DESPERATELY SEEKING THE BEST: Does she believe that we're the best people?

FRIDAY, JULY 18, 2025

A delusion we can't seem to quit: President Trump is back in the news this morning.

Rather, he was back in the news last night. Hope sprang eternal on Blue America's cable news shows in the wake of the latest report. 

The report had come from the Wall Street Journal. Headline included, it starts out like this:

Jeffrey Epstein’s Friends Sent Him Bawdy Letters for a 50th Birthday Album. One Was From Donald Trump.

It was Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday, and Ghislaine Maxwell was preparing a special gift to mark the occasion. She turned to Epstein’s family and friends. One of them was Donald Trump.

Maxwell collected letters from Trump and dozens of Epstein’s other associates for a 2003 birthday album, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. 

Pages from the leather-bound album—assembled before Epstein was first arrested in 2006—are among the documents examined by Justice Department officials who investigated Epstein and Maxwell years ago, according to people who have reviewed the pages. It’s unclear if any of the pages are part of the Trump administration’s recent review.

[...]

The letter bearing Trump’s name, which was reviewed by the Journal, is bawdy—like others in the album. It contains several lines of typewritten text framed by the outline of a naked woman, which appears to be hand-drawn with a heavy marker. A pair of small arcs denotes the woman’s breasts, and the future president’s signature is a squiggly “Donald” below her waist, mimicking pubic hair.

The letter concludes: “Happy Birthday—and may every day be another wonderful secret.”

To what "wonderful secret" did the letter allude? We can imagine several possibilities, but at present that's an unknown.

The bawdy letter from the future president was a classic example of "boys being [a bit prehuman]." This throwback sexual sensibility is sprawled all over the Fox News Channel every afternoon and everyone with the ladies of the Fox News Channel playing their role in the game.

Last night, Blue American cable news channels were thrilled by the Journal's report. As of this morning, MSNBC and CNN had scaled back the amount of emphasis.

Left to the side, as it constantly is, was a basic political question:

How did we ever manage to lose to this guy in the first place?

How did we lose to President Trump? As we watched Nicolle Wallace (a major cable news journalist) speak with Jason Bateman (a well-known Hollywood actor), we were struck by the following point:

They seem to have no idea. They don't seem to have the first clue.

Let's review! Bateman strikes us as a thoroughly good, decent person. To our eye and ear, he's quite articulate and he's surprisingly sharp.

We find it harder to heap praise on Wallace, but that's only because we think her political judgment has been so poor in recent years. And no one has perfect political judgment, except perhaps for us. 

How did we ever lose to President Trump? Let's start with a basic fact:

Especially under the circumstances, we didn't lose by much. Under the circumstances, it's amazing to see how narrow the president's victory margin was. 

Last November, Candidate Trump managed to win by less than 1.5 points, in a year when he should have won by a lot. He managed to win by that narrow margin in a year when his apparent opponent melted down in a June debate and had to withdraw from the race in mid-July!

He was then replaced, in clumsy fashion, by a substitute candidate who was never "presidential timber" to begin with. (We don't mean that as an insult. Almost no one ever is, including President Biden.)

Handed that remarkable state of affairs, the current president managed to squeak out a remarkably slender win. That suggests how weak a candidate he too actually was:

Still, those of us in Blue American managed to lose to that guy!

How in the world did we manage to do that? Nicolle Wallace has no idea. Neither does Bateman, a thoroughly good and decent person who isn't a political analyst.

How do we know they have no idea? Because of the things they said during their recent colloquy on Wallace's new podcast. 

The podcast has a remarkably ill-advised name: The Best People with Nicolle Wallace. Setting that name to the side for now, has a less insightful political discussion ever taken place on this earth?

Wallace is a major cable news journalist. As noted, Bateman isn't.  That said, what sorts of things did they say during their hour-long discussion? We'll start with this stunning incomprehension on display in this portrait of the state of play involving this nation's Trump voters:

WALLACE (6/3/25): I think politics is like Nordstrom, right? Like the customer’s always right. 

I worked at Nordstrom one year in college and like people would return things, they were like eleven years old and stained? And I remember going to like a manager, I’m like, "You’re going to take that skirt back?" and they’re like, "Yes, we take back any—" Like, so the voter’s always right.

But I think that to the degree that voters were saying something about Biden’s age, or about inflation, or about the democracy, you know, instead of trying to change what they were saying, I think people are too slow to not listen to it.

But I do think it’s still true that people face-to-face don’t hate each other as much as people do online. And so, I feel like to the degree that I think we could be okay, I still think it’s like going and getting in front of people. Like, I still think the resurgence of like— Like, if this were political—this is retail politics, right? It is two people talking to each other and listening to each other.

I think that’s what politics has to go back to. And then I think—

What in the world was she talking about? We'll admit we aren't real sure—but whatever the answer might turn out to be, that goulash led on to this:

BATEMAN (continuing directly): Well, the thing—

WALLACE: Right?

BATEMAN: But that presupposes that they have access to a speaker from which a bunch of facts are coming. So, what do you do about that, you know, your point about the customer is always right? 

Well, they’re making their "right" decision on facts that might not be facts. And so, what do you do about that?

In other words, do you think Trump would have gotten the same number of votes if the people who voted for him had access, to or the curiosity to seek out and find, the truth? Because they’re not getting the truth over on Fox? The $780-some million lawsuit is proof of it.

And that was just one issue. So, what do you do about that? 

It's true! Voters aren't getting "the truth" over on Fox a large amount of the time. And that is a major problem within our failing discourse.

One other problem is this: 

As is clear elsewhere in this colloquy, Bateman believes that voters are getting "the truth" when they watch MSNBC. You'll see that assumption emerge below. For now, Bateman's question led to this astounding reply from Wallace:

WALLACE (continuing directly): You’re so good. I can’t believe you’re asking me a question. I wanted to ask, so this is my thing.

BATEMAN: Yeah.

WALLACE: This is the thing that keeps me up at night. I think the truth has to be the next moonshot. And I think that all the smartest people in the world, maybe all the fired scientists, have to figure out how to make the truth the thing that’s sticky, the thing that goes viral, like the truth has to be the thing that people are sending around and they’re like, you know, look at this when no one’s watching, this is the truth about Trump or this is the truth about—

BATEMAN: But who’s the arbiter of what is true? I’ve always fantasized that, you know, that little grade that’s on the front of restaurants? You know, A, B, C or whatever?

WALLACE: Yeah! 

BATEMAN: Like, it’ll be great if media was forced to have that little bug in the bottom right corner of— You know, just like on MSNBC. During the day, it’s news reporting and it’s facts. And at night, it's opinion!

WALLACE: Yeah.

BATEMAN: And like, that should have—it’s a separate letter. no better, no worse—just identifies that. And therefore, you can intellectualize the thing that you’re talking about, opine on, whatever it is. But the same burden is not placed on that reporter in front. And then on Fox, they can go and freestyle if they want. And on MSNBC, you can freestyle if you want.

I happen to think—I'm a huge fan—but I happen to think that MSNBC doesn’t drift from the truth. They just have this immense amount of really interesting, solid facts to talk about. And so, they don’t have to freestyle and embellish...

With apologies, that has to be one of the most clueless exchanges we've ever seen or heard. And remember:

Bateman isn't a professional journalist—but the host of this podcast has been a highly influential journalist in recent years. She's been a major star of Blue America's journalistic firmament down through these politically disastrous years. 

In Wallace's view, "all the smartest people in the world" have to figure out how to turn "the truth" into "the thing that goes viral."  That's an astoundingly underfed view of the way any such discourse could ever conceivably work. But this is the person the corporate bosses at MSNBC chose as the person to lead us. 

To Bateman's credit, he almost seems to see the basic problem here. To his credit, he almost seem to understand a basic point:

In the vast array of matters under discussion, it isn't easy to come up with some perfect version of "the truth."

He seems to know there's a problem there. But he's soon imagining a system in which someone gives each channel a rating—a sticker the channel can put on display to show their viewers that that they are telling the truth. 

Stating the obvious, that picture of a possible world comes from the distant far side of Neptune. The journalist in this discussion shows no sign of being aware of any such obvious fact.

"Who’s the arbiter of what is true?" It's an excellent, ancient question! Sadly, though, Bateman's question quickly led to this:

He seems to think that what he sees on MSNBC really is "true," full stop. For that reason, he says that MSNBC, unlike Fox, doesn't have to embellish.

Those of us in Blue America have been hearing "the truth!" This leads Bateman, a good, decent person, to become a voice for Blue America's long-standing cultural libel:

BATEMAN (continuing directly): Talking about Pete Buttigieg, he’s been on Fox a bunch of times and is somehow, you know, reaching that audience. I asked him why he’s the only one that’s really been on there, and are the politicians not being invited on because Fox is afraid of what they’re going to say, or the politicians not want to be on because they don’t want to take the heat, do you know?

[...]

WALLACE: I love Pete, I love everything that he’s doing. And I think that that's—not only is that like the right model, I think it’s the only model. Like, you cannot leave out half of the country and, you know, you don’t need to win everybody, but you have to win over some of those folks.

BATEMAN: Yeah, but the truth-tellers or whatever book all the facts sit in from day to day, is not—there is no attempt to hide that from Republican voters.

WALLACE: Yeah.

BATEMAN: It’s ubiquitous.

WALLACE: I know.

BATEMAN: You have to make a real effort to stay insulated from the facts—

WALLACE: I know.

BATEMAN: —and common sense.

WALLACE: I know.

BATEMAN: It’s everywhere except on Fox or Breitbart.

WALLACE: It’s insane. It’s insane.

As part of the exchange, Wallace says that a political party can't leave out half the country.

As a journalist, no one has wholly ignored "half the country" any more than Wallace has! But by the end of this exchange, Bateman has slid all the way down to the ultimate libel:

We Blues are getting the truth on our cable channels. As for Republican voters, the truth is almost everywhere, but they're making no effort to attain it. 

"You have to make a real effort to stay insulated from the facts," Bateman says—and Trump voters are making that effort.

Sorry, Charlie! In fact, large elements of the truth were disappeared by people like Wallace all through the years leading up to last November's election. 

Were we Blues really getting "the truth" from our favorite corporate stars? Fellow Blue Americans, please!

On the channel which allegedly speaks the truth, we were told that the southern border was closed up tight as a drum, when it clownishly wasn't

We were told that President Biden was sharp as a tack, when he plainly wasn't. We were told that the cost of living was all in the electorate's heads, when it plainly wasn't.

People watching the Fox News Channel were, in fact, often receiving a clearer picture of those states of affairs than we were inside our Blue silos. And that's all before we get to the various things we Blues were told about an array of "culture war" topics—before we get to the various stances which came to be widely derided as "woke."

In our own view, the dumbest of all these ridiculous stances was the stance which went like this:

Before the people can know how to vote in 2024, they have to know if Candidate Trump had sex, on one occasion, ten years earlier, with a "porn star" who had now arrived on the scene, seeking a big bag of money.

That was one of the stances which emerged from our own millionaire corporate messengers. But from "Defund the police" on to questions involving transgender sports (and high school locker rooms), our Blue channels never warned us about the tortured logic which was moving voters over to (the highly unpopular) Trump.

Finally, there was Wallace's focus on the various legal actions designed to throw Trump into jail. Every hour she spent on the legal minutia involved in those complex cases was an hour she didn't spend talking about the everyday topics which were changing votes.

All in all, we Blues are afflicted with one major problem—with a problem we can't seem to quit. We've long believed that we liberals are "the best people," and that the others just aren't.

We believe that we're the smart ones! History traces this poisonous attitude all the way back to this story about one of Adlai Stevenson's losses to President Eisenhower:

Still Madly for Adlai

Like many of the best political stories, this one about Adlai Stevenson, the former two-time Democratic presidential nominee, is probably apocryphal. It was late in a long day on the campaign trail in 1956—or 1952, it varies with the telling—when a voice called out of the crowd: 

“Every thinking person in America will be voting for you!” 

“I’m afraid that won’t do,” Stevenson retorted. “I need a majority.”

So it's said that the candidate said. We convey that attitude a million ways, and everyone sees this but us.

The discussants were sure that we Blues were getting the truth from our cable news stars. They were sure that the Trump voters weren't.

In fact, the Fox News Channel is a nightmare—a cancer on the American discourse. That said, Fox viewers knew more than we Blue Americans did about the southern border, and about President Biden's apparent decline, and about several other major topics, than we admittedly brilliant Blue American voters did.

Inexplicably, Nicolle Wallace— good, decent person—named her podcast "The Best People." Almost surely, without necessarily thinking about it, she believes that she's a part of that group.

She believes that's who we are.

In part, we Blues put President Trump in power again by limping along with such thoughts. It's long been a part of the way we present ourselves to the world. We seem to harbor some desperate need to believe this about ourselves. 

Everyone can see this but us! Given the astonishing meltdown of our nation's presidential campaign, President Trump squeezed into the White House. 

Over here, we're left with a self-destructive delusion we Blues can't seem to quit. The border was closed up tight as a drum! Our candidate was sharp as a tack!

59 comments:


  1. Geez, Bob, did you type all those words yourself? Incredible. I checked, it's nearly 3000 words. Are you triggered or something? Nah, it's TDS of course.

    "Especially under the circumstances, we didn't lose by much."

    Well, in reality, if your remove all the fake votes, it's UGE. UGE.

    "She turned to Epstein’s family and friends. One of them was Donald Trump."

    Scraping the bottom of the barrel, eh? You know, Bob, pre-TDS you would be mocking this shit. Yeah. But that's pre-TDS you. Oh well.

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    1. Am I getting it? Somerby cloaks himself in a liberal persona as a guise to promote right-wing talking points because he has Trump Derangement Syndrome. I'm not sure I understand.

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    2. Enigmas never age.

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    3. Your Daddy is a serial rapist, including children, and you can't admit it. And I have TDS? Your a joke.

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    4. 'The fake votes.'

      Thank you ,12:11. That phrase by itself has sent my TDS levels soaring and I feel fantastic!

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  2. Trump denies that he wrote that letter and says he is suing the Wall St Journal.

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    1. What do you think, David? Did Trump write that letter?

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    2. Quaker in a BasementJuly 18, 2025 at 2:33 PM

      Trump's threatened lawsuit makes no sense at all. If this goes to trial, the story will be featured on every news outlet for the duration. Streisand Effect, you know?

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    3. @1:44 - I don't know whether Trump wrote the letter. This should be a non-story. After Trump's "Grab them by the pussy" comment, we knew how terribly crude Trump is.

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    4. What's so crude in "Happy Birthday—and may every day be another wonderful secret"?

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    5. Or, for that matter, in "when you're a star, they let you do it". Or is it the word "pussy" that you find "terribly crude"? Are you some kind of Quaker or Amish or something?

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    6. Personally I am a big fan of rich celebrities and politicians raping little girls.

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    7. So David in Cal thinks an ignorant old man grabbing attractive young women by their pussy without permission is crude, and really that is the same as RAPING A CHILD David??? Talk about a sick and twisted person.

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    8. 3:00 PM is an advocate for sexual assault. One sick puppy.

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    9. As I keep telling you all, Dickhead in Cal is amoral. Trump could rape a child in the middle of 5th Avenue in broad daylight, and Dickhead in Cal would still naked thru a Paris sewer to vote for him to be King.

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    10. Question, who is the rapist not suing?

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    11. "This should be a non-story. After Trump's "Grab them by the pussy" comment, we knew how terribly crude Trump is."

      DiC, you once again manage to focus on some trivial aspect of an accusation against Trump, rather than the main event.

      The potential significance of Trump's note is not how crude he is, it is that the word 'secret' could imply Trump is aware of Epstein's pedophilia.

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    12. Dickhead in Cal's only objective here is to deflect, divert and distract. That's it.

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    13. David -- your inability to see the forest for the trees is truly impressive. The "grab them by the pussy" comment was not connected to any specific incident. If it had been, it would have been criminal. This, on the other hand, connects Trump to a convicted sex offender and his misdeeds.
      Now, I will disagree with Hector: it was not pedophilia nor was Epstein convicted of molesting prepubescent girls.
      Again, we are talking about a criminal matter here, not just Trump being a general purpose asshole. Is it something truly new? I would say not exactly. It's just another dot connecting Trump closer to the degenerate person that Epstein was. It's just another brush stroke in painting a more accurate and, therefore, damning picture of Trump.
      If your point is: we all know that Trump is a sex predator, but we love him anyway...then so be it.

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    14. Epstein was convicted of sex trafficking, a term that applies to both adult women and teen girls (and children for that matter).

      Trump did more than imply that he and Epstein shared a taste for young women when he said explicitly:

      "Epstein likes to tell people that he's a loner, a man who's never touched alcohol or drugs, and one whose nightlife is far from energetic. And yet if you talk to Donald Trump, a different Epstein emerges. "I've known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy," Trump booms from a speakerphone. "He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it — Jeffrey enjoys his social life."

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    15. Ilya,

      I was using the term to apply to girls under the legal age of consent but in checking on it, it looks like you're right, it should only be applied when the victim is pre-pubescent.

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    16. The attempts of men who prey on children to redefine only molestation of toddlers as pedophilia is controversial. Teenage girls are too young to give consent to sex because they are insufficiently developed psychologically and cognitively to apply good judgment to sexual behavior. Pedophiles want to define their paraphilia based on what age the children are who they find sexually attractive, but that isn't the issue with men who molest teens. The issue is that girls can be manipulated into doing things they should not do because of their youth, such as running away with older men, engaging in damaging sex acts, getting pregnant or married too young, catching an STD, being "trained" to be submissive and lacking in self-esteem by being treated like shit by men who like dominance, and so on. None of those things are an issue with men abusing 6 year olds, for example, not that the younger children won't also have lingering trauma and psychological problems.

      Men who choose young teens tell themselves that they like how fresh and beautiful women are at that age, but they typically suffer from sexual inadequacy, difficulties relating to adult women, and worry that grown women will compare them to other men and find them lacking. A young woman may be sexually inexperienced which gives the man the chance to convince her that he is what all men are like.

      Trump has small hands. There are jokes about that being related to other inadequacies, but a man who engages in rape, assault and seduction of underage girls usually has some problem motivating that behavior. Anger is usually part of rape and it would arise in someone like Trump if he felt he were entitled to female attention by his money and looks, but could not convince women to take him seriously because of his personality or other problems. We can see now that Trump couldn't keep Melania involved with him despite the contents of their prenup.

      Epstein supplied wealthy but inadequate men with the fantasy that beautiful young women would find them irresistible. That obviously isn't what was going on with girls who were being coerced, but the men don't care. Caring would interfere with their fantasies about their own attractiveness and virility.

      So quibbling over whether what Trump/Epstein did was pedophilia or not is ridiculous. It was illegal and it involved underage girls who were unable to give consent, just as sex with a 6 year old would.

      A grown woman would look at Trump and say "not if you paid me" and walk away. A child would look at Trump and be impressed by his suit, be awed by a fancy dinner, feel special if he bought her a teddy bear or cell phone, and believe that him calling her a woman made her one. With Epstein's girls, all Trump would have to do is use a bit of flattery since Epstein was paying the expenses. Trump has lately been doing that with any woman who comes close enough to talk to him, such as during his press gaggles. That is a sign of his increasing dementia -- he has become the lecherous old man who doesn't know how to be socially appropriate in any context and if he feels sexy, he talks sexy to whoever is nearby. No one finds that charming.

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    17. Come to think of it, MAGA supporters and underage children have similar reactions to Trump's empty suit.

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  3. Somerby normalizing capitulating to Republicans dovetails nicely with Trump normalizing corruption.

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  4. Somerby's incoherent rambling of loony grievances aligns well with his right wing worldview.

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    1. "In fact, the Fox News Channel is a nightmare—a cancer on the American discourse."

      You say Somerby has a right wing worldview, but I've never met a conservative who told me that Fox News is a cancer on our discourse -- have you?

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    2. Yes, and there are many, there is an entire industry of Never Trump Republicans that criticize Fox News.

      Ironically, one of them is Nicole Wallace!

      Not knowing what "right" and "left" means is not shameful, just means you have an opportunity to learn.

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    3. I see. Somerby is Never Trumper who has been aTrump shill since 2015.

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    4. DG: you're casting pearl before swine. Somerby's criticism of the media and their narratives got straight past them. Yes, Bob has criticized and continues to criticize liberal icons of MSNBC. So did Jon Stewart -- and rightfully so.

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    5. Now criticize Jon Stewart.

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    6. Somerby isn't making much sense today. You may have some difficulty defending him, DG.

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  5. Trump has wonderful secrets, unfortunately that's an enigma that will not age well.

    womp womp

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  6. I don't think Trump wrote that letter.

    I also think the holocaust was a hoax.

    I have special insights ever since I was abducted by an alien/UFO.

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    1. Not just the Holocaust. That whole “Second World War” was a hoax.

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    2. This planet is fake.

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    3. Trump likes little girls poking in his sphincter.

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    4. The planet is flat. Trump rapes little girls.

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    5. The Earth is not a planet. The sun goes around it once a day.

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  7. Somerby: hey y'all, y'all don't mind if I keep repeating the same insipid post again and again, to really drive home my right wing agenda?

    Everyone else: shhhhhhhh we are napping!

    Somerby: Ah ok, so it should be fine to air my grievances tinged with racism, sexism, and xenophobia. Woot woot, I feel so free, finally able to say things that are not pc/woke, love that freedom!

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    1. The funny thing is that Somerby tells us that progressives calling everybody racist, sexist, and xenophobic has backfired politically, yet you never see the irony.

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    2. What is an insipid post?

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    3. DG, progressives don't call "everybody" racist, sexist and xenophobic -- we call the racists and the sexists and the xenophobes what they are, in order to make clear that they are misbehaving and need to change their behavior. No one thinks they should like it. We think they should be nicer to the folks they hate, because society cannot tolerate their bigotry.

      If you find irony in Somerby's misconceptions that may be because you don't understand what progressives are saying.

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    4. I’m not racist, I’m not sexist, but I am xenophobic. So sue me.

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    5. Are you going to vote for an asshole who will destroy the economy just because he might deport a few of the people you hate?

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  8. MSNBC and Fox are not presenting genuine political discussions. They're not presenting rational political deliberations based in truth. They are politics as entertainment. As entertainment products they are forced to distort complex political issues in order to achieve their prime objective which is to entertain an audience, keep them engaged and emotionally invested on the side of the protagonist. MSNBC has its “truth,” and Fox has theirs, not based on competing facts but on competing narratives sold to different customer segments. The "truth" is just a prop used in each of their shows. It's just part of the script. It's part of the performance. There's nothing practical or rational about what they do. It's completely based on emotional manipulation of an audience. This leads to the disconnects the Blue segment may have about the border and Biden's public deterioration etc.that Somerby speaks of. The imperatives of entertainment outweigh practical political imperatives and the real truth. There's no business like show business but entertainment demands simplicity whereas the truth is complex. Enjoy your popcorn kids. What you're watching has nothing to do with reality. It's as real as Mickey Mouse.

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    1. "competing narratives sold to different customer segments"

      That's not what I see out there. What I see is this: the "Blue segment" is entirely consumed by their hatred, and the "MAGA" segment makes fun of them idiots. End of story.

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    2. Trump rapes defenseless little girls. End of story.

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    3. That really should be ground for impeachment, in my opinion.

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    4. Are you ready for President JD Vance?

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    5. He isn’t Trump.

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  9. Hey, need a hand here.

    Does anyone know how Trump is certain that Bolsonaro is innocent? Like, did Trump send his investigators to Brazil and they found a lot of 'unbelievable' things? (te-hee)

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    1. More to the point, could a single fucking white house reporter remind the corrupt treasonous criminal bastard that the Court ruled unanimously that he doesn't have the fucking right to unilaterally impose fucking tariffs willy nilly. What the actual fuck is going on here?

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    2. Anon@4:55 -- Yes! That! Tariffs are nothing but an instrument of corruption for Trump. Maybe if Brazil buys his meme coins he will relent.

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    3. Trump doesn't care whether Bolsonaro is innocent or not. He pardons all kinds of criminals. Same with Netanyahu.

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    4. Y'all are fags.

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  10. "How did we ever manage to lose to this guy in the first place?"

    The answer to this question is easy. Trump is a conman and a criminal. He has some charisma and can be charming (at least 10 years ago this was true) so people believe him, but Trump has no scruples about lying, cheating, stealing, and manipulating people. Most people follow the rules in society because they care about social inclusion and whether other people like and respect them. Trump does not care about any of that, so he does whatever will get him to his goals, without any restraint about how he accomplishes things.

    Look at the way he got that soccer trophy. FIFA commissioned a gold version that cost $250K and showed it to Trump in the oval office. Trump said, this is staying here. The FIFA guys said OK and gave the players a cheap replica. That was, of course, a bribe to Trump, but this is how Trump gets what he wants. He takes it, he demands it, he punishes those who obstruct and he doesn't care about repercussions.

    Some number of Trump supporters admire that kind of behavior and want to emulate it. Others mistake Trump for a normal human being and take what he says at face value. Some think they can ride Trump's coattails to their own success. Some find Trump a hoot (Musk at first?).

    You can ask what kind of man would have sex with underage girls on Epstein's plane and not care about the girls themselves or the illegality of the parties. If that is despicable behavior, so is raping the country for one's own profit and not caring what happens to the people who live here, the victims of Trump's greed and incompetence.

    Good decent people can perhaps not conceptualize how much Trump lies and how fake everything about him is. Those of us who recognized Trump for what he is back in 2015 were not believed when we said things to the news. Hillary told people about Trump's collusion with Russia and was regarded as self-serving and trying to smear Trump, so she back off on her claims. The press and the DOJ would not follow through on the evidence because they did not want to be regarded as partisan. And then we had the Republicans who refused to impeach Trump when his crimes were obvious during his first term. I believe their self-interest clouded their judgment.

    So, then Somerby has the nerve to treat this like some difficulty recognizing truth or being inclusive of all voters because Hillary did not include Republicans among her party supporters. No party ever includes all of the people because people pick the party they share an affinity with. Somerby's demand that Republicans be catered to by Democrats is nonsense and there is certainly no reciprocity when Republicans are calling Democrats literal demons.

    We lost to Trump because Trump cheated. End of story. If Somerby wants to treat Trump as a legitimate politician, it is Somerby who is being untruthful, living in a delusion, failing to recognize reality.

    Somerby likes to pretend that this is a special time in history where it is especially hard to recognize truth (because of too much internet democracy). We know more truth in this time period than at any period in the past, largely because of scientific method, advances in science and technology, ways of recording and testing evidence in trials and research, advances in historical methods that tell us what happened in the past, and yes, because of communications and information processing. It is debatable whether there is more lying now but there definitely less misinformation and more understanding of human behavior, how people learn, psychological and cognitive functioning, and things we depend on such as agriculture, technology, weather, transportation and so on. All of that stuff places us closer to knowing more truth than ever before in human history. But Somerby is hysterical and claims knowledge is impossible and society is chaos.

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    1. Cont.

      Our systems failed us when we the people failed to indict, try and convict Trump for his crimes. My hope is that we will learn from that and institute some procedures to prevent con artists from grifting off the public in the future.

      But Somerby is essentially asking "how did that thief break into our house and steal our valuable stuff?" The answer is that a home is never Fort Knox, trust is required for society to function, but some people are thieves and thieves are gonna steal. And no, it isn't our fault for owning good stuff, nor should we have to sit at our windows with a shotgun all day to prevent such thievery. But we damned well better catch the thieves and throw them in jail so that other miscreants can learn a lesson from their mistakes. Trump is a thief. So are the people he has surrounded himself with. We need to clean house.

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  11. "We convey that attitude a million ways, and everyone sees this but us."

    Every person who is more intelligent than the norm gets used to being called names and bullied for it. That is depicted in the opening scene of the film Broadcast News. Somerby today engages in that same kind of bullying.

    When smart people are just being themselves, they get accused of putting on airs by using big words (which are generally their normal speaking vocabulary). When they talk about an interest, they get accused of trying to impress others by talking about something beyond sports. They can't talk about a book they've read without others feeling put down because the last book they read was in high school.

    Democrats are more highly educated than Republicans. That is a fact, not a putdown. When you know more, you talk and think differently -- that is partly why people go to college. No one is showing off in order to make Republicans feel bad, but if they are less educated, there is something THEY can do about it. We aren't going to dumb ourselves down in order to avoid hurting Republican feelings. And yes, Trump is not only dumb and uneducated (ignorant) but he has dementia. It would be too hard to anyone to limbo under that bar to preserve Republicans fee fees.

    We each have the right to the pursuit of happiness. If that means thinking smart thoughts and saying smart things, we don't have to pretend stupidity in order to make Republicans feel less dumb. Besides, if we were to engage in condescension, Somerby would accuse us of looking down on them, which that would be. So there is no way to win with Somerby and with the Republicans who claim that Democrats think we're better than them, when we actually are. All the statistics say so. Fewer divorces, less drug use, better health habits, more income, better crime statistics -- all in blue states and among blue voters.

    Republicans should be asking what we know that they don't, instead of trying to own the libs in self-defeating oddball ways that make them look even more like morans.

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  12. "Inexplicably, Nicolle Wallace— good, decent person—named her podcast "The Best People." Almost surely, without necessarily thinking about it, she believes that she's a part of that group."

    Somerby is unfair to Wallace with this remark. Yesterday I quoted the MSNBC explanation for what her podcast was about and why it had that title. It said that the people interviewed were those she (and her audience, she hoped) could take inspiration from because of a list of accomplishments that were part of the announcement of her podcast.

    She did NOT say that she considered herself one of the best people. She said that she is inspired by qualities and accomplishments of others and wanted to share those with her audience.

    I get it that Somerby dislikes Wallace. He dislikes most women. But to say that she "almost surely" considers herself best is a criticism unsupported, in fact contradicted, by available evidence.

    Somerby is a narcissist. Not all performers have that same personality trait. Many women are highly self-critical and have self-esteem issues, partly due to the way women are treated in male-dominated fields. To assume that Wallace has a grandiose fantasy about her own bestness, perhaps because Somerby feels that way about himself, neglects that her focus on the admirable behavior of others as a form of self-improvement negates Somerby supposition. Why would someone who considered themselves bestest ever need to learn anything from others? They would chose a different name and premise for their podcast.

    But hey, Somerby doesn't care how he attacks Wallace. Any stick will do. And remember, there is no such thing as truth in Somerby's world, because how would anyone recognize it if anything were true?

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