The Strategic yet Self-Defeating Hyperbole of 'Democracy in Peril' Journalism
As awful as things are, Trump is not Milošević, Republicans are not unified behind him, Stacey Abrams is not a hero, and every day is not January 6.

It's hard enough on a normal day to avoid the phrase "January 6" when watching CNN or listening to NPR for more than about 30 seconds, but now that we've reached the one-year anniversary of that harrowing riot at the Capitol, the media air is thick to the point of suffocation with claims that the nation "now teeters on the brink of a widening abyss," driven there by a major political party whose "unofficial litmus test" is believing falsely that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
So perhaps amid the daylong doomsaying for democracy, it's worth pausing on three less-ballyhooed news headlines from January 5: "GOP officials in Arizona's largest county affirm 2020 election was secure in rebuttal to Trump claims" (The Washington Post), "Senate Republicans open door to revising obscure 1887 law to protect elections" (NBC News), and (from The Union Journal), "Liz Cheney Says Donald Trump Unfit For Holding Any Future Office."
Reading the hundreds of thousands of recently published words about how "American democracy is more threatened than at any point in our lifetimes" (as posited by The Washington Post's Paul Waldman), it can be hard to square such evidence of Republican deviation from the "big lie" with the media's workaday portrayal of a unified GOP hellbent on doing the authoritarian bidding of former President Donald Trump.
"With Trump loyalists ascendant, no room is left for dissent in a party now fully devoted to twisting the electoral system for the former president," Barton Gellman wrote in a much-praised, 13,500-word cover story for The Atlantic titled "Trump's Next Coup Has Already Begun." Elected Republicans, Gellman asserted, have over the past year given the former president a "near-unanimous embrace," with Trump compelling "the whole party's genuflection to the Big Lie."
Gellman is not a journalistic outlier in hyperbolically maximizing the GOP's obedience to the 45th president. The Washington Post yesterday, in an article headlined "How Republicans became the party of Trump's election lie after Jan. 6," included this odd formulation: "Of the 32 candidates identified so far by the [GOP] 'Young Guns' program as having promise in the 2022 cycle, at least 12 have embraced the new Republican orthodoxy that fraud tainted the 2020 election." One would normally expect an "orthodoxy" to clock a higher percentage than George McGovern in 1972.
You would think that the facts of Republican capitulations to Trump and his conspiracy-believing fans—beginning with the 139 House members and eight senators who one year ago today shamefully voted against certifying a free and fair presidential election—would be journalistically sufficient. As would acknowledging the existence of the 42 GOP senators and 67 House members who did not vote Trump's way, in addition to legions of state and local Republican election officials who acted with integrity, and the dozens of Republican-appointed judges who swatted down the lame-duck president's Mickey Mouse election-challenging lawsuits.
But that is an increasingly naive understanding of how prestigious news organizations view their own role in this era of heightened "moral clarity" and eternally imperiled democracy. As Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan implored her colleagues earlier this week, "If American democracy is going to survive," then media outlets need to make "democracy-under-siege a central focus of the work they present to the public," and then "shout it from the rooftops. Before it's too late." No more of that equivocating, both-sides stuff; go straight to the democracy siren.
But what happens when journalism drops even the pretense of trying to understand opposing points of view? One important and inevitable development, one that is guaranteed to affect political coverage in this midterm year, is that most nuance about competing factionalism within the GOP will be collapsed into a Trump monolith, the better to be dismissed and opposed en bloc.
One of the sufficiently alarmist pieces that Sullivan hailed was a New York Times New Year's editorial with the five-alarm headline (or was it editorial threat?) of "Every Day Is Jan. 6 Now." In it, the newspaper of record gives all good citizens our marching orders: Vote Democrat, or else:
The Republic faces an existential threat from a movement that is openly contemptuous of democracy and has shown that it is willing to use violence to achieve its ends. No self-governing society can survive such a threat by denying that it exists….
In the months and years to come, Americans of all stripes who value their self-government must mobilize at every level — not simply once every four years but today and tomorrow and the next day — to win elections and help protect the basic functions of democracy.
This rather startling decree alas did not go far enough for another commentator approvingly cited by Sullivan, Georgetown visiting professor Thomas Zimmer, who complained that the Times "is often complicit in obscuring the anti-democratic radicalization of the Republican Party and the acute threat to American democracy emanating from the Right," evidence for which includes "regularly providing a platform to people whose sole purpose is to uphold traditional hierarchies, launder rightwing talking points, and legitimize the reactionary counter-mobilization against multiracial pluralism." (By which Zimmer meant anti-Trump conservative Bret Stephens.)
If every day is January 6, and every Republican a Trumpite (dedicated to, in Zimmer's words, the "underlying political project of entrenching white Christian patriarchal dominance by establishing one-party-rule systems"), then we know what to do: Oppose every Republican, everywhere, in every election, regardless of whether it has anything to do with Trump or the "big lie."
"Because 2022 is the first midterm of a presidential term and so the opposition party is likely to win a major victory anyway, the outcome may not be greeted with an explosion of violence," Waldman wrote, trying to sound (in his words) optimistic. "On the other hand, that victory will enable 'respectable' portions of the GOP to proceed in their effort to make fair elections a memory, as they take control of more and more of the apparatus of voting to ensure that Republicans can never lose."
Tabling for a moment those attempts to change voting laws and election officials—which are real, ongoing, and disturbing—think of the practical import of Waldman's words, on both politics and journalism. It will become a moral imperative for certain journalists and news organizations to label nearly every Republican candidate who is not explicitly anti-Trump as at least a quiescent participant in the Trump-led destruction of democracy, and portray their election as being a referendum on that issue, regardless of its salience in a given campaign.
This is a recipe for ineffective politics and godawful journalism, as even a cursory glance at the November Virginia gubernatorial race should remind us. Democratic favorite Terry McAuliffe tried desperately to call Republican Glenn Youngkin a Trump "surrogate" and "racist," and too many in the media were eager to believe that a state which voted Democrat the past four presidential elections was suddenly undergoing a spasm of "white backlash." Turns out voters were more motivated by education policy than whatever national political journalists imagined was dying in darkness.
If you drill down into the democracy-in-peril beat, and successfully make it past overheated nonsenses such as Gellman's 1,866-word section probing how Trump might be "just like [Slobodan] Milošević," you get to four concretely worrying (at least to me) trends:
1) Trump, despite his wretched actions a year ago and characteristic lying since, is still by far the most popular and important figure in GOP politics. 2) Partly because of the former president's ongoing insistence that 2+2=5, a majority of Republicans believe the fiction that President Joe Biden's victory was illegitimate, which incentivizes GOP politicians to act on that fantasy. 3) Republicans are attempting to (sometimes successfully) change election laws in such a way to make results more vulnerable to political pressure. And 4) Trump is trying to get his people installed in key election-tabulating positions on the state level. These are not good trends!
And yet it's awfully hard to sort through and trust even the in-depth news coverage of these developments. For instance, take this (Sullivan-praised) Associated Press article, "'Slow-motion insurrection': How GOP seizes election power." "Republicans are taking hold of the once-overlooked machinery of elections," we learn, with activity (changing personnel, conducting audits) in the battleground states of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. "This time, experts argue, is different: Never in the country's modern history has a major party sought to turn the administration of elections into an explicitly partisan act."
I am an eager audience for such scaremongering, alarmed as I was by the way the then-president abused the machinery of the Republican National Committee to gratuitously cancel state presidential primaries in 2020. Yet I also crave a sense of context and proportion, so I can calibrate the outrage accordingly. Is this stuff really unprecedented?
Er, no.
"In anticipation of a photo-finish presidential election," Politico reported in November 2008, without a single democracy-in-peril siren, "Democrats have built an administrative firewall designed to protect their electoral interests in five of the most important battleground states. The bulwark consists of control of secretary of state offices in five key states—Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico and Ohio—where the difference between victory and defeat in the 2004 presidential election was no more than 120,000 votes in any one of them."
Since I can already hear the accusations of bothsidesism hurtling toward my ears, here's a quick pre-buttal: I don't know if the "Secretary of State Project," as this George Soros–funded (no, really!) initiative was called, was directly comparable in scope and potential nefariousness to what the Trumpies are doing now. But I do know that I prefer knowing it was a thing than simply swallowing the journalistic onesideism whole.
By omitting helpful and complicating context, maximizing scary adjectives, and browbeating Democrats to do more ("they have so far failed to confront the urgency of this moment—unwilling or unable to take action to protect elections from subversion and sabotage," the Times editorial board complained), news organizations are contributing to the suspicion that they are not honest brokers in these very real and problematic warring interpretations of events.
Margaret Sullivan, for example, takes as axiomatic that former Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate and voting rights activist Stacey Abrams is a "hero," even though Abrams never conceded defeat in her controversial 2018 election, and has spread misinformation about voting laws in Georgia. Paeans to universal democratic values are considerably more convincing when applied universally.
Lopsided media hyperbole about the erosion of democracy is not remotely the most important story about January 6; far from it. America is beset by ongoing problems of populism, political violence, and whackaloonery, and it's an ongoing disgrace that a significant chunk of a major political party still indulges in the pathologies that contributed to last year's traumatic riot and disrupted the transfer of power.
But the road back from that insanity is not going to be built best by erasing the existence of non-Trumpy Republicans and treating every boring political interaction as a life-or-death struggle for the republic itself. Two-party systems produce partisan pendulum swings; that's what they do. Will the country, and its news media, be able to cope?
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You would think that the facts of Republican capitulations to Trump and his conspiracy-believing fans
But enough about the H&R Peanuts
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colors name
nama warma
The narrative about January 6 is driven by the facts--any more than the narrative about Russiagate was driven by facts.
Progressives find average Americans extremely frightening, and the ones in the media consider it their mission to disabuse us of our support for Trump.
That's all that going on here.
It's exacerbated by progressive panic about Biden's agenda faltering--because the people of West Virginia are having their say.
"The narrative about January 6 is [NOT] driven by the facts----any more than the narrative about Russiagate was driven by facts."
----Ken Shultz
Fixed!
"It's exacerbated by progressive panic about Biden's agenda faltering--because the people of West Virginia are having their say."
Can anybody think of a progressive issue that resonates with swing voters in swing states? That's another reason they want to obsess over this. Swing voters in swing states are against angry mobs overwhelming the Capitol. That's really all the progressives have to sell swing voters right now. The rest of what they're selling is a stack of shit sandwiches.
Who's ready to defer to the teachers' unions on education right about now? Who's ready to defer to the progressives on crime? If Bill Clinton were running in 2022, he'd be looking for mentally incapacitated inmate on death row to execute--just to show that he's tough on crime. Universal preschool would probably sell--if they could get the schools open.
That liberal arts degree comes in useful sometimes; wordplay becomes Truth. Just as a monarchy is a country ruled by a monarch, the new definition of democracy is a nation ruled by Democrats.
Republicans, Trump, and even libertarians are, under this new definition, an existential threat to democracy.
"The new definition of democracy is a nation ruled by Democrats"
The progressives' problem with Manchin is that he's representing the people of West Virginia to the progressives in Washington DC, but he's supposed to be representing the progressives of Washington DC to the people of West Virginia.
Progressives hold average Americans in contempt--especially those in the white, blue collar, middle class. In their minds, the white, blue collar middle class if racist, xenophobic, homophobic, and sexist, and the legitimate purpose of government is to rule them.
Representing the views of average Americans is a sin to them--and yet they claim to be defending "democracy". How can they defend democracy out of one side of their mouths while being nothing but contemptuous of the views of average Americans?
Like you said, they're not talking about the same thing we're talking about when we talk about democracy. In the progressive mind, "democracy" is the means by which progressives legitimize the horrible shit they want to do to our economy and our rights.
Why bother ratifying the 17th amendment if the senators are going to represent their states anyway?
It shouldn't need to be said in a libertarian forum, but "democracy" is like "national interests" in that it has both a legitimate purview and an illegitimate purview. Questions of spending, taxes, immigration, treaties, and wars are well within the proper purview of democracy. The First Amendment starts with, "Congress shall make no law . . . " because democracy has no place in questions of free speech, religious freedom, etc.
One of the reasons why progressives are America's most horrible people is because they don't mean what we mean when we're talking about democracy, but there's also the problem with them thinking that there isn't a line between what is and isn't the appropriate place for democracy. It's bad enough that they think their job is to control me rather than represent us, even worse that they refuse to recognize any boundaries on their sphere of control.
Their desire to control what we can and can't read and say on social media demonstrates both problems. They think their job is to control us rather than represent us, and they use "democracy" to legitimize their authority to control us up to including control of what we read, what we say, and ultimately what we think.
For the most accurate, reliable and eye popping report on what really happened at the Capitol last year on Jan 5 and 6, go to
https://www.revolver.news/2021/12/damning-new-details-massive-web-unindicted-operators-january-6/
It appears increasingly likely that Ray Epps and a half dozen others who planned and executed the original breach of the Capitol grounds, quickly removed the barriers (so none of the protestors realized they were unlawfully entering the Capitol grounds), and then urged/ushered/corralled (by using identical bull horns) thousands of naive Trump supporters to walk into the Capitol grounds.
America is beset by ongoing problems of populism, political violence, and whackaloonery, and it's an ongoing disgrace that a significant chunk of a major political party still indulges in the pathologies that contributed to last year's traumatic riot and disrupted the transfer of power.
You nailed the GOP in one sentence, Matt.
Well done.
(obligatory Democrats suck too)
"It will become a moral imperative for certain journalists and news organizations to label nearly every Republican candidate who is not explicitly anti-Trump as at least a quiescent participant in the Trump-led destruction of democracy, and portray their election as being a referendum on that issue, regardless of its salience in a given campaign."
Kind of like how it's no longer acceptable to simply not be a racist yourself; you must actively admit your subconscious racism and capitulate while decrying that every thing on the earth is a product of racism.
Pure thought control. Cults use the same tactics.
"Mind-control groups generally discourage doubts, differences of opinion, criticism, research, and exposure. They may present only one right way to think and claim to have all the answers. They may regard disagreement as a sign of weakness or lack of commitment. They may demand rigid loyalty, present issues in terms of black-and-white thinking (e.g., saved or unsaved, pure or
impure, with us or against us), and suggest catastrophic consequences for difference or disobedience"
https://chaplaincy.tufts.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020Update_Mind-Control-Group-Brochure-PDF.pdf
Lots of cults recruit on college campuses. People are especially vulnerable at that age.
Ken, we have a cult problem now. It is the Cult Of Covid. Fauci is the High Priest. One faction, Branch Covidians, wants vax mandates out the ass.
Perhaps he and his followers will leave and create Faucitown.
I'd be happy if they just left.
Will they be serving grape Flavor Aid from large metal tub?
Please?
Kind of like how it's no longer acceptable to simply not be a racist yourself; you must actively admit your subconscious racism and capitulate while decrying that every thing on the earth is a product of racism."
That's legitimately cult stuff.
Progressives should market a transformative weekend retreat program to help people train themselves to think the right things in the right way. They could sell crystals.
"Progressives should market a transformative weekend retreat program to help people train themselves to think the right things in the right way."
Perhaps a better (final) solution would be to put wrongthinkers on a train, period.
The progressives are too smart for that. No need to be so obvious. No need to round up people for reeducation like the Chinese government does in Xinjiang either. You just dominate the media (social media and otherwise), go after people with things like bias training programs at work, and go after the kids' minds like the progressives do with CRT. Say the wrong thing, let everyone know that you're thinking the wrong thoughts, and career and your standing in polite society may be over for good. No need for trains. No need for camps. Just dominate education, the workplace, and media, and the rest of it takes care of itself.
Yet
And fruit punch with some added preservatives, like arsenic.
>>harrowing riot
sorry you were acutely distressed by what you saw on your television but still was not a riot.
More peaceful than prior mostly peaceful protests - - - - - - -
It's what we used to call a sit-in.
Biden and his progressive pals are wrecking this country. More Trump articles!
Speaking of Abrams, has she conceded the Ga. Governor's race yet?
Beat me. When she was introduced at the DNC as governor, did that undermine democracy?
Matt Welch....I have a lot of confidence in the American people, and their ability to jointly solve problems for our general betterment.
I have absolutely no confidence in our political leadership. None.
I have no confidence in Welch providing an actual libertarian perspective that isn't couches in either a defense of ignorance or the left. All his complaints in the article are far worse for the left. The fact that he denies election issues well documented at this point is telling. Libertarians have always accepted elections were flawed and open to fraud until 2020. Even when given direct evidence, mention of these things makes one apparently a conspiracy theorizing trump supporter.
When Pelosi tried to seat a losing candidate, did that undermine democracy?
Nah....Nancy is on the side of all that is good and right. Didn't you get the memo from NYT and WaPo today?
Fuck Phil Murphy.
Hope you don't get hammered with too much snow this evening.
When the majority party kicks off committee members selected by the minority party? When the DNC is using absurd readings of the constitution to get courts to disqualify GOP candidates? When the DNC went to courts to kick of the green party candidate?
I got some bad news for you Matt; the media lies.
I got some more bad news for you; you are part of the media.
(there is no good news)
We have to redouble or efforts on vaccination because of Doomicron!
Yeah, but moronic (the anagram of omicron) is sweeping the nation Diane. Sweeping! That is what the breathless Yahoo lady said in your link. Aren't you terrified?
If that were not enough, today is 1/6. You know, that day that will
mostlyprobablymaybealways live in infamy.It's a viral blizzard!
Your Democracy is in peril if an executive can lock down millions of people in their homes and out of their jobs without any input from a legislature.
Either that or that's not what these idiots mean when they say "democracy in peril".
Election Insurrection Erection Detection
Gives new meaning to 'Election IED'
Perfection
Imperils democracy:
selfies in the capitol building
Does not imperil democracy:
the DC riot where the SS rushed Trump to a bunker
dozens dead and billions in damages from peaceful protest
'private' enterprises silencing dissidents or going after them financially, with the government making threats against them to 'encourge' this behavior
no legal, civil, or constitutional rights
hate speech isn't free speech
the 1st amendment doesn't protect disinformation
you cannot protest against us or have a worship service because of covid restrictions
no due process - quarantines and red flag laws: if a government expert says you're dangerous, that's good enough
no basic human rights
healthcare is a basic human right
obey us or you will be denied healthcare
Democrats are anticipating election defeats in 2022 and 2024, so they are creating a false narrative to invalidate democracy ahead of time.
That's the real assault on democracy.
What's funny is the RNC has linked video of major media and democrats warning of election fraud in the 2020 elections... coming from Trump. Which is why they needed illegal rule changes.
Good point
Justin Trudeau just called the unvaccinated extremists, racists and misogynists. That dude is a cunt of the highest order.
He is just trying to imitate Macron over in France.
Or his daddy Fidel.
Is it la cunt or le cunt?
Want to bet how many non-vaccinated people have blackface in their history as Justin does?
Why do so many progressives seem to not know that blackface is a bad idea and has been for quite a few decades now?
For the most accurate, reliable and eye popping report on what really happened at the Capitol last year on Jan 5 and 6, go to
https://www.revolver.news/2021/12/damning-new-details-massive-web-unindicted-operators-january-6/
Reason refuses to cover this story because it appears almost certain that FBI agents and/or paid informants planned and executed the original breach of the Capitol grounds, quickly removed the barriers so none of the protestors realized they were illegally entering the Capitol grounds, and then urged/ushered (with identical bull horns) thousands of naive Trump supporters to walk into the Capitol grounds.
Mr. Welch, who should be installed? These are typically partisan positions, didn't you know that?
A question that answers itself.
And God said let them have Dominion voting machines over the fish.
Obviously Democrat operatives are the only people Welch thinks are holy enough to handle the task.
'the nation "now teeters on the brink of a widening abyss,"'
And we're about to take a giant step forward!
Welch and the rest of the media get their way it will be a great leap forward.
Looking forward to the peril in November.
I need to watch “holy grail” again.
SQUIRRELSYPROG has a copy you can borrow, apparently ...
Not one mention of the Democrats current push to federalize elections? That is, large take them away from the states, using Trump as the excuse for overturning the proper constitutional order?
What about falsely believing that America is full of white supremacists, biding our time until we can kill all minorities and LGBT-folk and subjugate all women to being barefoot in the kitchen?
Meh.
I don't like 'em barefoot in the kitchen.
Gets messy after I throw a Whisky glass ...
Matt lost me in the very first sentence by calling January 6 "harrowing". I thought it was kind of amusing to watch, with the exception of the one person who got (justifiably) killed by the Capitol police. Nobody else was killed. Some windows got broken. A guy put his feet on Pelosi's desk. And a dude dressed a viking was at the podium. Is any of that "harrowing"?
Make sure we continue the "justified" narrative every time some hopped up criminal attacks the police and gets shot for his trouble. We should be rallying in the streets for every one of those police officers that gets convicted on trumped up murder charges.
A lament about 'democracy in peril' that does not highlight that we just went through a period in which unelected health czars locked us up in our homes, closed our businesses, and disrupted our children's education without a whiff of legislative process does not seem to understand what democracy is.
^
If Trump is NOT Milosevic then what difference would it then make if Republicans were united behind him?
I think that the first Trump impeachment over fictional Russian interference was a greater threat to democracy than Jan 6th. First of all, it was done by elected officials who should have known better. Second - it set a precedent that the losing side should not only reject the legitimacy of the election, but they should use force to do so. The impeachment used the force of congressional power and Jan 6th used the force of a civilian riot.
Just how outside democratic norms in the western world are the Democrats? From a Canadian newspaper:
Objective observers find the Democrats’ obsession with photo ID bizarre. As Lott notes, photo ID is the norm elsewhere. In Canada, photo ID is required to vote. If a voter has none on her person, she may declare her identity in writing, and someone working at the polling station may verify it.
Of the 47 European countries, 46 require government-issued photo IDs for voting purposes. In the United Kingdom, photo ID isn’t universal, but the British parliament is taking standardization under consideration. In Mexico, where election fraud was rampant, strict reforms were instituted. Not only must voters present a photo ID, it must be biometric — and voters’ thumbs are ink-stained to prevent multiple voting.
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/barbara-kay-a-year-after-the-capitol-riot-electoral-reform-is-key-to-american-healing
"Republicans are attempting to (sometimes successfully) change election laws in such a way to make results more vulnerable to political pressure. "
How so? Generally, it seems like it has been the opposite, where Republican states impose rules that make voting more uniform, such that more rural, poorer counties are required to open longer, and urban, richer counties can't be open at 3 AM, or the laws prohibit giving voters stuff while in line to vote, or they mandate that time in lines be measured and precincts run the next election better if they get too long. This would seem to reduce the chance of pressure swaying the vote. On the flip side, the Democrats' all mail-in proposals would almost certainly increase chances of political pressure, as a decision has to be made on every ballot whether to accept the signature. You could almost certainly shift more votes by rejecting marginal signatures in precincts that are historically unfavorable (while accepting all signatures in favorable precincts) than anything the Republicans have proposed so far.
On an unrelated note, is there a reason to believe that Jan. 6 was anything more than an example of a crowd going out of control when you don't have crowd control in place? People being pissed off at the government and thinking it isn't legitimate isn't exactly new. Heck, DC targets protesters as part of their tourism efforts. So, why couldn't the police handle the Jan. 6 protests when they could handle the other protests? I very much doubt it was because the Kavanaugh protesters, BLM protesters, anti-war protesters, climate change protesters, hanging chad protesters, etc. were law abiding angels.
Trump is Zaphod Beeblebrox.
That said, as power hungry as he may have been, it is amazing that Trump never manipulated Covid to for his own power grab.
It’s absurd that he was president, it’s more absurd that his successor is a bigger joke.
This point can’t get hammered enough: Trump was handed ultimate authoritarianism on a silver fucking platter (with Democrats egging him on no less), and DIDN’T take it.
colors name
nama warma
"Tabling for a moment those attempts to change voting laws and election officials—which are real, ongoing, and disturbing—"
As opposed to those noble and patriotic efforts to change voting laws and election officials, like George Soros' Secretary of State Project, or the Democrat judges who rewrote election laws in 2020 by judicial fiat?
When one side starts using election laws as a political weapon, the other side is going to reciprocate.
Trump is not Milošević, but Biden is certainly becoming Milošević very quickly.
Holding political prisoners without charges or trials
Threats against States governors of the opposition party.
Packing the courts
Violating immigration laws
Federal Mandates
Federalizing elections
Making a liberal cites into a state
Weaponizing the DOJ against political opponents
Weaponizing the FBI against private citizens protesting school boards
Dems want to legalize child porn, so of course he likes them.
Whenever you read a Buttplug post that seems wildly out of character, you should assume it's Impostor Buttplug. He / she / they exploit a flaw in Reason's comment system in a weak attempt to portray Buttplug as an incoherent moron who cannot maintain internal consistency from day to day. Or even from minute to minute.
Example: Real Buttplug will post data proving the Biden economy is the strongest in US history. Then the Impostor will show up and say something like "I'm not a Biden supporter at all. I give his Presidency a grade of 'F' so far."
#StopSmearingButtplug
Dear Matt-
THIS.
Fucking T H I S .
/s/
EVERYBODY NOT PROG
"#StopSmearingButtplug"
Ew.
Yeah. Some engage in
yellowbrown journalism.EVERYBODY NOT FASCIST
https://www.salon.com/2021/04/11/trumps-big-lie-and-hitlers-is-this-how-americas-slide-into-totalitarianism-begins/
Trump’s Big Lie and Hitler’s: Is this how America’s slide into totalitarianism begins?
Is it just ENTIRELY too much to ask Der TrumpfenFuhrer to take BACK His Big Lie? MANY-MANY-MANY USA presidents before Him, were BIG enough (not-sore-LOSERS) to gracefully yield power!
Stop taking stupid pills.
Geez - if only someone could show me that: 1) big tech did not unilaterally silence republicans during the election, 2) that the media didn't put a few fingers on the scale for Biden by refusing to acknowledge the evidence of corruption on Hunter's laptop, 3) that Zuckerberg didn't buy election offices in strategic locations for purposes of maximizing dem votes, 4) how there can be more tallied votes than registered voter in precincts across the country, 5) how there were swings of tens (in some cases hundreds) of thousands of votes against Trump in the middle of the night 6) why vote counting in multiple states across multiple time zones was suspended in a seemingly coordinated fashion 7) why unconstitutional changes to election laws and procedures were allowed to stand 8) how vote tallies for Biden were inconsistent with down ballot democrats, 9) why dems are united in their efforts to resist any sort of transparent and serious audit of anomalies 10) How a ten-fold increase in mail in ballots resulted in a ten fold decrease in invalid ballots. There's more, but let's start with that. Meanwhile, it's going to take a bit more than parroting "big lie" to convince me because from 2016-2020 I saw the establishment and the democrats devolve into a level of derangement and corruption that enabled the "Russia!" lie; resulted in burning, looting and murdering across the country; collapsed the economy over an enhanced cold virus unleashed by China and illegally funded by Fauci; intimidated and threatened school children and others over hats; weaponize government and intelligence agencies against US citizens, and launch two kabuki theater inquisitions based on hearsay and accusation. Any party, and its supporters, capable of all that is certainly capable of stealing an election, lying about it, and taking political prisoners.
Asshole Prog-
I unmuted you for the first time in months just to say this:
FUCK RIGHT OFF AND DIE IN A FIRE, YOU FUCKING ASSHOLE PROG.
Thank you.
Geez - if only someone could show me that Der TrumpfenFuhrer is not STILL lying His Big Lie about stolen elections!
If His Big Lie is all TRUE, then WHY isn't He in court, fighting the good fight? Maybe it goes like THIS?
https://reason.com/2021/03/23/sidney-powell-says-shes-not-guilty-of-defamation-because-no-reasonable-person-would-have-believed-her-outlandish-election-conspiracy-theory/
Sidney Powell Says She’s Not Guilty of Defamation Because ‘No Reasonable Person’ Would Have Believed Her ‘Outlandish’ Election Conspiracy Theory
Which particular lies are you wanting to hear and believe today, hyper-partisan Wonder Child?
Perhaps you could try to answer a single question I posed instead of playing the useful idiot. Or, are you one of those that thinks "democracy" means that democrats rule?
Right off of the top, #1 of your endless series of lies and-or distortions:
1) big tech did not unilaterally silence republicans during the election
Did "big tech" imprison them with tape on their mouths? If so, citation(s) please! Name me JUST ONE person in the USA today, with an internet connection, or a friendship with some bums under the bridge... Who can NOT "access" ALL the lies that they want to hear, from EITHER party? Here is the simple fact: We are SOOOO awash today in political facts and lies alike, that there is NO such person, with lack of "access", short of the comatose and prisoners in solitary confinement! Your whining and crying has NO basis! (You want to annex the private property of web site owners, you MARXIST you! Cry some more for us, when your Marxism is thwarted!))
Do you recall the awesome enchanter named “Tim”, in “Monty Python and the Search for the Holy Grail”? The one who could “summon fire without flint or tinder”? Well, you remind me of Tim… You are an enchanter who can summon persuasion without facts or logic!
So I discussed your awesome talents with some dear personal friends on the Reason staff… Accordingly…
Reason staff has asked me to convey the following message to you:
Hi Fantastically Talented Author:
Obviously, you are a silver-tongued orator, and you also know how to translate your spectacular talents to the written word! We at Reason have need for writers like you, who have near-magical persuasive powers, without having to write at great, tedious length, or resorting to boring facts and citations.
At Reason, we pay above-market-band salaries to permanent staff, or above-market-band per-word-based fees to freelancers, at your choice. To both permanent staff, and to free-lancers, we provide excellent health, dental, and vision benefits. We also provide FREE unlimited access to nubile young groupies, although we do firmly stipulate that persuasion, not coercion, MUST be applied when taking advantage of said nubile young groupies.
Please send your resume, and another sample of your writings, along with your salary or fee demands, to ReasonNeedsBrilliantlyPersuasiveWriters@Reason.com .
Thank You! -Reason Staff