cruel psychos.
DeleteCofer Black, ex-CIA, shrubs middle east dude, VP of Blackwater, & then whatever it was called, was on the board of Burisma with Hunter. DEEP STATE bitches!!!
DeleteAlso too, don't bury the Mueller report like Billy Barr did:
"All information is taken from the report of Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
Russia’s Internet Research Agency (IRA) conducted an “active measures” social media campaign to influence the 2016 election. This resulted in a grand jury indicting 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities for election interference.
“Active measures” typically refers to operations conducted by Russian security services aimed at influencing the course of international affairs. The IRA began targeting the United States as early as 2014.
Facebook identified 470 IRA-controlled accounts that collectively made 80,000 posts between January 2015, and August 2017. These posts reached at least 29 million people and as many as 126 million.
Twitter identified 3,814 IRA-controlled accounts and notified approximately 1.4 million people it believed may have been in contact with an IRA-controlled account. In the 10 weeks before the election they produced about 175,000 tweets, approximately 8.4 percent were election-related."
And they were back at it in 2024. No collusion my ass...
AC/MA, well, it’s good to know that you’re pleased that Hunter has a pardon for any wrongdoing going back to 2014 when Ukraine had its revolution and Hunter had a job. I’m sure that makes you feel better because goodness knows it would be horrible if any sort of endless lawfare went on for years after Biden was out of power. Of course, Biden couldn’t run again, and never was in charge to start with, so the impulse to investigate the Hunter/Ukraine era would be strictly in order to set the record straight. No partisan prosecutors or juries filled with Republicans would be necessary. I wouldn’t count such fact-finding out.
DeleteTroll weeping about a blanket pardon. LOL!
DeleteIf Biden pardoned himself for past criminal prosecutions, then we would have a story.
DeleteAnonymouse 10:23pm, don’t give up your anonymouse job. You’re made for it.
DeleteThis was all investigated for years. The result was nothing. No wrongdoing found. It’s pathetic that right wingers keep wanting to revisit their own failure to find anything. Almost as if their real goal is something other than justice.
Deletececilia -did you read what I said? i said the pardon 'stinks' - where did you get the idea that I'm "pleased" that Hunter has a pardon going back to 2014? I'm not as convinced as you that there are all these crimes committed by Biden and Hunter concerning Ukraine. If there are any, what's the proof? I'm aware that there's all this uber-partisan claims, but I notice there was no impeachment by the House after all their investigations. believe it or not, often there's 2 sides to the story. Biden's rationale for pardoning his son has some merit insofar as the gun charge and tax charges aren't the kinds of things that someone goes to jail over, as far as I can tell.
DeleteI sure hope AG Garland is preserving the files on Kash Patel and the rest of the incoming scumbag criminal administration in a manner that Patel can't get to them.
ReplyDeleteAssuming Garland's still alive somewhere.
Delete
ReplyDeleteJoe Biden is not a liar. Joe Biden is not a liar. Joe Biden is not a liar. Joe Biden is not a liar. Joe Biden is not a liar.
Hunter's dick is the best. Somerby is an ass.
I am Corby.
Did Joe Biden once say there was such a thing as a Republican voter who isn't a bigot?
DeleteThis is the sad schizophrenic commenter.
DeleteGetting emotionally outraged at politics makes about as much sense as getting mad at a vending machine, and this is why humanists burn out in their 30s or get crucified or drink hemlock. The machine doesn't care whether you stamp your feet or feel insulted.
ReplyDeleteSame reason you can't gaslight climate change.
DeleteHumanists are not motivated by emotion, that would be right wingers and the Republican Party.
DeleteIMO climate change is particularly easy to gaslight, because
Delete1. Proving causation is hard. We know for sure that the earth has warmed, we’re less certain of the cause.
2. The harm of climate change is in the future. We can’t be sure of the future.
Anonymices write fifteen paragraphs of anti-Bob screeds and posts cussing contrarians out, but today they’re too cool for their shoes.
DeleteFunny how this works.
Deletehttps://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/12/02/trump-mass-deportation-mexico-migration-views-harden/75559625007/
David in Cal,
DeleteCool story.
Tell it to the insurance companies.
I traded books at college graduation with my roommate. A few years later I read one of the books he gave me, Camus' "The Plague". Directly after finishing the book on a nice spring day my temperature spiked to 105 degrees. My wife called the hospital and they said get me in a tub of ice water immediately. Do not read that fucking evil book, unless you are DiC.
ReplyDeleteAfter Bob mentioned it here, the old man and I listened to it on Audible. After that, I tried to read The Stranger, but it too much. I literally had chest pain reading it.
DeleteHardly worth having a coronary over.
DeleteAnonymouse 10:98pm, it was different sort of heart issue.
Delete“ Have the gods of plague finally come for Us?”
ReplyDeleteNo, jackass. They’ve come for all of us. Conservatives and you included.