George Will Loves To Argue About America
The octogenarian columnist has a lot to say about happiness and history in the United States.

After 80 years of life and roughly 6,000 newspaper columns, you might think George Will would be tired of arguing. But "arguing about the nature of the country is as American as frozen apple pie with a slice of processed cheese," the Washington Post columnist says. "So let's argue."
Facts, of course, are important for arguing, and Will prides himself on the number of facts that fill his opinion writing. He frequently visits the deep well of history to make a point. Problems arise, though, in cases where at least one side gets the facts wrong, as with The New York Times' 1619 Project, or has no facts at all to support its position, as with Donald Trump's claims about the 2020 election.
Will's newest book is American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008–2020 (Hachette Books), a collection of columns that covers everything from the Great Recession through what he calls the crybaby presidency of Donald Trump. Of special interest are his columns drawing complicated lessons from the World War II era, when the country triumphed over authoritarianism and genocide abroad even as it practiced racial apartheid at home.
Will's love of America is unabashedly patriotic, but it's never jingoistic or untroubled by tough historical truths. For almost everything happening today, he thinks, there is a historical parallel to learn from, whether it's election conspiracy theories or President Joe Biden's legislative efforts to dramatically expand the role of the government in American life.
In September, Will spoke with Reason's Nick Gillespie via Zoom about happiness, totalitarianism, conspiracy theories, and the importance of learning from history.
Reason: Let's talk about this concept of the "unruly torrent." What do you mean by that, and why is that a kind of controlling image for this passel of interesting columns that you've collected?
Will: Well, it's unruly in the sense that it is a torrent. That is, most of reality is not governed. Most of the time that's a very good thing. It's been well said that the essence of the Bible reduced to one sentence is, "God created man and woman and promptly lost control of events."
Those of us with a libertarian streak—some streaks broader than others, but mine is broad enough—believe that things being out of control is exactly what we want. We want a spontaneous order: up-from-the-bottom creativity rather than down-from-the-top command structures. However, events can be unruly and turbulent and dangerous as well as constructive. And I think we're seeing the dangerous side in the last period that my book covers.
Do you think there is something inherent in the American DNA where we cannot stay happy? There's that great scene in Key Largo, the Humphrey Bogart movie, where Rocco, the bad guy played by Edward G. Robinson, is basically asked, "What do you want?" And he says, "I want more. I want more." It seems as if, among our insatiable appetites, we're never very happy for very long.
Yeah. That's what someone called the joyless pursuit of joy. I'll match your pop culture reference with one of my own. Long ago there was a radio show called Fibber McGee and Molly. And Molly would say to her husband Fibber, "If it makes you happy to be unhappy, then be unhappy."
There's a certain kind of American who's not happy unless he or she is furious these days. Indignant, set upon, aggrieved. It's worse than usual.
It's totally bipartisan, too. Or not bipartisan, but across the political and ideological space.
Absolutely. Donald Trump sort of perfected and became the avatar of crybaby conservatism. "Everyone's picking on me: the media, Hollywood, academia, etc."
Pity the billionaire. Right?
Exactly. And the left today feels set upon by big corporations and money—other than George Soros' money and politics and all that stuff. So whining is the national anthem these days.
One of the themes of your columns is that politics obviously is important, but it cannot be most of what we're doing or how we address most of our problems. It's just not up to the task.
Yes. And that is totalizing politics. If the personal is political, everything is politics. And that's the definition of totalitarianism.
A mistake people commonly make about totalitarian societies is they say, "In a totalitarian society, you're not allowed to participate in politics." No, no. In a totalitarian society, you can't not participate in politics.
I remember when I first entered East Berlin, my first sight of a totalitarian society, what struck me was (a) the absence of advertising, which I missed instantly; and (b) the presence of the big red banner saying "Victory for Sozialismus." That is, we were conscripted into political vocabularies everywhere, and that's the problem. And that's of course why we're fighting so much about the teaching of American history.
George Orwell said in 1984: He who controls the past controls the future. And who controls the present controls the past. Hence The New York Times' 1619 farce, saying that if we can just reframe American history, we can control the future by saying, stipulating—I won't say they argue it, even, but by stipulating—that America was conceived not in liberty, as Lincoln said at Gettysburg, but in slavery and sin in 1619.
By the same token, isn't it a good thing for us to be arguing over what America stands for and what America means? We should update and reinterrogate the past and come to a new consensus. Is the problem with something like the 1619 Project that it is not a good-faith argument about what America stands for? Or is it that it is flatly wrong in its particulars? Or some mix of both?
Arguing about the nature of the country is as American as frozen apple pie with a slice of processed cheese. It just is. If you don't like arguing, you picked the wrong country. So let's argue.
What's wrong with the 1619 Project is that it is factually preposterous. The essence of the story is that Americans fought the American Revolution because Lord Dunmore said that slaves fighting on the British side would be emancipated. Well, he said that in November 1775—after Lexington and Concord, after the Boston Tea Party, after the Boston Massacre, after the Stamp Act. The war was up and running, and this is after George Washington had been put in charge of the troops.
So it is factually illiterate to say this. And that is why, to use your term, it's not a good-faith kind of argument. It's tendentious, meretricious, and propagandistic.
Political scientist Morris Fiorina talks about the last 20 years, and possibly the next 20 years, as an era of no decision, similar to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. From a dogmatic libertarian point of view, I want to say, "Yeah, this is good, because it means neither party can really put their agenda in place."
But it also means that with every election, each flip of the switch, it seems the pendulum gets more and more extreme. Instead of settling in the middle, it's going out wider and wider. And it's a wrecking ball, it's not a pendulum.
Do you think the inability of us as a nation to find a political consensus—which we did, more or less, for the Cold War period, and even briefly in the 1990s, when the era of big government was over—is it destructive to not be able to fashion a governing consensus?
It can be, because what it does is it convinces the American people that elections don't matter. And what happens as a result of that is executive government. That is, Congress can go back and forth with narrow majorities on both sides. What really changes, what really infuses energy and action, is executive orders from the president.
Look what Joe Biden did in his first weeks in office: a flurry, a blizzard of executive orders. That is not healthy. I believe that the most alarming thing in American government is the modern presidency, which is essentially untethered from constitutional restraints. People say the presidents have usurped the powers of Congress. If only they'd had to usurp them! Congress hands away powers on a silver salver. It's so eager to get rid of them. They don't really pass laws anymore. They…say, "We really ought to have good education. You folks, over there in the Education Department, fill in the details."
So what you get is, to make this very timely, the Centers for Disease Control [and Prevention] says, "Well, OK, to control disease we're going to seize landlords' property and make them house tenants free, while they go on paying their mortgage, interest, taxes, etc."
Or to be even more timely: The president says, "Therefore, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is hereby directed to order 80 million private sector employees to be vaccinated." Two things wrong with that. Either Congress intended that, in which case the Supreme Court should step in and say that violates the nondelegation doctrine—that is, you have delegated to the executive branch, essentially, legislative powers. Or Congress did not intend that, in which case the statute's being misapplied.
I keep coming back to the fact, and a large chunk of my book is about this, that all that stands between us and even worse government than we normally have is the judicial branch. The president will not limit himself. Congress will not limit itself. Only the judiciary can police the outskirts of limited -government.
Let's talk about the Holocaust, because a number of the collected essays focus on a wide range of stories that continue to come out about the Holocaust that are haunting and important. What for you is the main message that we need to keep at the forefront, as we're going about all of our business, when looking back at this event?
Primo Levi, a Holocaust survivor and Italian, said, "It happened once; it can happen again." It didn't just happen once. It happened over and over again, in Rwanda and elsewhere. It happened in the Balkans.
But the Holocaust happened in Europe's most cultivated, highest-educated nation, Germany. And it happened so swiftly. A book that I read not long ago, called Hitler's First Hundred Days, really should be read. Because Hitler's first 100 days saw such an enormous and swift transformation of public attitudes. Just weeks after Hitler becomes chancellor, on the 30th of January 1933, mobs were walking through the streets beating Jews up. And people were walking past them. This was the new normal. How fast a new normal can insinuate itself into our lives. That's one of the lessons of the Holocaust.
In contemporary America, what are the analogs that have you worried? What mobs are we walking past that we should be stopping?
I think the fact that Mr. Trump's successful indoctrination of scores of millions of Americans with the belief that widespread voter fraud stole the 2020 election is a frightening example of how easy it is to change the consciousness of large swaths of the American people. No evidence for what he says. He doesn't really bother to provide evidence, or point to evidence, or suggest where the evidence is.
It's a little bit like the crazy people who got obsessed with the Kennedy assassination. And their argument was: Proof of how vast and thorough the conspiracy was is that there's no evidence left of it at all.
The Kennedy assassination comes up from time to time. And you mentioned in passing in one column that all the conspiracy theorists, they have to get [the shooter] Lee Harvey Oswald off the stage, so to speak, because he kind of confounds their theories. Not just for the conspiracy freaks, but for mainstream media. There's a column where you talk about how the response to Kennedy being killed from The New York Times and from the establishment media was, "No, it wasn't Lee Harvey Oswald who killed JFK. It was a climate of hate, it was right-wing people, etc."
He died at noon. In the morning after's New York Times—which means this story had to be written eight hours after he died—Scotty Reston, the revered bureau chief of The New York Times, in a front-page story, said he was killed by a climate of hate in Dallas. And so they had already said, "Goldwater did it," essentially.
Yeah. Climates of hate don't kill people. Ex-Marines who defected to the Soviet Union and won a couple of marksman badges kill people.
Or, as Jackie Kennedy said, "A little communist."
You have a couple of columns that deal with the Japanese internment camps. Or, more specifically, with people who either were or had their families interned, who then went on to fight, typically in Europe, because Japanese-American citizens whose families were in this country longer than my family has been in this country, were not allowed to fight in the Pacific.
What is the lesson that we can learn from people who were systematically and legally cut off from full participation in American society before being put in internment camps, and then go fight to help America? What does that tell us about an American story? And is that, in a way, a validation of a 1619 Project model of America as a horrible country, or is it a refutation of it?
Well, I think it refutes it. In the 1944 Korematsu decision, the Supreme Court, to its—I was going to say everlasting, but that's not true, because it corrected itself—to its shame, ratified the internment of these people, two-thirds of whom were American citizens, half of whom were women and children.
However, in 1983, I believe it was, the Supreme Court said, "We repudiate that decision." Reparations were paid, voted by Congress, which refutes the idea that Americans are too squeamish to look at the disagreeable parts of their past. But what the episode, to me, indicates is the dangers of executive power again. The ability of presidents wielding wartime power to pick up these powers is—to use the attorney general, then later justice, Robert Jackson's phrase—like a loaded gun sitting there on the table to be picked up.
When Gen. [John] DeWitt, who's really the villain of the piece, who was in charge of West Coast defense, said, "We have to do something about these potentially disloyal Japanese-Americans," people said, "Well, what evidence do you have?" He says, "It's very suspicious, because there's no evidence whatsoever. It shows you just how sinister that deep secret they're plotting is."
It makes QAnon seem like a responsible investigative conspiracy, because at least it's producing fake evidence.
It's the will to believe. If the people want to believe things, they will believe them. And again, this is a recurring problem in any society, but I think particularly in mass societies with mass communications that can cater to these delusions.
You said in a 2016 interview with Reason that if Trump succeeds, makes it into office, the Republican Party will be reduced to a husk. Where are you on that now? The Republican Party certainly took a shellacking in the 2020 presidential election. Along the way, it lost control of Congress (which it seems poised to retake, actually, or at least the House in 2022). But is the Republican Party reduced to a husk? And how long-lasting do you think the damage is that Donald Trump has inflicted on the Grand Old Party? How bad is it?
It's bad. It's not just a husk. It's not really, in the normal sense of the term, a political party, because it is entirely a cult of personality. And it's a cult of personality because most Republican office holders, at the national level at least, are frightened of their voters, which means they don't like their voters very much. And it means they don't respect their voters, because they think one tweet from Mar-a-Lago can sic 25 percent, 30 percent, 40 percent, depending on the constituency of these people, on the officeholder. So they're walking on eggshells at all times. They're desperately unhappy, because they don't feel that there's dignity to their position or their work right now.
And again, what is Trump's agenda? Might Trump run again in 2024? Yes, no, maybe. But what's he want? Build a wall? We've been down that road. It seems to me an entertainer really has to change his act, because the one thing Mr. Trump is beginning to look like is a one-trick pony. And I don't know what he says for an encore.
What about the Democratic Party? Joe Biden won, and won decisively. They took control of the House and then the Senate (clearly because of Trump's prolonged hissy fit from November through January). Yet they are also pretty fractious at this point. There is an insurgent group led by Bernie Sanders in the Senate and other people in the House who are even more progressive. And they, too, are riven by populism and by a kind of lack of coherence.
They're riven, but history is made by intense, compact -minorities.
Are you calling Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) a compact minority?
I'm saying that she and her squad, her cohort, have the energy in the Democratic Party. A lot of people are saying, "Gee whiz, I did not know Biden was this far left." He's not left. He's not a progressive. He's a Democrat. And he goes where his party goes, and his party is being pulled. Just, to be fair—if I will cite the man for whom I cast my first presidential vote—just as Barry Goldwater and his intense compact minority in the Republican Party pulled the party permanently to the right.
Here's the difference. In 1933, [President] Franklin Roosevelt set out to change the relationship of the citizen to the central government. And he did so, having won lopsided legislative majorities in the House and in the Senate. In 1965, Lyndon Johnson, having won a landslide victory against my man Goldwater, had lopsided majorities in the House and the Senate, and set out to complete, as he saw it, the New Deal agenda with Medicare and Medicaid and all the rest.
It's very different to do what Biden is doing. He's violating Jefferson's axiom, "Do not undertake great departures on slender majorities." The country didn't vote for this. The country doesn't want it. The country finds Modern Monetary Theory implausible—which is [the idea] that as long as the interest rate is lower than the rate of growth, you can borrow and spend forever, with an asterisk, because the economists say interest rates are going to remain low for the foreseeable future. And a Hayekian epistemic folly is being committed.
You remember that in May 2008, the foreseeable future didn't extend to September 2008, when Lehman Brothers and all the other unpleasantness happened.
The last column in the collection involves your assistant, Sarah Walton, whose husband graduated from a service academy in 1989 and was killed in Afghanistan in 2008. You talk about the sacrifice that both he and she gave.
You've been critical of American foreign policy, particularly the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. How do we grow up as a country so that we can honor people and their sacrifice—immense sacrifice—without incurring more of those sacrifices?
Well, first of all, you begin by saying that what they do is demonstrate valor. And once you value valor, you don't want it squandered. And we've had far too much squandered valor.
I think that the invasion of Iraq in 2003 is the worst foreign policy blunder in American history. I don't think we've paid even half the price of it in terms of difficulties down the road. Save your valor for causes that deserve it. And nation building—again, epistemic humility from Mr. Hayek—know what you know, and know what you can't know. And what you cannot know is nation building, because it's a phrase as preposterous as orchid building. Nations are like orchids. They are organic growths.
When we send to Afghanistan a general, I won't use his name, but a general who says, "We're going to bring government in a box for Afghanistan," we know you're about to squander valor.
You are 80 years old. You have children who range in age from being members of Gen X to being millennials. How do you reach younger people? America has always revered its young. It's always been scared of its young. But how do you reach younger people, to give them a sense of the scope and depth and breadth and meaning of history?
Make it interesting. And write well. There's nothing in the world more optional than reading a column, therefore it had better be fun. And it's not going to be fun if it's just rhetoric. The nicest compliment I can recall receiving was a fact-checker at the Washington Post Writers Group, which syndicates my column, saying until she became a fact-checker she had no idea how many facts there were in my columns. And that's what I want. I mean, it says the opinion page, but I want my column to be 95 percent stuffed with information.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity. For a podcast version, subscribe to The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.
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'Everyone's picking on me: the media, Hollywood, academia, etc.' The spray-tanned loud-mouth may have figured out early for a 'conservative,' that playing the grievance card pays off, but this does not show that 'news' media, hollywood, and academe were, and are not demonstrably arrayed against him. Trump gave focus to the hyperventilating left by providing them with a singular object for their cultural bogeyman, the white supremacist, misogynist, homophobe, transphobe, Islamophobe.
If Trump deployed the victimhood bomb, the left had already weaponized it and used it for decades, in everything from propaganda pamphlets to poison gas. The victim play is universally stupid, but especially retarded when used by rich, powerful people.
Poison gas? Can you explain the reference?
Caw caw!
https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/sealioning-internet-trolling
Sealioning is a harassment tactic by which a participant in a debate or online discussion pesters the other participant with disingenuous questions under the guise of sincerity, hoping to erode the patience or goodwill of the target to the point where they appear unreasonable.
Often, sealioning involves asking for evidence for even basic claims.
Cite? :p
Mike is either on the spectrum, or a persistent but mediocre troll. Or both.
No, I just was curious what you meant by “poison gas” in “in everything from propaganda pamphlets to poison gas”.
Agreed, coming from Trump, it was a risible tactic, but it played well,
i suspect, to a portion of the voting base. He seems markedly thin-skinned for a preening schmuck. Odd, given the trait also seems endemic to career politicians, bureaucrats and administrators, and 'the media, Hollywood, academia, etc.'
Everything Is So Terrible And Unfair(tm)
If you ain’t on the left you’re appropriating that. Double unfair. Haha.
That was the oddest take... The Obama administration literally used the FBI, CIA and the State department to spy on his campaign and set people up for prosecution for crimes they did not commit... And with the cooperation of the press they proceeded to use this to spend nearly 3 years trying to unseat him with a $35 million special prosecutor investigation and attempts to impeach him.
And you pretend that this is fake "they are picking on me" whining of a poor billionaire?
Sure, Trump played into it.... But when the federal government is *literally* out to get you, maybe you have a right to complain about it? He even has a state AG who ran for office on platform of using her office to persecute him, his family and any associated she could find.
But sure, he is only MSU for the ability to play the victim.
That is just a pathetic take.
The government is out to get people because, obviously, progressives are evil and live to make other people's lives miserable! You and Ken have completely lost the thread.
So what are you trying to pull here?
Are you claiming that Obama didn't employ the Director of the FBI, the Deputy Director of the FBI, the Chief of the Counterespionage Section of the FBI, the Director of the CIA, the Director of National Intelligence, and members of the Justice Department and the State Department to illegally gather dirt on members of the opposition political party in an effort to ensure his former Secretary of State won the Presidency?
Because not even he denies that.
And yes, you are evil sarc.
Sarc doesn’t care what they did to Trump because he deserves it, in sarc’s mind.
But he’s not tribal like we are.
Is the real sarc, or the better sarc?
That's exactly my point. As the adage goes, just because you're paranoid, it does not mean they're not out to get you. Trump playing the victim to card to his benefit did not diminish the fact that media, Hollywood, academia, were frothing at the mouth at the mere idea that he was in office. And they were using any and all tools and avenues to hinder policies even marginally associated with bad orange man. All while engaging in an ongoing, 2015 until now, tantrum and media blitz against Trump and his influence.
It's okay to play the victim card when you're in the middle of actually being victimized.
Trump is probably the only person in history impeached twice on evidence and testimony that completely exonerated him.
Arguing about the nature of the country is as American as frozen apple pie with a slice of processed cheese.
Who the Hell eats apple pie with cheese of any kind, processed or otherwise? Is that something The Tucker Inn does when they run out of Cool Whip Non-Dairy Whipped Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil?
Merry Christmas From Tucker Inn 1980 Cool Whip Commercial
https://youtu.be/k2RiSX70CpQ
Though fans of apple pie with cheese exist everywhere, they seem to be concentrated in the American Midwest, New England, and parts of Canada and Britain. - https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/cheese-apple-pie
To each their own, of course, but to me it sounds and prolly tastes as weird as those orange-shaped and -flavored chocolate balls.
It comes down to the same problem as always -- people argue so much over government because government controls so much. It is literally more profitable, in every sense of the word -- financially, emotionally, socially -- to sic government on everyone else before they sic government on you.
The only cure is less government, and that ain't gonna happen as long as government defines its own limits, with government judges interpreting the limiting legislation from Congress and the limiting regulations laid down by the executive.
Other notes: He complains about Trumpistas claiming the 2020 election was rigged. He forgets that Hillary has never admitted she lost 2016, the Hillaristas were every bit as strident about Trump stealing her election, and the Burn Loot Murder riots all spring and summer were a direct consequence of the Dems delegitimizing Trump's 2016 win.
He has a short memory. Iraq 2003 was not the worst foreign policy blunder in American history. The 1898 war with Spain was, because it begat imperialism overseas, with a blue water navy which had no purpose but expansion, imperialism, and taking the offense. It beats the 1847 war with Mexico, because that was just a continuation of the existing land expansion.
Hillary Clinton conceded the election to Trump just days after the election. Trump is still out claiming the election was stolen to this day.
When did she call it the most fair and untainted election ever?
She clearly hated conceding and was unhappy about it.
Is the bar that she has to be joyful about conceding? She doesn’t seem like a joyful person in general.
She literally cancelled her concession speech. Her advisors came out of the hotel the next morning and said "don't worry, we are going to impeach him"... 8 am the next morning.
Pretending that they accepted the results and moved on is a stupid way to lie.
Heck, they still claim Gore had the election stolen.
Mike lies.
But does he realize it?
Do you think that we all just fell off the turnip truck, and have no recollection of things that happened just five short years ago?
Who do you think you're tricking?
https://news.yahoo.com/hillary-clinton-maintains-2016-election-160716779.html
You don't read real news much do you, probably no time left for it after swallowing all the DNC bile.
Cool, you insulted me but didn’t actually make any counter-argument. That’s an indication you’ve got nothing.
For the trolls, insults are a counterargument.
Huh. You insulted me as a troll while arguing that only trolls use insults. Guess you were so busy insulting yourself I hadn't noticed earlier.
Haha sarc got busted as a hypocrite!
You seem to be unfamiliar with the concept of someone’s “starting it”. It’s a concept most people learn about in kindergarten.
Nobody was insulting anyone else until YOU chose to do so.
Your fake news was an insult to everybody. Try telling the truth for once, you might not get as many insults.
Fake news? I’ll provide a cite:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/nov/09/hillary-clinton-concedes-election-donald-trump-speech
“Hillary Clinton called on her supporters to accept the US election result on Wednesday, as she delivered a concession speech in New York in which she pressed Donald Trump to hold fast to American values.”
Sealion Mike and sarcasmic by their own confession:
sarcasmic
August.12.2021 at 4:45 pm
I only show up to watch the clowns duke it out while tossing in this or that provocation.
I stir shit up. So what.
Mike Laursen
September.18.2021 at 11:38 am
SQRLSY, can you cover for me today? In a typical day, I usually:
– post a comment or two pointing out logical flaws, contradictions and partisanship in Ken’s essays, which he regards as examples of flawless logical thinking
– post a comment or two pointing out that Ashli Babbitt was not a saint
– post one “Fuck Tulpa!” comment
Yesterday or the day before you threw out a half-assed passive-aggressive insult about disentangling something I wrote. I responded with an even more direct insult concerning your insult. You didn't respond, coward that you are, and won't respond to this one either in any reasonable fashion.
You haven't got a lick of common sense in your entire body, let alone your brain. Is that enough insult to drag a response out of you?
What a convincing and fact-based argument!
Anyway, you have yet again proven my point.
And you just admitted you didn't mute me.
Fucking idiot.
Haha sarc got busted as a liar!
That’s one of the fake sarcamsic accounts.
You would know all about that, since you did it to me.
OK, I’ll have to take your word for it. I’m not a coward, so the Occam’s Razor explanation is I never saw whatever I was supposed to respond to. That’s how it works with a comment section where people come and go at random times.
It’s odd you would bring up cowardice, anyway, since no conversation here truly requires courage. It’s a freegin’ chat room.
If you link to whatever you are talking about, I’ll respond.
Nobody except sarc has any respect for you Dee. And that’s just because he dislikes the same people that dislike you.
And as for no actual content, it was right there between the lines where everyone else understood it -- that you could only be unaware of Hillary's refusal to admit she lost if you were not following the news.
You're dumber than Hillary. See if you dare respond to my actual content.
The only thing more disturbing than your partisan screeds is your team based, partisan perspective on everything. Everyone is against you! Is it even possible at this point for you to put forth a sensible argument without invoking the latest fringe conspiracy theory?
Mute mute mute!!!!!
Guess not. Liar again.
Shall I triple dog dare you this time? What does it take to bribe you to keep me muted? Oh wait, you'd have to be trustworthy, sorry not sorry.
That’s Tulpa.
Let them keep chasing ghosts. The trolls keep each other entertained.
“Everyone is against you!”
Sarc said this. Really.
You are only fooling people I have already muted, Tulpa.
Enjoy the mean girls routine, because all I see is a bunch of gray lines.
Whenever he's not bragging about muting everyone so that all he sees is grey, sarcasmic whines about being muted:
sarcasmic
November.2.2021 at 10:19 am
Chumby does. Pretty sure he's a Mainer. But he's got me on mute. You know, virtue signaling to Ken. Can't listen to someone who takes people's words to their logical conclusion. Only a progressive would do that, right?
Please link to whatever you are taking about.
She conceded the election. Just days after she lost. That is an admission she lost.
This may surprise you, but Hillary Clinton lies. Constantly. Like her husband. Her concession was a lie, a formality crafted for propaganda purposes so that people like you can craft a narrative.
Afterwards, she went right back to not conceding, attacking the legitimacy of the president, and trying to orchestrate his ouster.
You claimed that Hillary Clinton accepted her loss, and that is clearly a lie. People pointed you to videos and news articles demonstrating that that is a lie.
How much more "counter-argument" do you want?
Leftists like Mike Laursen rig elections.
They are a virus, and an imminent threat to your family's safety.
I don't give a damn whether or not Hillary contested the 2016 election, I care that 2020 was a scam obvious to anyone who has any fucking value whatsoever.
FTA:
Apparently Will is a leftist as well. He doesn't buy the election conspiracy theory, and anyone who doesn't believe the election was stolen voted for Biden, right?
Nope. You’re a lying, drunken shitweasel though. You make up shrill strawman, and then play victim. Just crawl back in you bottle and hope your liver gives out soon. You’re a valueless liar who makes this country worse.
We don’t need that.
Neither does Erick Erickson, you child-abusing piece of shit.
Will is a self-aggrandizing opportunist. He will say whatever it takes to be part of the Washington elite.
The best thing to do with Will is to ignore him; his opinions are worthless.
Looks like Will doesn't have any value either, because he doesn't see the election to be a scam.
You should start writing him letters telling him to kill himself. That's what you do, right?
Just seems odd that "The worst foreign policy ever" did not make him rethink his party.
Nobody loves you, sarcasmic.
As you continue to degenerate into incoherence and conspiracy theories, perhaps you can serve as a mirror for people that have not yet crossed the line into complete partisan insanity. Although I would not be surprised to see Ken become the next Nardz, given that his rants these days are little more than emotional partisan bromides.
You know sarcasmic, everyone here can read Ken. We all know he's not the uberpartisan you're trying to make him out to be. And you know that too.
I realize that you're only trolling Ken to get headpats from Dee, but it's super-pathetic.
Hillary Clinton trotted out her acceptance speech just last week.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/66890686@N02/51770928505/in/dateposted-public/
She should have waited, the fraud proof was there, CROSSCHECK. It PURGED an astonishing 7,264,422 suspects, yet we found no more than four perpetrators who have been charged with double voting or deliberate double registration.
Trump victory margin in Michigan: 13,107
Michigan Crosscheck illegal purge list: 449,922
Trump victory margin in Arizona: 85,257
Arizona Crosscheck illegal purge list: 270,824
Trump victory margin in North Carolina: 177,008
North Carolina Crosscheck illegal purge list: 589,393
Virginia removed an astonishing 41,637 voters based on Kobach’s accusation they COULD have voted twice. Not one arrest.
"The only cure is less government"
WELL SAID....... It's *all* right there.
Donald Trump sort of perfected and became the avatar of crybaby conservatism. "Everyone's picking on me: the media, Hollywood, academia, etc."
Turns out that DoJ, DoD, State, most Bureaucrats in the Executive Branch, the DNC, many judges in the Federal Judiciary, the Legislative branch (both parties and their federal employees), and the majority of the press WERE picking on Mr. Trump*
*If you consider a coup d'etat being picked on.
AND
What mobs are we walking past that we should be stopping?
And he chooses the 2020 Election fraud and not the mostly peaceful BLM/Antifa/DNC/Diversity/Equity SUVs careening through crowds.
I like George Will's opinions well enough but he appears to suffer (still) from TDS.
George Will is an establishmentarian piece of shit whose role is controlled (occasional) "opposition" for the totalitarian left.
Because anybody that dares to be critical of Trump must be a left wing totalitarian. Right? Because everyone that is not Trump is pure evil? Did I get that right?
You should read his post again. Slower this time.
No.
Now fuck off you retarded, attention-whoring troll.
The Trump Administration did MORE de-regulating of the government than any Administration I remember prior..
Sooooo... Yes; MOST de-stain of Trump is either based in pathetic emotions of 'fitting in' or disgust of not being for totalitarianism.
sarcastic. Loves you, sarcasmic.
*nobody loves you, sarcasmic.
No, not at all.
AOC is a left wing totalitarian but not an establishmentarian piece of shit.
George Will is an establishmentarian piece of shit but not a left wing totalitarian.
They overlap only in that neither of them gives a f*ck about liberty, prosperity, peace, or justice, and that both of them are motivated by power and money.
I see immanetizing the scatology is still with us... But AOC and GOP are, indeed, essentially the same. Altruism instructs each differently as to whom needs threatening at gunpoint, and why that serves "the Common Good over the Individual Good." But the pressing need to point guns and bark out orders is the fundamental thing both brands of coercive collectivist share as their important common feature (or bug).
Guess you cannot be a crybaby conservative President without crybaby conservative supporters.
You like to insult people on the sly for insulting you directly.
You are a fucking coward who thinks cowardly insults are clever.
Proving the point yet again the trolls only understand insults, and are incapable of exchanging ideas in good faith.
Nice of you to respond to people I have on mute.
It never gets old does it, Tulpa? Very mature, and oh so clever. What are you going to do next? Hack my bank account?
Nope, never gets old. Whatever game your mind is playing with itself, I enjoy it.
That’s Tulpa.
Here's something you could do -- exercise some restraint. Don't respond to yourself. Mute yourself.
Be clever. Think for a change.
That’s also Tulpa.
I do not even bother anymore. There are better things to do. You are satisfying the trolls by even engaging, which is exactly what Tulpa wants.
Let the morons chase their own shadows.
Good for you sarc, for finding a bank that lets you keep an account with no balance.
Judging by the army of gray lines, I can tell the trolls are really enjoying Tulpa's childish behavior, which goes to prove my point that this website has been hijacked by right wing morons. It's a shame.
Time to post the list, sarcasmic.
WE WANT THE LIST!
I’m the worst.
You are one of several commenters here who only show concern for rude behavior when it is directed against right-wing commenters.
1. That’s you for the left.
2. He was also pointing out that your insults are on the sly.
Why did Overt mute you again?
Trump and his supporters are in a symbiotic relationship. They feed each other egos in exchanging for sacrificing their integrity. Anybody that is not with them, is against them. It's sad.
And yet just yesterday sarcasmic was mad at Trump supporters because they booed Trump on the vaccine.
It's almost like this troll can't remember anything from even hours earlier and the same thread.
None of that exists. You leftists are crybabies. Mainly because you’re all a bunch of pussies. Kyle Rittenhouse proved that last year. So best you learn you place.
The most important, and perhaps unique, foundational principle in the design of the United States was the concept of limited government, specifically to maximize individual liberty. Every bit of legislated and regulatory growth since then, with rare exceptions, has defied this principle, with plenty of authoritarian expansion from left, right, and center.
We might expect ideologues to seek and impose power, but perhaps even average, politically detached people incline towards rules. Are we just incapable of living with uncertainty?
To state the obvious, in a nation of 300 million people there is a wide spectrum of desire for security/certainty vs liberty.
Even the same person can change their views depending on their youthful confidence vs aging vulnerability, or lack of experience vs, say, having the experience of trying to run a business.
There really isn’t a homogenous “we”.
True. There are a lot of soulless Marxist trash like you that believe you can give away MY liberty. This erroneous belief will be corrected.
Maybe Loki was right:
“Is not this simpler? Is this not your natural state? It’s the unspoken truth of humanity that you crave subjugation. The bright lure of freedom diminishes your life’s joy in a mad scramble for power. For identity. You were made to be ruled. In the end, you will always kneel.”
Most people talk warmly about liberty until they're scared of what others do with their liberty. COVID fearmongering has really highlighted that. Safest and most effective vaccine ever!!! But I need the government to force everybody to get it and fuck your freedoms. - Tony, Joe Friday, White Mike, etc...
Nick: What mob on the street is being ignored?
Will: Orange Man Bad
Personally, I’m a little more concerned with the actual, weekly, political violence that occurred with little consequence throughout all of 2020. It might even lead to record violence throughout the country.
But that was mostly peaceful violence, endorsed by our elites (and with cosplay opportunities for their kids).
The American violence records were mostly set in 1863.
Touché
I think the fact that Mr. Trump's successful indoctrination of scores of millions of Americans with the belief that widespread voter fraud stole the 2020 election is a frightening example of how easy it is to change the consciousness of large swaths of the American people. No evidence for what he says. He doesn't really bother to provide evidence, or point to evidence, or suggest where the evidence is.
Speaking of successful indoctrination, any analyses on the dollar-for-dollar comparison of resources expended investigating Russian Collusion to electoral fraud? I'll even give Russian Collusion dollars the benefit of the doubt by ignoring the up-front costs incurred by the FBI and DNC spent generating/acquiring the Steele Dossier.
Evidence?…… Apparently over 80 million people voted for the current vegetable in chief in 2020, joe “I wrote the damn crime bill” Biden, and the SJWs threatened to riot (more) if this asshole LOST.
Circumstantial I know, but a bizarre abandonment of stated principles at the least.
The title confirms my fear about him: that all this time, he's just been contrary.
Not really. Contrary within acceptable boundaries.
I must say I agree with everything Will said. Dude's on point.
Of course you do. They're all the same opinions that you got from CNN.
Agreed.
Idiot.
Pretty much. The Republican Part is now the Trump Party, because he can mobilize his base against elected members of the GOP with a simple tweet.
Scary.
i didnt think twitter was allowing the former president of the united states to tweet
It’s amazing isn’t it?
It’s awesome. Now we can drive the RINOs out. You won’t like that. I’m sure you’re a huge fan of Liz Cheney and Mitt Romney.
Why shouldn't he? Who else is showing any leadership in the GOP? He deserves to lead.
ROFLMAO!
Will: They're desperately unhappy because they can't defy 25, 30, or 40% of their own electorate with dignity/impunity.
This is beyond even Mel Brooks' parody, "Fuck black people, these men's phony-baloney jobs are important to them!"
Seems a real shame that a party is having difficulty dealing with the reality that the VOTERS, who they allegedly represent, do not like or trust them. Don't they know the elected officials are their fucking BETTERS?
Maybe. The monster he created may be slipping from his control, though.
Nah. You’re just an idiot. Like the way you’re not the least bit concerned about antifa, and their rapes, murders, billions on property damage, etc..
You’re such a fool.
I think the fact that Mr. Trump's successful indoctrination of scores of millions of Americans with the belief that widespread voter fraud stole the 2020 election is a frightening example of how easy it is to change the consciousness of large swaths of the American people. No evidence for what he says. He doesn't really bother to provide evidence, or point to evidence, or suggest where the evidence is.
LOL - where's the proof that it was Trump that did all this? Can you provide evidence of your charge?
Sure, it was that fucker Trump that climbed into my head and convinced me with no evidence whatsoever that the election was rigged. Despite the fact that I've listened to Trump as much as I listen to Biden - both of them are so full of shit and tell such fantastical lies that you can't believe a word they say. Despite the fact that there were so many abnormalities in the 2020 election, including illegal changes to the election procedures that just so happened made it easier to commit fraud and including the fact that supposedly Joe Biden was the most popular President in American history.
Sure, it was Trump that also convinced me you can't trust Our Most Sacred Institutions of Democracy™, including the the media, Hollywood, academia, etc. - you know, all those things that Trump is being a crybaby over - because they're all full of lying shitweasels who want to fundamentally transform the United States into a fascist dictatorship. You know, you're quite the crybaby yourself, whining about the 1619 project and the media putting out false narratives. What's the problem, George? You don't trust these people? You seem to be claiming, without evidence, that these people have bad intentions. Where's your proof, George? Where's the evidence?
Oh, and by the way, "one tweet from Mar-a-Lago can sic 25 percent, 30 percent, 40 percent, depending on the constituency of these people, on the officeholder"? I guess you haven't heard - Trump got kicked off of Twitter, he ain't tweeting anybody you jackass.
George Will cannot believe his lying eyes. TBH, anybody that watch the election and isn't suspicious is a cuck. And instead of there being transparency about investigating the questionable elections, Democrats have fought every effort. A reasonable person may ask, if the process was legit, why fight an audit or more transparency?
Let's not pretend for one fucking minute if the circumstances were reversed, the media and Dems would have been howling until investigations were done.
Send everybody home except a few Republicans. We're all done counting tonight. But then 100k + votes get counted after that point at 96-97% clip for Donald Trump. And, no audit trail for those votes. You think the media, Dems and libtards would accept this scenario? If yes, you're a lying, partisan cuck. (Queue Mike and Joe to defend. 3, 2, 1...)
Here we go again. Tulpa's figured out how to spoof screen names again.
You win. I'm not dealing with this. Keep posting as me. I don't care anymore.
If anyone cares (which I doubt) mute me and a bunch of sarcasmic posts remain. That's because it's a different account.
Anybody that wanted to mute me, has already muted me. So, by trying to convince people to mute me, you are not achieving anything. But, by all means, please keep wasting your time.
We could tell. He’s not as much of a weasel as you are.
Go to democratic underground and post your autistic scribblings there.
There are at least two fake accounts.
The sick part of it all is that he has probably been doing this for months, with god knows how many sock accounts, which explains why even after a weekend of not posting a single comment I get attacked for things I did not say.
Let them tire themselves out with their immature routine. Trolls have endless energy. The rest of us have lives.
Poor sarc.
Nobody loves sarc.
I blame the other R Mac for this comment.
We believe you!
It really is pathetic the degree to which Tulpa is willing to attempt to impersonate me. So convincing! Too bad there is a simple way to tell the difference.
Too bad there is a simple way to prove your doppelganger is a doppelganger -- stop responding! Mute it! Mute yourself!
You are responding to Tulpa.
Let them.
Tulpa gets a kick out of these childish antics, and the mean girl squad will waste their days chasing a phantom pretending to me. I do not read their trolling comments. Let them waste their time.
You _are_ Tulpa.
You should deny us your wisdom. That would be quite a punishment.
Both of you are frauds. Everyone knows the real sarcastrated trumped off to Glibertarians months ago.
^ This.
The real sarcasmic swore back in spring that he was leaving for Glibertarians and never coming back. They both are fake.
Poor sarc.
If that is Tulpa, Tulpa is mentally ill. There's no point trying to win. Just be glad you're not him or his immediate family.
Agree.
I’m definitely glad I’m not you.
Shorter version:
Defend the Establishment, within normal parameters, have a long career as an opinion columnist.
Where there’s a Will, there’s a way.
George Will continues to make a fool of himself by falsely portraying himself as a Conservative libertarian, while repeatedly lying about and demonizing Trump (the most libertarian president since Cal Coolidge) since he began his successful 2016 campaign against Hillary.
Similar to Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, Jonah Goldberg, Peggy Noonan, Bill Kristol and Reason's Jacob Sullum, George Will has been suffering from an extremely severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome, which has no known cure for those whose hatred for Trump has trumped their objectivity.
"whose hatred for Trump has trumped their objectivity."
I see what you did there.
"Similar to Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, Jonah Goldberg, Peggy Noonan, Bill Kristol and Reason's Jacob Sullum, George Will has been suffering from an extremely severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome"
Basically a neocon and corporatist purge.
Trump was the best thing to happen to the Republican party.
Trump was a libertarian in the way a buzzsaw is an eating utensil.
Trump wasn't libertarian, but he was still the most libertarian president since Coolidge.
You know who else isn't libertarian? You.
Tony is a totalitarian.
The Indoctrination of America was Trump's fault! Obama *earned* that Peace Prize!
I blame Rupert Murdoch.
So many evil geezers, not enough cardiac arrests.
How about Soros and his new internet censorship gambit?
Or is that different?
And why don’t we ever hear complaints about Soros’ ties to over 30 major news organizations?
Good. Finally someone's doing something about it.
The internet was invented, then lies and misinformation that actually affect the outcomes of elections and the freedom of billions of people spread on it.
You'd think something should be done about it too if you weren't such a sad victim of every right-wing lie to get crapped onto Facebook.
To the surprise of no one, tony
supports a nazi fuck bag.
Democrats believe a lot of bullshit and they vote accordingly.
They believed that Trump committed crimes with Russia concerning the 2016 election, that the Mueller investigation proved it, and the only reason he wasn’t prosecuted was because he was a sitting president, even though, if true, he would have been immediately ready for the charges for almost a year now.
They think the summer 2020 riots were mostly peaceful even though they were the most damaging riots in US history.
They think BLM isn’t a communist institution, when it is. https://mobile.twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1462177628580941828
Or it’s just a movement followed by useful idiots, maybe? https://nypost.com/2021/04/10/marxist-blm-leader-buys-1-4-million-home-in-ritzy-la-enclave/amp/
They believe that inflation is impossible in the US, unless it happens, in which case, it’s temporary , unless it’s not temporary, in which case, it’s good!, but also, caused by rich peoples’ greed.
They clap for Elizabeth Warren, a rich person completely supported by tax dollars who pays no taxes, as she calls Elon Musk, who pays more taxes than any person in history and started multiple successful companies by himself, a “freeloader.”
They believe property rights are a myth, but equality is real. Basically, in general, any narrative they like is true because everything’s subjective to them, yet they whine about “misinformation”: apparently, the Lost Cause has to be wrong, but individualism is racist because they say so. Sure, if you’re a child.
Similarly, property rights are a myth, but equality is real, even though no one’s an equal and even the native Americans had words for “mine.”
They believe communism is idealistic, even though communists viciously raped and murdered millions of people just for being slightly more successful and making others feel bad about their own accomplishments, an impulse they persist in fostering to this day.
They think CRT isn’t part of the curriculum no matter how much evidence there is it’s part of the curriculum, but, it completely should be in the curriculum, because it’s totally awesome (even though it’s not!)
They think January 6 was an organized insurrection even though no one has been charged with insurrection, and no investigation can find any evidence of it.
I could go on and on.
Please don't, you'll hurt yourself.
If you deny climate change is real or that Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election, you're worse than any of the nonsense you listed by orders of magnitude of bad. You're a threat to human existence itself.
Go fuck yourself and merry Christmas. Also, link me where CRT is being taught in elementary schools.
I blame Rupert Murdoch.
Rupert Murdoch gave Obama the Nobel Peace Prize?
George F. Will
and
F Joe Biden
Republicans Pounce! Will misses the old days when they Flounced. He's also from Chicago, he must have his head up his ass if he thinks voter fraud doesn't exist. Next time, Nick, ask him who he voted for in 2016 and 2020.
There's no doubt who he voted for. His home team - the Democrats!
You don't get to write for the Washington Post for almost 50 years without being on Team Establishment, and you don't get a gig with MSNBC without being on Team (D).
Are you calling Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.) a compact minority?
OK, THAT was a good joke Mr Gillespie.
Biden's policies may be ambitious, but they are not unpopular. The slim majorities in Congress belie the actual political positioning of the American people, who are saddled with a government absurdly biased toward rural citizens.
If someone can explain to me why an Idahoan deserves 60 times the representation in government that a Californian gets, they haven't yet.
Try reading Federalist 62.
Pretty sure Idaho wasn't a thing when that was written.
So you didn’t read it.
Like he ever would. Tony is proudly ignorant. On top of being kind of dumb. He stall has that progtard arrogance though.
Delaware was, though.
If you are talking about the Senate, the original idea is they are representing the state.
Specifically, states with smaller populations that wanted to preserve slavery against the will of the actual people. So much principle!
Umm... no. The slave states weren't remotely everyone. You can't actually into history, can you.
Do you people need to pretend that slavery wasn't a major issue for young America because it makes you feel icky in your tum tum?
You're practically fascists anyway, you might as well just say what you want to be done to minorities today.
Watched the old musical, 1776, recently. There was actual a whole musical number explaining that slavery was a major issue for young America.
That musical alone is enough to clue people in to the fact that the founders disagreed about stuff. Every time I read the history I come across a new thing, a new constitutional provision for example, for which there was passionate disagreement. Each phrase of the First Amendment itself had partisans on either side.
I don't trash the Enlightenment like some leftists do, but the whole point of that endeavor, and every single man considered a founding father would say so, is that they were not demigods with all the right ideas set in stone. They'd be offended by people who worship them centuries later.
You're practically fascists anyway, you might as well just say what you want to be done to minorities today.
Says the guy defending George "The representatives have a sad because they can't just ignore 40% of their constituency." Will.
Keep living in the past, tony. That’s where your diminishing victim status resides, and it clearly makes you bitter.
It's interesting to me how you keep ascribing a victim mentality to me, someone who's rarely complained about discrimination or such, while out of the other side of your face you're going to talk about the Soros Democrat Jew conspiracy that's stealing all your bitcoin or what the fuck ever.
There's one consolidated voice coming from the right, and it's not a good look: The only real victims are white, straight males.
You can read all about it in Mein Kampf.
I'm not going to unmute whatever 50 centers I have muted between here and there, but how the hell a discussion starting with noticing a joke about a petite Puerto Rican congresswoman being a compact minority work its way around to slave states?
Geez fuck professional internet trolls are a goddamned blight on society.
Those states with smaller populations couldn't impose their will on the nation, since new laws needed to originate in the House, which has roughly proportional representation.
For example, both the House and the Senate had a Democratic majority when the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was passed. Without that act, slavery would have effectively ended. This wasn't a case of "small states imposing their will on big states", it was a case of a party that favored racism and slavery, namely the Democrats, representing both the majority of states and the majority of people.
The Fugitive Slave Act was a compromise between Southern slavers and Northerners opposed to the expansion of slavery. It was one of many compromises made over slavery, including aspects of the US constitution, that did little to either end slavery or the polarization around it, unfortunately leading to the Civil War, which decided the matter.
I'd think it's more instructive to refer to slaver interests vs. anti-slaver interests in this context since the Democrats and Republicans of today don't resemble the Democrats and Republicans of the 1860s. They don't even resemble the Democrats and Republicans of the early 2000s.
Your incredibly tedious attempt to saddle modern Democrats with the institution of slavery is what we call projection. You're trying to cover for the fact that you are on the team currently shrieking hysterically over any modern project aimed at promoting black civil rights.
I care about what you do now, not what labels were attached to people 150 years dead.
Madison:
Clear enough?
Yes, it was clear that Madison was giving a half-hearted defense of the equal representation for each state in the Senate. That his defense of it is not based on any political theory, but on simple pragmatism that the smaller states insisted on it, and that the Constitution likely wouldn't have been ratified without it.
The Constitution was not creating a nation that was "independent and sovereign states bound together by a simple league". The point of starting from scratch rather than making reforms to the Articles of Confederation was that "a simple league" wasn't working. A stronger federal government was needed to hold the country together and just to carry out basic functions that a national government needed to be able to do.
The best thing about George Will is his regular column in the Washington Post, which generally manages to raise the collective blood pressure of the Progressive readership there. I wonder how many he’s seen off due to heart attacks and strokes.
Hardly any. He's just the loyal opposition to them.
Someone standing atop the bulwarks shouting "Lets think this over first" at the incoming tide.
Read a George Will editorial in the Post, then read the comments if you want a picture book definition of ad hominem. The Progs can’t refute him, so all they can do is resort to personal insult.
He should also raise the collective blood pressure of conservatives and libertarians, since George Will is the poster boy for why both ideologies have failed: a pompous intellectual who fails to reach people.
...George Will is the poster boy for why both ideologies have failed: a pompous intellectual who fails to reach people.
Totally. To reach people, you need to appeal to their emotions, not their reason. Give them something to fear, someone to hate, and someone to feel superior to, so that they can feel better about themselves. Especially pompous intellectuals for that last one.
George Will is a self-aggrandizing pompous ass. I couldn't care less what he has to say about anything.
Back in SDI v. Freeze days I listened to Wills' interview with Edward Teller, also the one with Oswald Mosley. What I distinctly remember from somewhere is a cartoon pushing a different looter faction. It pictorially urged the brainwashee to admit to "not understanding a word" of what Wills was saying. This Orwellian piece came complete with a cartoon of an oaf puzzling at a teevee screen.
Thanks for promoting the neo-con establishment POS. Tells me who you really are.
According to George Will, Republican officeholders “are frightened”, “don’t like” and “don’t respect” their voters. Seems to me one that one or the other has to go, either the Republican officeholders, or their voters. Any bet as to which ones go?
As to George Will, it turns out that the one person who understood him the best was Garry Trudeau, the creator of Doonesbury, who 40 years ago mocked and ridiculed a young Reagan hanger-on who hired people to look up big words for him.
Seems to me one that one or the other has to go, either the Republican officeholders, or their voters.
Why? Republicans seem to be doing a decent job at holding onto those voters despite their fear, contempt, and lack of respect for them. That is the power of appealing to their base emotions rather than their reason, I think.
Wills was the original coiner of "immanetizing the eschaton," according to a redneck journalist editorial griping about big woids. When Mangu was joking about that I had no idea what was so funny. But yeah... kind of a Father Coughlin 2.0.
George Wills still gets a “Gott Mit Uns” into the first paragraph...
I assume that you are referring to this: "It's been well said that the essence of the Bible reduced to one sentence is, "God created man and woman and promptly lost control of events.""
If that is "well said," then it contradicts fundamental Christian theology. God, being all-powerful and all-knowing, can't lose "control" of anything. Perhaps then, what is well said about it is that it exposes the contradictions inherent in believing in a supremely good and yet all-powerful God.
I see immanetizing the eschaton still holds its attraction for mystics. If more of that means less banning of all voluntary pursuit of happiness, it might not be such a bad thing.
Republican politicians are playing this game where they have to pander to the drooling masses because otherwise the drooling masses will primary them and elect someone even crazier. It's an inmates/asylum situation.
Now we see Boebert, Taylor-Greene, and others are breaking through, with utter American trash entering the halls of Congress, embarrassing everyone concerned.
It was a failed strategy, because the compromises they've had to make are putting even formerly dignified politicians on the side of traitors and neo-Nazis. The only morally defensible position to take is to abandon the Republican party and help kill it. To vote for Democrats, to pass laws that realign representation with the population (which thankfully is not blowing the way of the fascists).
But they still, in their heart, think liberals are evil, undoubtedly using the motivated reasoning of their benefactors for whom the biggest threat in life is a tax bill. And there's the simple sweet deliciousness of power.
The interesting thing happening in the last couple days is watching Trump break with his own cultists (he never, ever respected them, as they should well know) because they are trashing his one actual accomplishment, the vaccine.
I believe that Trump is an orange herring, and like with all cultists, his leadership matters less than their own belief structure. Cult belief is not first about worshiping a guy, it's about the need to avoid being humiliated by being proved wrong in front of everyone. And they went all-in on the vaccine conspiracy. It's more motivating than Trump.
They'll dump Trump and latch onto the next craziest person who tells them they're right about everything and feeds their victim mentality.
My annoyance is that it is now my problem that so many countrymen have to be forced out of a cult, a painful, destructive process, when this country so many other things it could be doing.
And Democrats pander to your kind, proving that there are drooling masses on both sides of the political spectrum.
To be fair, lots of people pretend to be libertarians.
Every few years he changes what he pretends to be, so now he admits it: He loves to argue.
George Will is an elitist. He's good about talking kindly towards everybody's rights and mutual respect, but he's a big government statist; through and through. If George wonders why Trump came to power, he needs to look into the mirror. It's establishment Republicans like George Will, John McCain, Mitt Romney, etc; that made a Trump presidency possible.
Maybe insert the steps about burning books and witches, and cognitive dissonance relating to one's/the in-group's bigotry versus claims of egalitarianism.
To be fair, Democrats haven't been advocating communism for decades; like Hitler and Mussolini they keep most of the communist ideology (anti-capitalism, collectivism), but figured out that exploiting racial divisions is a better strategy. In other words, Democrats are basically fascists.
He should join the Reason commentariat. If he isn’t here already.
Isn't it amazing how a technology-impaired 80-year-old millionaire elitist still has his finger on the pulse of the TikTok generation.
Is the "dumb" party a step up or down from the "stupid" party? The GOP hasn't been for small government since Nixon got elected.
Because there's nothing big government or statist about building a giant vanity wall along the Rio Grande.
Mic drop after that one Chumby!
building a giant vanity wall
Of course! What other possible purpose could a large border fence serve other than "vanity"?
That's some deep thinking, Tony.
But it's not small government.
A small government doesn’t need a wall. End the existing welfare state. Open all borders.
That's not technically true, every 2 years there are large portions of the party that proclaim a commitment to small government. The fact that tends to only apply from end of one Congress to the swearing in of the next is pure coincidence.
Wow, I don't watch TV, but that was really sickening.
"Corrupt human tornado" describes the Clintons perfectly. Projection.