American Politics from 2019 on

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L'Emmerdeur
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by L'Emmerdeur » Thu May 21, 2026 8:04 pm

A harbinger of things to come from the multitude of right-wing zealots and Christofascists Trump and the Republican-controlled US Senate have installed to lifetime tenure in the US federal judiciary. This particular judge wasn't put on the bench by Trump but he's clearly embraced the Trumpist approach to the law. It's going to be ugly.

'A MAGA Judge’s Shocking Power Grab Crosses Over Into an Impeachable Offense'
An ultrapartisan federal judge issued a stunning and possibly unprecedented order on Monday that simultaneously violated the rights of vulnerable children and the lawyers trying to protect them. At the Trump administration’s bidding, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor—who sits in Texas—commanded Rhode Island Hospital to give him sensitive information about minors who received gender-affirming care, including their private medical records and Social Security numbers. He then issued an injunction claiming to prohibit the hospital from seeking relief in the federal courts that oversee Rhode Island under threat of contempt. And he barred the hospital from “aiding and abetting” any other party that might ask for help from these courts, including the children whose rights will be trampled by disclosure of their records.

O’Connor’s order is an extreme abuse of power that verges on impeachable misconduct. He has absolutely no authority to prevent any party from seeking relief in another court, let alone the home courts with natural jurisdiction over this dispute. Nor may he gag any litigant from “aiding and abetting” others who wish to make their case in those courts; these prohibitions read more like the diktat of an autocrat than the lawful directive of a jurist. O’Connor’s massive overreach seems designed to tee up a constitutional crisis over the ability of MAGA judges to facilitate the administration’s persecution of blue-state residents many miles away. It also tests the resolve of judges in those blue states to hold the line against distant conservative courts attempting to encroach upon their constitutional authority at the president’s behest.

The Trump administration set off this conflict when it issued a subpoena seeking to compel Rhode Island Hospital to turn over a mountain of information about transgender minors whom it had treated. This demand was part of a nationwide assault on doctors who offer gender-affirming care, and seven courts had already blocked similar subpoenas issued against other providers. The basic problem, as these courts identified, is that the government failed to accuse these doctors of any plausibly unlawful conduct, rendering the subpoenas invalid. When the Justice Department took aim at RIH, however, it sought to enforce its subpoena not in the Rhode Island federal courthouse. Instead, it went to O’Connor’s court, in Fort Worth, Texas, and asked him for an order to enforce the subpoena. (O’Connor, a far-right partisan, invites Republicans to shop their cases to his court.) He complied without even allowing RIH the opportunity to respond, directing the hospital to give the government the records it sought.

RIH, joined by Rhode Island’s Office of the Child Advocate (a state agency), then asked for the federal court in Rhode Island to quash the subpoena. On Wednesday, Judge Mary S. McElroy of the state’s U.S. District Court did just that. McElroy castigated the DOJ for “appalling” and “reckless disregard for the duty of candor” while calling out O’Connor for playing along with the department’s brazen judge shopping. Most important, she outmaneuvered the Texas judge by quashing the subpoena itself, finding that it was an illegitimate and unconstitutional invasion of privacy. By rendering the subpoena a nullity, McElroy left O’Connor nothing to enforce, making his earlier order toothless.

On Monday, however, O’Connor struck back with a shocking order that used wildly inappropriate intimidation tactics to wrest back control of the case. In a testy opinion, he rejected the conclusion reached by McElroy (and seven other courts) that the subpoena is invalid, as well as repeated accusations against RIH that McElroy had found to be “deceptive, if not intentionally and knowingly false.” He decried RIH’s pleas for relief in Rhode Island’s federal court as “flagrant attempts to avoid compliance with lawful orders” designed to “circumvent the authority of this court.” And he ordered RIH to give him all the documents demanded by the government’s subpoena by Tuesday, implying that the hospital might destroy these records if he did not obtain them immediately.

In reality, RIH had every right to ask McElroy for relief. Indeed, the hospital’s attempt to litigate this case in Rhode Island—where it is located—is far more defensible than the DOJ’s efforts to drag the fight to Fort Worth, 1,750 miles away. Yet O’Connor condemned RIH’s move as an underhanded gambit to “circumvent” his authority, as though he alone had a claim to litigate this dispute and McElroy was an impudent interloper. Only a judge drunk on unaccountable power could mistake a party’s right to petition its own courts for a gross act of defiance.

...

[O’Connor] is evidently eager to escalate this skirmish into full-on judicial warfare over his self-proclaimed right to rule over Rhode Island, its citizens, and its federal courts. At stake is the prerogative of uncaptured judges to enforce the law free from interference by robed partisans halfway across the country.

[...]

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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Brian Peacock » Thu May 21, 2026 11:46 pm

"My court is bigger than your court!" It's nonsense of course. But very dangerous nonsense.
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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Tero » Thu May 21, 2026 11:48 pm

Guardian:
“Harris wrote off rural America, assuming urban/suburban margins would compensate,” the report says. “The math doesn’t work.” The autopsy concludes that Stein’s success in the state that Harris lost provided a clear lesson for Democrats: focus less on “abstract issues and identity politics”.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/202 ... on-autopsy

But the committee is wrong. It would not have made any difference. Rural America is not going to vote for a black woman. The 2% she lost by that were available were mostly erhnic groups.
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Tero » Mon May 25, 2026 11:54 pm

Can't have everybody doing well. If white people do a bit worse, that is OK too, as long as the liberals suffer even more.
"Some progressives believe "the people" don't know the truth. Since 2000, a Democratic president has handed off a pretty good or very good economy to a Republican, and that Republican has ruined it. It was a lie that Donald Trump was a successful businessman. It was a lie that tax cuts spur investment and growth. These progressives believe that once the lies are exposed, "the people" will reward the party that has a record of bringing prosperity to all."

"The problem is the progressive story does not make room for an alternative possibility: that "the people" elect Republicans not in spite of the Democrat's success but because of it. In America, prosperity is inextricably linked to race. Policies that benefit the "undeserving," a label that always includes Black people, are always under threat. In time, a Republican is elected to restore "justice." The progressive story insists "the people" don't know, but truth is, they probably do, and they have acted on that knowledge three straight times since 2000."

"This is not to say that Republican presidents are rewarded. Quite the opposite. The restoration of "the natural order" – in which the dominance of white people in America is preserved and protected – requires ruining the economy. That is what Donald Trump has done. A new Reuters poll shows a mere 35 percent approve of his job performance. He's burning up the country and Americans are rightly mad as hell. But the reaction is not rooted in economic policies per se. It's rooted in the complexities of whiteness. White majorities punish Democrats for helping everyone. Then they punish Republicans for hurting them."

"Whiteness is the animating force that pushes the electorate back and forth, producing cycles of boom and bust that harm lives and decimate fortunes. There have been 11 recessions since 1945, all but one under GOP presidencies. Instead of facing the truth about "the people," however, some (white) progressives would rather hold onto the belief that voters are being lied to and that rational self-interest will kick in once the facts are convincingly laid bare. At that point, "the people" will reward the party that brings prosperity to all. Eleven recessions are not the exception. They are the rule. But you can't tell that to the willfully colorblind."
https://www.alternet.org/amp/republican ... 2676930063
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by JimC » Tue May 26, 2026 3:21 am

Racism seems totally endemic to US society. I'm not saying Australia is immune either, given the rise of the xenophobic Australia First party...
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Brian Peacock » Tue May 26, 2026 5:43 am

... Indeed. We have our (un)fair share of racism here too, but in the US race stories seem to be on a whole different level; race seems almost like a fundamental principle and preoccupation of society; almost like something akin to unwanted compulsive thoughts, except those with the compulsion don't realise they have a condition or how damaging they're being to themselves and those around them.
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There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia."

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Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by macdoc » Tue May 26, 2026 10:43 am

yup
AI Overview When discussing "dire conclusions" regarding racial justice in America, scholars and commentators hold vastly different perspectives, often depending on which framework of history and racial progress they utilize.The Permanent Racism Thesis: Derrick BellOne of the most famous bleak conclusions in civil rights literature comes from the legal scholar and critical race theorist Derrick Bell (author of Faces at the Bottom of the Well and Silent Covenants).
The Conclusion: Bell concluded that racism is a permanent, indelible fixture of American society. He argued that even herculean civil rights reforms (like Brown v. Board of Education) ultimately serve to temporarily appease minority populations but never dismantle overarching white dominance.
The Dynamic: According to Bell, when racial patterns are threatened, the system naturally adapts to maintain the status quo, producing only "peaks of progress" that eventually slide back into systemic irrelevance.The Colorblind Critique: Coleman HughesConversely, writers like Coleman Hughes (author of The End of Race Politics) present a different type of "dire" warning regarding the current trajectory of racial justice advocacy in America.The Conclusion: Hughes argues that modern "anti-racist" movements (such as those inspired by Critical Race Theory) are leading society toward a new, retrogressive form of institutionalized neo-racism.

The Dynamic: He cautions that departing from the "colorblind" ideals of the historical Civil Rights Movement has created an era of division and reverse discrimination, concluding that society should move away from race-based quotas and diversity efforts in favor of class-based and socioeconomic interventions.Structural & Historical Persistence: Multidisciplinary ConsensusMainstream sociological and historical analysis (e.g., The Anatomy of Racial Inequality or The Third Reconstruction) generally notes that while overt, legally mandated white supremacy has been defeated, the "dire" conclusion often lies in the reproduction of historical racial disparities.
The Conclusion: This consensus suggests that existing societal structures, institutions, and laws continue to perpetuate historic legacies of racial inequity without necessarily needing explicit individual malice.
The Dynamic: Consequently, racial minorities face avoidable, systemic disadvantages in areas like criminal justice, housing, and healthcare, which activists and bioethicists argue continually violate human dignity unless actively and aggressively dismantled.
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by L'Emmerdeur » Tue May 26, 2026 2:42 pm

JimC wrote:
Tue May 26, 2026 3:21 am
Racism seems totally endemic to US society. I'm not saying Australia is immune either, given the rise of the xenophobic Australia First party...
It is, however progress is being made even if at a somewhat glacial pace. One step forward, 3/4 step back. To argue otherwise is to ignore history.

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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Tero » Tue May 26, 2026 3:47 pm

Elsewhere (Donal posts)
50+ years of Southern Strategy and propaganda targeting institutions like education. Democrats going along with consolidation of media and defunding education and other essential services. Poor white people believing that they are poor because some black girl with a baby can get SNAP and not because billionaires are buying up all the businesses, downsizing their jobs away, and then bribing politicians to repeal or just ignore regulations meant to protect those poor whites.
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Re: American Politics from 2019 on

Post by Tero » Wed May 27, 2026 8:04 pm

MAGA problem: Being average does not get you anything
https://esapolitics.blogspot.com/2026/0 ... t-get.html
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