The main reason is that I'm still recovering from Covid. It's a fairly mild case, but it has sapped my ambition. Saturday I realized I hadn't gotten started yet, and asked, "Am I willing to put on a big push to catch up?" The answer was no.
A second reason is that this week's news isn't inspiring me. A lot of articles and news-show segments have been speculating about what the January 6 Committee will report, in particular whether it will make criminal referrals against Donald Trump for this or that crime. I admit that's an intriguing topic, but if we can just hang on for a few more hours, the committee will tell us this afternoon. The full report will be available on Wednesday. So if you're having fun speculating, don't let me discourage you. But it's not an efficient use of energy, particularly if you're running short this week.
Or we could speculate about whether Kevin McCarthy will find the votes to become speaker, and what will happen if he doesn't. Again, if you're enjoying yourself, have at it. But hardly anybody who's writing about this knows anything for sure. Here's what I think I know: Nothing tells voters that you're "ready to govern" like having a big internal conflict on Day 1, especially if it's mostly about egos and has nothing to do with the voters' lives.
Other big news stories have involved people who are intentionally trolling us. So Elon Musk tweets "My pronouns are Prosecute/Fauci." And MTG told New York's Young Republicans that if she and Steven Bannon had organized January 6, the Capitol invaders would have been armed, and "We would have won." She then said she was joking, which was probably at least partly true. Fascists are famous for their sense of humor; I suspect many Nazis were laughing uproariously on Kristallnacht as they broke windows and burned Jewish shops.
The ambitious post that I didn't have the energy to pursue asked the question: So how should we respond to such trolling? People say this stuff because they want to be the center of an outrage-storm, so if we get outraged we're just playing the role they've assigned us. Since the trolls are not interested in an exchange of ideas, a detailed debunking is probably useless. Pointing out that these are horrible people is more wasted effort, because I suspect most of their fans already know that they're horrible people.
When trolls are powerless to do anything more than get your goat, ignoring them is the right answer. But ignoring a soon-to-be-important member of the new House majority and the world's second-richest man (who has turned a significant chunk of the public square into his personal fiefdom) is probably also a mistake.
So what, then? I have thoughts, but nothing resembling a complete answer. Feel free to contribute your thoughts in the comments. Maybe you'll influence what I eventually do write.
A talk I've been working on for January -- I'll link to a full text after I give it -- has me recalling how the Sift got started. Originally, it was just a list of links that I called "What impressed me this week". I posted the list on Monday mornings as an easy product that would get my week off to a good start. (Over time, the tail came to wag the dog, and now my week is organized around getting the Sift out.)
So what follows is a throwback: With minimal comment, these are the links that caught my eye this week.
I'm not usually a Thomas Friedman fan, but his column "What in the World is Happening in Israel?" is worth your time.
Ron DeSantis wants a grand jury to investigate the pharmaceutical companies who produce and distribute Covid vaccines. He also is establishing a Florida "public health integrity committee" to second-guess the CDC. Chris Hayes points out that DeSantis is attempting to get between Trump (who wants credit for funding Operation Warp Speed) and his base (who believe all sorts of anti-vax conspiracy theories). Ironically, it's Trump's one clear life-saving accomplishment that makes him vulnerable. Lesson for future conservative presidents: Never do anything good, because other conservatives will use it against you.
Do I really need to comment on the Trump NFTs? Sad. Maybe the saddest thing ever produced in our Country.
Cory Doctorow summarizes Joseph Stiglitz's report on the current inflation: It wasn't caused by excess demand, so raising interest rates is the wrong way to solve it -- and might make it worse. I have a yes-but reaction: Raising interest rates may not solve inflation, or might solve it but create too much collateral damage. But rates had been unreasonably low since the start of Covid, and needed to go up to more typical levels eventually.
The one development that tempted me to sift this week was TPM's series exposing the texts Republican congresspeople sent to Trump Chief of Staff Mark Meadows just before and after January 6. Both Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and Rep. Ralph Norman urged Meadows to urge Trump to declare "Marshall Law" which is not really a thing. (Martial law is literally the "law of Mars", i.e., rule by the military.)
Vanity Fair's Bess Levin explains that Greene and Norman asked for Marshall Law "because they’re both f--king idiots", but I prefer to think that they intended to invoke the hero of this 1980s comic book.
The House Oversight Committee had a hearing about anti-LGBTQ violence and the Club Q shooting. If you're a Republican, the problem can't be guns and it can't be right-wing eliminationist rhetoric against drag queens and transfolk, so how do you spin this? It's about defunding the police, which no one anywhere near Club Q actually did.
The recent Musk/Twitter developments have made it clear that free speech was never the issue. Now that one of their own has control, right-wingers are fine with Twitter banning whoever Musk feels like banning, for whatever reasons he wants. This is a general trait on the right: Freedom means freedom for them. They will never, ever defend freedom for everybody.
Over on Mastodon, Simon Weiss makes a good point about the @ElonJet controversy:
There are many legitimate reasons to track Elon Musk's flight coordinates, for example to offer him ads more relevant to his interests
Amanda Marcotte argues that the right-wing "cancel culture" and "woke mobs" rhetoric is psychological projection:
In reality, it's left wing ideas that are suppressed out of a genuine fear of their persuasiveness. Books are banned from schools so kids won't learn that LGBTQ people are normal or that racism is wrong. Musk openly argues that the "woke mind virus" must be "defeated," which is to say that threateningly convincing ideas about human equality must be banished from the discourse, lest they win people over.
Until next week: Have a great Christmas, Solstice, Hanukah, or whatever you celebrate. Have fun, stay safe, and try to stay (or get) healthy.
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