THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2026
We pretend to listen: This very morning, the evocative translation of the dramatic statement was banging around in our heads.
It was banging around in there again. We find this highly evocative:
"When I saw all this, and other things as bad, I was disgusted and withdrew from the wickedness of the times."
As we noted a few weeks ago, that statement, in translation, is drawn from Plato's Seventh Letter, which may or may not be authentic. The background goes like this:
In 404 B.C., in the wake of the Athenian surrender in the Peloponnesian War, the Athenian democracy briefly fell. The Thirty, later known as The Thirty Tyrants, were placed in control of the polity.
In this less evocative translation of the epistle which may be authentic, Plato notes that some of these appointed rulers were personal friends of his. At first, he was intrigued by their rise to power, but soon he amended his view of the Thirty Tyrants:
The Seventh Letter
[...]
In quite a short time they made the former government seem by comparison something precious as gold. For among other things, they tried to send a friend of mine, the aged Socrates, whom I should scarcely scruple to describe as the most upright man of that day, with some other persons to carry off one of the citizens by force to execution, in order that, whether he wished it, or not, he might share the guilt of their conduct.
But he would not obey them, risking all consequences in preference to becoming a partner in their iniquitous deeds. Seeing all these things and others of the same kind on a considerable scale, I disapproved of their proceedings, and withdrew from any connection with the abuses of the time.
We prefer the more evocative rendering of that final statement. But so it went, in the youthful Plato's eye, as the democracy fell.
If history has taught us anything—and almost surely it hasn't—it has taught us that The Thirty stayed in power for only about a year. That said, sometimes there is no tribe that is perfectly wise. With respect to the Athenian democracy, here's what happened next:
(Continuing directly from above)
Not long after that, a revolution terminated the power of The Thirty and the form of government as it then was. And once more, though with more hesitation, I began to be moved by the desire to take part in public and political affairs.
Well, even in the new government, unsettled as it was, events occurred which one would naturally view with disapproval; and it was not surprising that, in a period of revolution, excessive penalties were inflicted by some persons on political opponents, though those who had returned from exile at that time showed very considerable forbearance.
But once more it happened that some of those in power brought my friend Socrates, whom I have mentioned, to trial before a court of law, laying a most iniquitous charge against him and one most inappropriate in his case. For it was on a charge of impiety that some of them prosecuted and others condemned and executed the very man who would not participate in the iniquitous arrest of one of the friends of the party then in exile, at the time when they themselves were in exile and misfortune.
After deposing The Thirty, the new government, in a period of revolutionary zeal, had proceeded to condemn and execute "the most upright man of the day."
Putting it a different way:
Sometimes, the very best, as well as the worst, may be "full of passionate intensity." Making it even simpler, sometimes—as President Lincoln said—sometimes it may turn out that we did this too.
Regarding that portrait of the fall of Athens, we wouldn't say it's that bad around here today. But we'd say there's a family resemblance to the way our own democracy, such as it has ever been, has been coming undone—is currently falling apart.
Have those of us in Blue America played a role in this fall? We'd have to say that the answer is yes! In our view, Colby Hall correctly identifies some of our Blue American blame in this admirably nuanced piece.
We Blues have played a part in this too! That said, it seems to us, the larger point would have to be this:
As we've noted in the past, we humans weren't built for this line of work! Eventually, empires and sprawling nation states are destined to fall apart. We humans are inclined to array ourselves in tribes. The fall then proceeds from there.
Yesterday, Attorney General Bondi appeared before the Congress again. As it was the last time, so too yesterday:
We've never seen anyone behave the way she's done on these two occasions.
In a recent profile in The Atlantic, Stephanie McCrummen sketches the way Bondi—who was once a Democrat who seemed to be fairly liberal—came to be the way she is. We recall part of this story:
WHAT HAPPENED TO PAM BONDI?
[...]
Florida politics was trending Republican with Jeb Bush’s election as governor [in 1998]. Though no one I spoke with could recall Bondi expressing strong ideological views—if anything, she seemed fairly liberal—it was around this time that she switched her party registration from Democratic to Republican. She became friendly with Sean Hannity. Soon, Fox News was sending black cars to drive her to the studio to talk about sensational cases such as that of Terri Schiavo, the comatose Florida woman who became the center of a national political drama over whether to end life support. Producers would give Bondi a tape of her appearances afterward, or she’d tell friends to record her segments, and they would gather in a living room and rewatch them. “She’d be like, ‘Did I sound stupid the way I said that?’ ” a close friend from that time told me.
[...]
As state attorney general, Bondi was widely praised for her crackdown on opioid pill mills and for her work combatting human trafficking. But more and more, her success hinged on her willingness to be a spokesperson for the party, especially on Fox News. She appeared regularly as a legal commentator on Hannity, Fox & Friends, America Reports, and The Five, where she had a three-day stint as a guest host. “She was an accomplished, well-spoken carrier of the message,” the GOP operative, who worked on Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign, told me, recalling Bondi’s role as a Romney surrogate. “Pam was somebody you could put out for almost anything,” this person said. “She was somebody you could put on a Sunday show.”
We remember Bondi's generally fatuous guest spots on Fox. We recall our surprise in 2010 when she was elected attorney general of Florida—largely based, or so it seemed to us, on the prominence she had gained from those fatuous guest spots, in which she discussed those high "human interest" events.
Can you really get elected based on that? we recall wondering.
As for Hannity himself:
Last night, he again devoted the bulk of his program to the ongoing human interest / true crime drama unfolding in Arizona. On CNN, Jake Tapper was still out there in Tucson. Let us say this about that:
CNN has made some extremely good hires in the past decade or so. We were skeptics when they hired Kaitlan Collins in 2017. She had just turned 25, and she had a very thin resume—a resume which was largely compiled at Tucker Carlson's Daily Caller!
As it turned out, our skepticism was misplaced. Collins has been a sensational hire; we admire her competence and her character.
So too with the relatively recent hire of Audie Cornish, who always had a great voice for radio. As it turns out, she has a great voice for cable news too, along with an impressive amount of sanity, erudition and judgment.
Tapper, hired in 2012, was another very good hire. Yesterday, though, a somewhat odd situation obtained:
The democracy was coming apart right there in Washington, D.C. But for reasons which go unexplained, Tapper was still on the ground in Pima County, where he had been sent.
Last evening, Tapper and Hannity each continued with the mystification about the three-hour search of Annie Guthrie's home, followed days later by the search of the woods behind her home. Last night, Hannity and Tapper (and everyone else) continued the strange refusal to address those somewhat puzzling facts in an endless series of interviews in which the world's most obvious question persistently went unasked and was completely unaddressed.
At this site, we don't know what happened to Nancy Guthrie. As would be the case with any sane person, we hope that she'll be found.
This morning, the New York Times has published a classic "thumb-sucker" piece which pretends to explain the public's fascination with this profoundly unfortunate case. In a somewhat familiar fashion, the piece "explains" that fascination without ever demonstrating that any such fascination exists.
Meanwhile, will Tapper ever be allowed to come home? The democracy is crashing in D.C., not in Arizona.
With respect to those somewhat puzzling searches:
On CNN and on Fox, everyone—hosts and expert guests alike—agrees that the possible reason for those searches must never be addressed. Hosts keep reporting the fact that those searches have taken place, and everyone then agrees to show no sign of wondering why they have occurred.
Why has law enforcement conducted those searches? Hour after hour, night after night, everyone agrees not to ask!
In our view, it would be easy enough to answer that question in basically anodyne ways:
Law enforcement never rules anyone out! Until this horrible case has been solved, the FBI and the local police will be leaving no stone unturned!
It would be easy enough to say such things. Some experts have even volunteered the fact that family members are always checked out first.
(With apologies, we've even seen a few guests make a dangerous statement. They've said that 90 percent of such cases involve family members.)
That said, we assume that the specific explanation for this manufactured mystery lies on the public record. Again, we'll cite an opinion piece by Colby Hall. On balance, we disagree with him here:
Ashleigh Banfield’s Nancy Guthrie Reporting Shows How Clickbait Obstructed Justice
A media figure publicly named a family member as a “prime suspect” in the disappearance of an 84-year-old woman. Law enforcement said no suspect existed. The sheriff called the reporting irresponsible and reckless. The damage was already done.Ashleigh Banfield, a former NewsNation host who remains affiliated with the network as a true crime podcaster, repeatedly identified Nancy Guthrie’s son-in-law as a prime suspect in her disappearance, citing an anonymous law enforcement source. She did so across platforms while authorities were actively searching and publicly saying the opposite. There does exist the possibility that sheriffs are obfuscating a real lead, which would make Banfield’s reporting no less irresponsible if it hinders an ongoing and active investigation.That sequence captures the core failure of click-driven crime coverage. Speculation outran verification. Narrative displaced restraint. An active investigation was forced to contend with a media storyline it did not create.
We pretend to work, and they pretend to pay us.
They pretend to discuss the news, and we pretend to listen?
ReplyDelete"In 404 B.C" blah, blah, blah.
404? Sounds like a joke.
"Can you really get elected based on that? we recall wondering."
What, you feel that writing long, boring, repetitive essays is a road to success? Are you nuts?
"For us the people in our crumbling world, is the current arrangement possibly somewhat similar? "
I don't know much about arrangements in your world, but with a bit of luck, the swamp will be drained, meaning that your crumbling world will crumble and disappear. Let's keep our fingers crossed.
Eventually, all rich and well connected sex traffickers, drug traffickers, and massive fraudsters will be out of jail, working with renewed vigor, leaving their victims without justice, thanks to the Swamp Drainer.
Delete"404? Sounds like a joke."
DeleteIt is funny when people study history, isn't it trumptard? Bunch of pointy heads reading books instead of watching Fox News.
Bob just doesn't understand that Ignorance is Strength.
Quiet, piggy.
DeleteAnalogies may be useful to illustrate a concept, but should not be used to prove a point. If today were really like ancient Greece, who would be the analog of Socrates? Soe would argue it is Donald Trump. And, the finagled charges brought against him by Dems were analogous to Socrates's trial.
ReplyDeleteTrump stole classified documents and tried to overturn the 2020 election.
DeleteTrump is the most corrupt person ever to be president.
DeleteTrump was Epstein’s best friend for years and has repeatedly lied about his relationship with him.
DeleteYou’re fucking insane, dickhead in cal
DeleteSocrates was known for developing a method of questioning, focusing on ethics, and proclaiming his own ignorance. He gave up his life rather than recant his beliefs.
DeleteHard to imagine a dumber analogy than to compare him to Trump. A seriously stupid comment. Breathtaking. I am in awe of this illogic, which seems to emanate from a black hole of anti-intelligence.
Hector - in your opinion, is anyone today analogous to Socrates? Who do you think?
DeleteBiden
DeleteDickhead in Cal has no shame. Zero shame. He comes here every day to prove it.
Delete"is anyone today analogous to Socrates?"
DeleteNo.
I picked Biden because he drank the Hemlock in order to give his party a chance against Trump. He acted with political courage for the greater good. Somerby didn't support Harris after Biden stepped aside. Too busy withdrawing from evil or some such, mumble mumble mumble he said.
DeleteCringy shit. Super-cringy. Surprisingly worse than retarded Corby's usual.
DeleteYou cringe easy. How do you tolerate Trump's dance moves?
Delete
DeleteI see; you, retarded Corby, are such a faithful admirer of Donald Trump, our greatest President, that you're watching his every move, day and night.
Sorry, but, believe it or not, not everyone is so dedicated.
I think you are confused. Grunge is the music trend, not cringe.
DeleteThey gave the troll farmworkers a crash course on American pop culture, but they were a bit too literal. A few got brain damaged.
DeleteThis is the headline of Hall’s piece:
ReplyDelete“Biden’s Border Failures Directly Led to the Minneapolis Crisis”
Ridiculous. Biden didn’t make Trump and Noem and Miller et al send in a massive ICE/CBP force into Minneapolis (of all places) to theatrically rough up and round up people, some innocent, killing two citizens in the process. That was solely the Trump administration’s choice. They could have chosen to do it quietly, professionally, respectfully, but of course the Trump administration doing anything quietly, professionally, or respectfully is laughable on its face.
In any case, the public are majorly opposed to the way Trump has handled this, and aside from MAGA voters, no one is saying this is what they voted for.
Plato withdrew from the wickedness of his times, then re-engaged when he felt times were better. It might have been better if he had stayed involved and tried to fight the wickedness. It doesn't tend to go away on its own and there is nothing admirable about keeping one's head down and letting others do the dirty work to oppose tyrants. But then, Plato was kind of an asshole.
ReplyDeleteI admire the way Socrates refused to participate because it violated his principles. We need more people like that opposing Trump's wrongdoing. If Somerby is going to write about these Greeks, he should at least take a better message from them.
DeleteExamples of people taking a stand include the DOJ lawyers who have quit rather than indict people on political grounds, who have broken no laws and merely exercized their First Amendment rights. They are refusing to prosecute, while grand jury members are refusing to indict the people Trump has ordered charged.
DeleteI admire the Epstein victims who have chosen to reveal their identities in order to make sure the Epstein Files are not swept under the rug again. Trump's DOJ tried to punish them by failing to redact their names and by publishing their nude pictures, but they showed up to face Bondi, as adults, in public because what happened to them was wrong. Bondi refused to look them in the eye because she is a coward.
DeleteAll the "victims" that were at the Bondi hearing we're adults when they met Epstein. Where are all the "children"? I thought this had something to do with pedophilia and underage girls.
Delete"I thought this had something to do with pedophilia and underage girls."
DeleteSo, will you learn any lesson, and never listen to Right-wingers ever again? Or do you work for the corporate-owned mainstream media?
Sex trafficking isn’t legal with adults either.
DeleteWhat is wrong with you men?
Deletehttps://rights4girls.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/r4g/2019/11/Ms.-Fall-2019_NoSuchThing.pdf
DeleteAgain, all of the so-called victims at the Bondi hearing were adults when they met Epstein. I thought this was a controversy about pedophilia and child rape. Where are the children? Can anyone name one? Can they say where one of them was were raped?
DeleteCan anyone point to any concrete evidence of a large elite trafficking conspiracy? What about the existence of a “client list", where is the client list? What evidence is there of thousands of minors being trafficked? Be specific. Where can I find any evidence at all of blackmail operations? Can anyone please provide any evidence whatsoever of one co-conspirator beyond Maxwell?
DeleteI realize it's more fun and thrilling to speculate and fantasize. But at some point the gig is up and you have to provide evidence. So do me a favor and back up the speculation with concrete evidence if you could. Thanks.
Why does Somerby tolerate these Epstein apologists at his blog? Read the article I posted. @6:08
DeleteEpstein died in 2019. The young teens abused would now be of age. That changes nothing. The woman at the link I posted wrote an op-ed for the NY Times when Epstein died. She was 15 when she was raped. You guys are scum.
DeleteShe made accusations after Epstein died and after a multi-million dollar fund was set up to compensate so-called victims. So it was never proven.
DeleteBut that doesn't answer the question. Show me evidence that one underage girl was raped. Show me where the client list is. Show me evidence of a blackmail operation and thousands of minors being trafficked.
Donde estas, muchacha?
Is it wrong to want to see evidence for these speculative claims? If so, why?
Do you feel like these claims are not falsifiable? If so, why?
Can you be sure that you have not been swept up in a gigantic moral panic based on speculation and not evidence? If so, why?
Gee, you’d almost think an investigation by the DOJ would be a good idea, especially after that sweetheart deal Epstein originally got..
DeleteWho does this guy think testified against Ghislaine Maxwell?
DeleteRefusing to believe any victims doesn’t make you fair-minded. It makes you sound desperate and defensive. We have these guys bragging to each other about their misdeeds, from Epsteins own files, with photos. You sound like an idiot trying to defend them.
DeleteNo one can provide:
Delete- Evidence any minor was ever raped
- Evidence anyone was raped on Epstein Island
- Evidence of any pedophilia
- Concrete evidence of a large elite trafficking conspiracy
- The existence of a “client list"
- Evidence of a blackmail operation
- Evidence there were co-conspirators
- Evidence of thousands of trafficked minors
- Proof that any "victim" at the Bondi hearing was ot an adult when they met Epstein.
No one can provide:
Delete- Evidence any minor was ever raped
- Evidence anyone was raped on Epstein Island
- Evidence of any pedophilia
- Concrete evidence of a large elite trafficking conspiracy
- The existence of a “client list"
- Evidence of a blackmail operation
- Evidence there were co-conspirators
- Evidence of thousands of trafficked minors
- Proof that any "victim" at the Bondi hearing was ot an adult when they met Epstein.
Is it wrong to want to see evidence for these speculative claims? If so, why?
DeleteDo you feel like these claims are not falsifiable? If so, why?
Can you be sure that you have not been swept up in a gigantic moral panic based on speculation and not evidence? If so, why?
Why did Trump fight so hard to keep 'Epstein file' information from being released?
DeleteHi Hector, I prefer not to change the subject if you don't mind. (That said, Trump stated his reasons why.)
DeleteHector,
DeleteCan you provide:
No one can provide:
- Evidence any minor was ever raped
- Evidence anyone was raped on Epstein Island
- Evidence of any pedophilia
- Concrete evidence of a large elite trafficking conspiracy
- The existence of a “client list"
- Evidence of a blackmail operation
- Evidence there were co-conspirators
- Evidence of thousands of trafficked minors
- Proof that any "victim" at the Bondi hearing was ot an adult when they met Epstein?
Do you feel like wrong to want to see evidence for these widespread claims? If so, why?
Hector, do you believe the above list of claims are true? If so, why?
DeleteVictims deserve justice. Courts try cases so evidence can be presented and evaluated.
DeleteThey are hiding the evidence so assholes can claim there is none. This is wrong.
DeleteWhen a girl says she was raped, the least afults can do is take her seriously and investigate.
Deleteadults
DeleteWho is "they"?
DeleteHector, of course, disappears.
DeleteThey can come back anonymously or under one of their other nyms.
Delete"Making it even simpler, sometimes—as President Lincoln said—sometimes it may turn out that we did this too."
ReplyDeleteSomerby misunderstands Lincoln when he said that God visited punishment on both the North and South in the form of war and the suffering that it entails. Lincoln was not saying that the North and South participated equally in slavery or the cause for which the war was fought. There wouldn't have been a war, if that were true.
It is annoying when Somerby tries to superimpose his own opinions onto folks like Lincoln, distorting Lincoln's own intention and ignoring the context of his statement to do it.
And no, we are not in the midst of a civil war. No one likes what Trump is doing except his fellow criminals and an increasingly smaller group of dupes and morons. Even Erika Kirk didn't attend the TPUSA halftime show.
Make America Safer. Deport ICE.
ReplyDelete"At least two dozen ICE employees and contractors have been charged with crimes since 2020, and their documented wrongdoing includes patterns of physical and sexual abuse, corruption and other abuses of authority, a review by The Associated Press found."
There are beginning to be suggestions that ICE is recruiting thugs from Mexican cartels.
DeletePam Blondie proudly hires insurrectionists recorded on video screaming to kill the police. That is our justice department now.
DeleteWhen she is not touting $1.99 gasoline prices.
DeleteWhen Trump last made the $1.99 gas price claim there were no gas stations in the United States charging that price. Now Bondi has made the same claim in front of Congress yesterday, and once again there is no gasoline available in the US anywhere that retail's for $1.99. They are profoundly pathological liars.
Deleteretails
DeleteJust as a matter of fact, Colby Hall's description of Biden's border policies and actions is incorrect -- it reflects right wing propaganda. It is unsurprising that Somerby loves it.
ReplyDeleteAthens was presumably not caught in a situation where one side was inventing false facts and propagandizing (gaslighting) the people. Somerby makes very little effort to sort out whether Trump's statements are true, much less Colby Hall's. Somerby has been pushing Colby Hall and Mediaite to the point where it resembles the embedded ads for various things now being included in Political Wire, TPM, and other previously less monetized blogs. You can't blame someone for needing to make money, but ethics require identifying those ads in some way to readers.
Hall is wrong on several points. Joe Biden did not lose control of the Southern border. Democrats did address border concerns during the election. And no, Trump did not return to office with a mandate to govern with force. Colby Hall couldn't sound more Republican if he tried. And Somerby refers to him often and apparently loves his message.
Colby Hall is (and was) a contributor to NewsNation. They are described as:
"NewsNation brands itself as a centrist, neutral alternative to partisan cable news. While some media analysts have placed its reporting in the middle, others, including former staff, have noted a right-leaning tendency or influence in its coverage, often described as a more moderate or "Fox Light" perspective. "
Next time Somerby tries to portray himself as liberal, remind him that you cannot work against the interests of your own political party (Biden is too old, Somerby argued, over and over and over) while pretending to be a member of it. Similarly, there is nothing liberal about Hall's attacks on Democrats, his Democrats are in disarray stance, and the accompanying repetition of right wing talking points, whether it is Somerby or Colby Hall speaking.
Isn't it about time for Somerby to quote David Brooks again?
NEW: CNN admits the truth, 58% of voters now say the Democrat Party has gone TOO FAR LEFT.
ReplyDelete“Voters who say the Democrats are now too liberal… look at this:
42% in 1996, 48% in 2013, now 58% in 2025 of ALL voters agree.”
The Left is collapsing.
Centrists gave us Trump.
DeleteHahaha. Keep that in mind next November. The special elections in Texas and elsewhere are telling you something. Trump will be in the low 30 percentile by the midterms. Like he was after his last failed presidency.
Delete"Eventually, empires and sprawling nation states are destined to fall apart."
ReplyDeleteSomerby appears to want to apply this to non-sprawling nations too. If he were arguing that Puerto Rico should become a nation, because the US is too sprawling to govern it, he might have a point, but he appears to be saying that the US government is falling apart, when it is not. Trump is falling apart and our government has been dealing with him poorly, but we remain a nation, Alaska and Hawaii have not pulled away from the mainland, and there is really nothing sprawling about the rest of our country, with its semi-rectangular, contiguous states.
sprawling definition: "spreading out over a large area in an untidy or irregular way"
It makes sense that India would become independent of Great Britain eventually (especially since it was separate for most of its prior history). It makes no sense to claim that we in the US must devolve into separate nations because North Dakota and South Dakota just cannot get along. Somerby ignores that there are large concentrations of blue voters in so-called red states, and vice versa. We are a purple nation governed by an imbecile who was elected because Russia meddled in our election system and no one would believe Trump was cheating in 2016 or 2024. Our problem is not sprawl, but corruption, cronyism and selling out to billionaires who have no interest in anything but being rich and powerful at the expense of the people's need. Thom Hartmann, Robt Reich, and many other DEMOCRATS have discussed this in great detail. Somerby has never mentioned it here. Instead Somerby blames democracy and human nature (we aren't built for this, he claims, with no evidence at all).
If anyone wants to know why I hold such a grudge against Somerby, it is because he is willing to drop his support for democracy, abandon our system, ignore the needs of our people just for the attention of assholes like Trump. To do this, he ignores truth (says it doesn't exist) and pretends that no one can know anything for sure, in order to embrace the most despicable actions of bad people. Socrates wouldn't do that. But Somerby does.
Somerby says the news is pretend. Of course it is, over at Fox News. But Somerby says he watches Fox 24/7. He gives no appearance of following any news beyond the mainstream media (which he calls blue, when it is not). Then Somerby generalizes from his wretched sources to ALL of the media, including the independent media and sources he does not read or watch. That is fake reasoning. He pretends to think and we pretend he is saying something valid, when he clearly is not.
ReplyDeleteSomerby has nothing to say to anyone here. He is an old fart pretending to be relevant, without delivering.
The mean spirit with which he dismisses Nancy Guthrie's plight shows that he doesn't understand that news, ultimately, is about people and our problems and achievements. I'm surprised Somerby hasn't complained about Olympics coverage.
Somerby is irrelevant, mentally fuzzy, and has nothing to say to anyone here, especially not the people who are fully participating in politics and other aspects of real life. It is evident that even Socrates and Plato speak to him oddly. He has no solutions for us and barely knows what is wrong with our country. Hint: it isn't sprawl, it is incompetence, corruption, and graft.
Eventually, Somerby will be back to tell us that Helen of Troy has been miscast in the new movie version of The Odyssey. That's what all the bros are stewing about today.
In actual media analysis, Robert Reich today discusses the flood of people leaving CBS after it became a propaganda organ of the right wing:
ReplyDelete"Producer Alicia Hastey departed CBS News Wednesday, saying the kind of work she came to do was “increasingly becoming impossible,” as stories were now evaluated “not just on their journalistic merit but on whether they conform to a shifting set of idealogical expectations.”
Whose ideological expectations was Hastey referring to? Would it be impertinent for me to suggest it’s the sociopath in the Oval Office?
Hastey’s criticism came a little over two weeks after Bari Weiss, the anti-“woke” opinion journalist who became editor-in-chief CBS’s News, unveiled her “21st century” vision at a town hall meeting. Weiss told producers and staff they were free to leave if they didn’t like it.
Since then, at least six out of CBS Evening News’s twenty producers have accepted buyouts."
He then goes on to describe who has replaced them, including Peter Attia (who appears all over the Epstein Files and is an RFK Jr. style health nut).
Somerby has never discussed Bari Weiss, not even when she was with the NY Times, nor the takeover of CBS by the right. If it isn't on CNN or MSNOW, it doesn't exist to Somerby.
https://robertreich.substack.com/p/the-tragic-end-of-cbs-news
Peter Atilla is complicit, as you state, but he is not an RFK Jr. styled nut.
DeleteHe promotes longevity, by encouraging healthy lifestyle, sleep and eating habits, but he cannot promise longer life. To the extent that he is part of the current faddism (obviously motivated by covid fears), he is grifting off of people's fear of death and concerns about disease. I question the morality of that, but he has not allied with RFK Jr. and others who are recommending unhealthy practices.
DeleteAtilla has not become a producer, as far as can be gleaned by searching Google. Nobody can promise longer life unless they have a gun to your head and are willing to spare you, or some similar scenario. Atilla oversteps the boundaries of accepted medical practice, in part so that he has something outside of traditional medicine to provide his wealthy consumers via his very expensive concierge practice.
DeleteAttia?
Delete"WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Senator Mark Kelly released a new online video on Thursday reminding the nation’s bartenders that they are allowed to refuse Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s orders.
ReplyDeleteStaring stonily into the camera, the former astronaut warned that, if Hegseth appears to be above the legal blood-alcohol limit, any additional drink request would constitute an illegal order.
“Our laws are clear: you can refuse illegal orders,” he told the bartenders. “You must refuse illegal orders.”
Kelly concluded the video with one final urgent plea to the mixologists: "If Hegseth’s behavior is belligerent, his words are slurred, and his makeup is smeared, you must refuse his orders."
Nancy Guthrie has not been found, so why call Jake Tapper home?
ReplyDeleteJake Tapper proved his incompetence as a journalist when he wrote a book in which George Clooney diagnosed Biden with dementia (while ignoring the President's obvious symptoms). I hope his sales were worth it, because he forfeited his integrity as a journalist with that book. Now he is a joke, so why shouldn't he be assigned human interest stories in Tucson?
Somerby selectively quotes Lincoln when it suits his own purposes, but here is Lincoln's own view and its relevance to today's problems, as explained by historian Heather Cox Richardson:
ReplyDelete"Lincoln dated the founding of the nation from the Declaration of Independence rather than the Constitution, the document enslavers preferred because of that document’s protection of property. In the Declaration, the Founders wrote that they held certain “truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed….”
But in Lincoln’s day, fabulously wealthy enslavers had gained control over the government and had begun to argue that the Founders had gotten their worldview terribly wrong. They insisted that their system of human enslavement, which had enabled them to amass fortunes previously unimaginable, was the right one. Most men were dull drudges who must be led by their betters for their own good, southern leaders said. As South Carolina senator and enslaver James Henry Hammond put it, “I repudiate, as ridiculously absurd, that much-lauded but nowhere accredited dogma of Mr. Jefferson, that ‘all men are born equal.’”
In 1858, Abraham Lincoln, then a candidate for the Senate, warned that arguments limiting American equality to white men were the same arguments “that kings have made for enslaving the people in all ages of the world…. Turn in whatever way you will—whether it come from the mouth of a King, an excuse for enslaving the people of his country, or from the mouth of men of one race as a reason for enslaving the men of another race, it is all the same old serpent.” Either people—men, in his day—were equal, or they were not. Lincoln went on, “I should like to know if taking this old Declaration of Independence, which declares that all men are equal upon principle and making exceptions to it…where will it stop?”
Lincoln had thought deeply about the logic of equality. In his 1860 campaign biography, he permitted the biographer to identify six books that had influenced him. One was a book published in 1817 and wildly popular in the Midwest in the 1830s: Capt. Riley’s Narrative. The book was written by James Riley, and the full title of the book was “An Authentic Narrative of the Loss of the American Brig Commerce, Wrecked on the Western Coast of Africa, in the Month of August, 1815, With the Sufferings of Her Surviving Officers and Crew, Who Were Enslaved by the Wandering Arabs on the Great African Desart [sic], or Zahahrah.” The story was exactly what the title indicated: the tale of white men enslaved in Africa.
In the 1850s, on a fragment of paper, Lincoln figured out the logic of a world that permitted the law to sort people into different places in a hierarchy, applying the reasoning he heard around him. “If A. can prove, however conclusively, that he may, of right, enslave B.—why may not B. snatch the same argument, and prove equally, that he may enslave A?” Lincoln wrote. “You say A. is white, and B. is black. It is color, then; the lighter, having the right to enslave the darker? Take care. By this rule, you are to be slave to the first man you meet, with a fairer skin than your own. You do not mean color exactly?—You mean the whites are intellectually the superiors of the blacks, and, therefore have the right to enslave them? Take care again. By this rule, you are to be slave to the first man you meet, with an intellect superior to your own. But, say you, it is a question of interest; and, if you can make it your interest, you have the right to enslave another. Very well. And if he can make it his interest, he has the right to enslave you.”
Cont.
Delete"Lincoln saw clearly that if we give up the principle of equality before the law, we have given up the whole game. We have admitted the principle that people are unequal and that some people are better than others. Once we have replaced the principle of equality with the idea that humans are unequal, we have granted approval to the idea of rulers and ruled. At that point, all any of us can do is to hope that no one in power decides that we belong in one of the lesser groups.
In 1863, Lincoln reminded his audience at Gettysburg that the Founders had created a nation “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal,” but it was no longer clear whether “any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.” During the Civil War, the people of the United States were defending that principle against those who were trying to create a new nation based, as the Confederacy’s vice president Alexander Stephens said, “upon the great truth” that men were not, in fact, created equal, that the “great physical, philosophical, and moral truth” was that there was a “superior race.”
In the midst of the Civil War, Lincoln called for Americans to understand what was at stake, and to “highly resolve…that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/february-11-2026
I believe the AG of this country, Pam Blondie, went on FOX NOOZ channel yesterday - because why shouldn't the AG be a clown - to plead for attorneys to apply for a job - because anyone with anyone with any integrity can't stand to be near her anymore.
DeleteBondi is a wretched human being.
Delete"They pretend to discuss the news, and we pretend to listen?"
ReplyDeleteSomerby ought to know. He pretends to write a coherent essay and his troll fanboys praise it as if he had actually written something worth reading. Because that is their job. Meanwhile, all that comes across is negativity toward important American values, such as support for democracy, liberal ideas about the value of diversity and inclusion, lies about Biden, and a shifting of attention away from events damaging to Trump. Bondi screwed the pooch, but you wouldn't know if from Somerby's essay today. That is the opposite of news -- it is distraction, misdirection, gaslighting and lies. None of that is journalism.