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“Under Biden, the Democrats should have been more radical” — 6 Comments

  1. Jonathan Last has decayed precipitously from when he was writing at (now bat-guano-crazy) Bill Kristol’s Weekly Standard. Especially memorable to me is Last’s article “American Narcissus,” from November 2010: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/magazine/87594/american-narcissus/ (That’s in the archive at the Washington Examiner and is somewhat less readable typographically than was the original.)

    It opens with:

    Why has Barack Obama failed so spectacularly? Is he too dogmatically liberal or too pragmatic? Is he a socialist, or an anticolonialist, or a philosopher-president? Or is it possible that Obama’s failures stem from something simpler: vanity. Politicians as a class are particularly susceptible to mirror-gazing. But Obama’s vanity is overwhelming. It defines him, his politics, and his presidency.

    Last followed up with this codicil …

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2135826/the-american-narcissus-cont/

    … which I will quote in its entirety:

    A reader sends in a classic Obama moment that I completely missed. Here’s Ryan Lizza in a 2004 profile of Obama for the Atlantic:

    I couldn’t help noticing, when we sat down to talk in the dilapidated storefront that houses his Springfield campaign headquarters, that the blue-pen drawing he’d doodled on his newspaper during fundraising calls was a portrait of himself.

    You may have your own favorite scenes from the American Narcissus. Feel free to send them along to jlast[at]weeklystandard.com. Submissions will be accepted without judgment. This is a safe place, a nest of trust in a tree of understanding.

    You can’t make stuff like this up!

  2. Add to arrogance and ignorance, denial of reality. Arguably denial of inconvenient realities is the foremost characteristic of those on the left. Even ‘rational’ liberals like Carville, Dershowitz & Maher still “choose truth over facts”.

  3. The filibuster, or any other Senate rule, can be set aside at any time for any reason by 51 votes:

    Every question of order shall be decided by the presiding officer, without debate, subject to an appeal to the Senate. When an appeal is taken from the decision of the presiding officer, the decision of the presiding officer shall be overruled only if a majority of the elected members of the Senate vote to overrule his decision.

    We don’t actually know that only Sinema and Manchin among the Dems opposed it. Votes are whipped. They don’t hold the vote unless they believe they know the outcome. All we know is that at least two Democrats, not necessarily those two, opposed those bills and there was not a Senate majority in favor. The agreed-upon whipped vote is everyone but those two, certainly, but if there were more than two opposed, then Sinema and Manchin were cover for them–Dems who opposed it for some non-public reason that their home-state base would not forgive if they knew.

    The Republicans do exactly the same dance of Designated Mavericks, and our failure to see through it is why they represent us so poorly.

    Obamacare is an excellent example of what they can do when they want to. Individual Senators were bought off at sometimes a high price:

    SEN. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., exacted a special price for his vote on the Senate health-care bill. Opening up the Medicaid program to 15 million more Americans over the next decade will cost the states billions of dollars — but not Ben Nelson’s state. For Nebraska, the cost, estimated at $100 million through 2016, will be paid by the federal government.

    The debt ceiling vote in 2021 is another, when the Republicans had enough votes to sustain a filibuster but Mitch McConnell whipped enough votes to set aside the filibuster, at Chuck Schumer’s (and McConnell’s cronies’) behest.

    Separating the debt limit and NDAA, and creating a one-time filibuster carve-out is a solution that allows both parties to claim some sort of victory. Republicans are able to say that they made Democrats raise the debt limit and to get them on the record for a specific amount (which could be as high as $2.5 trillion, according to the New York Times). Democrats, meanwhile, are able to avoid using budget reconciliation, giving them more time to focus on passing another piece of legislation they’ve struggled to vote into law: the Build Back Better Act, a massive social and climate spending package.

    The filibuster is theater, intended to fool us, the voters. They get rid of it whenever they want to. We need to stop being fooled.

  4. I still say we should be thankful that Barack and Michelle weren’t really Long March communists.

    Once they did their eight year stint in the White House and put together a multi-millionaire portfolio of properties in Chicago, Martha’s Vineyard, and Hawaii, then the Beautiful People lifestyle, they were Outta There.

    Sure, Barack does phone consultations and occasional speeches, but if they were serious about the “fundamental transformation of America” they would have kneecapped Joe before the primaries, put in Michelle as a figurehead, and I doubt Trump could have won.

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