Why the GOP acts as it does

I saw an article in Vanity Fair Magazine titled: Met Gala 2023 Red Carpet: See All the Fashion, Outfits & Looks. In looking at the photos, I suddenly understood something about the Republican Party. I saw all those vacuous people, dressed in outrageous costumes, each trying to out-shock out-shameless, out-deprave the others, I, at last, realized what you already may realize. The GOP has become a fashion show for empty-headed vicious, gun-toting. bigoted haters. You may remember when the GOP was the staid, common-sense party, the calm, sober, solemn, religious party. It was the party of Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, and Gerald Ford. No flashy, wild ideas there.
It was the party of kind, friendly, “everyman” Ronald Reagan. It was the party of the Bushes. That party had ideas: Fiscal responsibility. Business growth. Military strength. Above all, honesty. It was the party of honesty (despite a few peccadillos here and there). These people had honor. Their lies were in the “normal” politician’s range. They would be embarrassed by the public’s discovering their lies. They were family men who didn’t cheat or at least hid their cheating. Their voters would have rejected a man known to be a cheater. The men were realists, so far as any politicians are realists. They were patriots. The believed in democracy. They despised authoritarianism and the Hitlers, Stalins, Maos, and Mussolinis of the world. Some were in the military. They were intelligent men. They attended church. They surrounded themselves with intelligent people. Similarly, their voters tended to be the more educated, more intelligent, more honorble people, of the sort, who would not easily be conned by a carnival barker or by a hate monger, or by a superficial psychopath. Each man was different. Each had his faults. But all followed the  overall straightlaced tendency of the Republican Party. That was what Republican voters wanted. Then came Donald Trump, and everything changed for the GOP. He lacked intelligence. He lacked ideas. He lacked a philosophy. He lacked morals. At one time he was a Democrat. Then he was a Republican. He lied incessantly. Thousands upon thousands of lies. He lied about his grades in school. He lied about his “heel  spurs” so he could avoid military service. He lied about his business plans. He lied in business. He cheated his employees out of their wages. He cheated his lenders. He cheated his financial backers. He criticized soldiers who gave their lives in battle as suckers. He was not embarrassed by disclosure of his lies. He had three wives, and cheated on all three and boasted about it. He won not by expressing reasonable theories but rather by extremism. He won because he was outrageous. He taught Republicans that to gain attention you have to be ridiculous to the extreme. Being unintelligent and amoral, and incompetent, he surrounded himself with, or befriended way to many unintelligent, and/or amoral, often criminal, mostly incompetent people, who had no plan for the betterment of America, but only for personal power. Steve Bannon, Jeff Sessions, Tom Price, Betsy DeVos, Ben Carson, Wilbur Ross. Steven Mnuchin Scott Pruitt. Michael Cohen, Chris Collins, Tom Barrack, Dinesh D’Souza, Michael Flynn, Igor Fruman, Michael Cohen, Rick Gates, Duncan Hunter, Corey Lewandowski, Paul Manafort, George Nader, Peter Navaro, George Papadapoulos, Lev Parnas, Brad Parscale, Roger Stone, Allen Weiselberg, Lewis Libby, and dozens upon dozens of others. Thus today, we have the GOP, a party willing to forgive and and to cover up an attempted overthrow of the democratically elected government of the United States, the single most traitorous act in America’s history. We have the GOP, that features such lying incompetents, who would have been ostracized from previous Republican organizations, as Marjorie  Taylor Greene, George Santos, Kari Lake, Madison Cawthorn, Herschel Walker, Rick Scott, Mike Lee Ron Johnson, Ron DeSantis, Mitch McConnell, , Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley, Jim Jordan, Matt Gaetz, Elise Stefanik, Paul Gosar, Louis Gohmert, Andrew Clyde, Gregg Abbott, Kristi Noem, Tom Cotton, Marco Rubio, Tucker Carlson, Mike Pompeo, the entire Fox “News” group, Breitbart, Kanye West, QAnon, OANN, white supremacists, nazis, fascists. All of this has become the new normal for the GOP. Rather than despising despots, Trump and his GOP admire them and hope to be them. Trump’s admiration for Putin is legendary. His affection for Kim is written in love letters. His similarity to Hitler is stunning. IN SUMMARY The GOP has descended into performance art, similar to Hollywood, and fashion where the most outrageous performer gets all the attention and voices of reason are ignored. Part of this is due to the Internet, where people get their news in tiny bites because there are so many sources of news it’s difficult for anyone to focus on just a few. To break through the avalanche of information, misinformation, and disinformation, and to penetrate the public’s consciousness the public has been conditioned to ignore the safe, sane, and truthful in favor of the outrageous, “did she really say that” lie. And because the GOP has no real plans, and primarily devotes itself to throwing stones at any Democrats’ plans, along with trying to reduce benefits for the poor and middle-classes, while increasing benefits for the rich, it devotes itself to the powerful emotions, outrage, hatred, and envy. Thus, you have Donald Trump convincing his MAGA base that Mexican immigrants are rapists and drug dealers, and blacks are criminals and animals, and Muslims are terrorists, and the poor are lazy takers, and gays are “groomers,” but nazis, white supremacists, and traitors attacking Congress are “good people.” And his base, the MAGAs, being less educated and possibly less intelligent than the median American is more naive about conspiracy theories. and believing of such conspiracy theorists as Alex Jones. His base is the perfect audience for the outrageous lies thrown at them And the GOP knows it. So they give the people what they want: Lies, bigotry, hatred, fear, and conspiracies. No, the government is not planting microchips in your body via vaccination, and no, Hillary Clinton is not holding children in the basement of a pizza parlor. An irreligious man, who cheats on his wives and consorts with hookers, has the backing of conservative evangelical Christians (!) and the Church of Jesus Christ Later Day Saints (Mormons) (!) And somehow these religious people are able to justify their hatred of immigrants and people of color, and gay people, and deny America’s history of bigotry, and rationalize their blind support for a man so antithetical to everything their God has preached because they are enthralled with his embrace of hell. He has planted fear in their minds, and then presented himself as their savior. and amazingly, they believe him, so powerful is their hatred. The more religious they are, the more they believe. Their piety has primed them to believe the impossible. They confuse the man’s psychopathy with strength, though in truth, he is weak, morally, psychologically, and physically. If the GOP was a TV show, one would conclude they have jumped the shark. Through Donald Trump the GOP has sold its soul to the devil, and we all know how that story ends.   Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

A Challege: Show me where I’m wrong.

Do you love learning? Even though I passed right through 88, and am roaring toward 89, I still do, which means I love being shown where I’m wrong. How else can anyone learn but to be given new beliefs that replace former beliefs?
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Never be too old or too sure to learn.
So here is a challenge to you, my readers, plus the MMT gang (Stephanie, Warren, Randy et al.), CRFB, Fox viewers, mainstream economists, journalists, politicians of all stripes, and all others who may believe some or all of what I believe is wrong. You may agree with me on many things but disagree on certain details (Hello MMTers). I’d love to hear from you. Some of you may disagree with everything I write. I’d love to hear from you (except from those whose main argument consists of comparing me to excrement. No learning there; I’ve heard it all). Some of you merely may have questions, not necessarily disagreements, about what I believe. Send me your questions and I will try to answer those I feel may be educational. Some of you agree with everything I write. Gotta love you. Here’s the challenge: I will list certain things I believe. You tell me where I’m wrong, and this is the important part: Show me your data. I’ll print worthwhile comments along with whether I feel you’ve made a valid point(s). Where appropriate, I’ll provide data or other evidence to substantiate my point. Or, I’ll simply agree with  you. This way, we all can learn, and it will be fun. I believe:

I. Our Monetarily Sovereign government never can run short of its sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar. It can pay for anything costing dollars, instantly, simply by pressing computer keys. This compares to city, county, and state governments, which are monetarily non-sovereign, and do not have a sovereign currency, so can and often do run short of dollars.

In the same vein, euro nations like Germany, France, Italy, Greece et al, do not have sovereign currencies, so they can and do run short of euros. The European Union is Monetarily Sovereign so it  cannot run short of euros.

II. Federal taxes do not fund federal spending. The primary purpose of federal taxes is to control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to limit and by giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to encourage.

Even if the federal government collected $0 taxes, it could continue spending, forever. In fact, the Treasury destroys all the tax ollars it receives, and orders new dollars to pay for goods and services.

A secondary (though not necessary) purpose of federal taxes is support demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring dollars to be used for tax payments.

III. The Federal government does not borrow dollars, nor does it use the dollars that are deposited into T-security accounts. After being deposited, those dollars remain the property of the T-security account holders and are not touched (including the interest dollars deposited by the government.)

The federal government easily could operate without accepting any T-security dollars. The purposes of T-securities are to provide a safe storage place for unused dollars (which stabilizes the dollar), and to aid the Federal Reserve in controlling interest rates.

IV. The federal deficits and debt are not, nor will they ever be, “unsustainable.” That word, “unsustainable,” is used by Libertarians and other debt hawks, yet never have I seen what it supposedly means. Does “unsustainable” mean the government will be unable to pay its bills? If not, what exactly does it mean?

The “debt ceiling” is an artifact of economic ignorance and should be eliminated. It’s sole purpose is to provide an excuse for outrage by the political party not in power. As such, it is a danger to America if used by traitors in Congress.

V. Federal deficit spending never causes inflation. Every inflation in history has been caused by shortages of key goods and services — most often oil and food — not federal deficits.

 Today’s inflation was caused by OPEC and Russia related shortages of oil, and by COVID-related of a litany of products and services.

The old saw, “Inflation is too much money chasing too few goods” is half wrong and half right. It should read, “Inflation is too few goods and services.” Period.

VI. Federal spending does not cause the above-mentioned shortages. Inflations tend to come suddenly. Federal spending does not cause a sudden increase in oil shortages (producers like OPEC, Russia and even America can and do suddenly contract production.)

Similarly, federal spending does not cause people suddenly to eat more food, thereby causeing a food shortage.

Thus, federal deficit spending does not cause inflation.

VII. All hyperinflations — pre-WW2 Germany, Zimbabwe, Argentina, et al. have been caused by shortages, not by government spending. The illusion of “excessive” spending (the infamous currency in a wheelbarrow) is created by an unknowledgable government’s poor response to inflation — printing higher denominations of currency rather than acquiring and distributing the scarce products and services.

VIII. Recessions are caused by reduced federal deficit spending and are cured by increased deficit spending to acquire and distribute the scarce products and services.

IX. Depressions are caused by federal surpluses and “balanced budgets,” and are cured by deficit spending.

X. The federal government can and should fund no-deductible, comprehensive Medicare coverage to every man, woman and child in America.

IX. The federal government can and should fund Social Security benefits for every man, woman, and child in America.

X. The federal government should fund all education from pre-K through post-college-grad, while paying people to attend school. The pre-K through 12 financial burden should be taken from the monetarily non-sovereign cities, counties, and states and paid by the infinitely solvent federal government.

XI. Benefits from the federal government do not dissuade people from working. The vast majority of Americans wish to increase their incomes and/or move up the income/wealth/power scale, so they will work to augment whatever they receive from the federal government.

XII. All benefits should go equally, to everyone, rich or poor. This eliminates the onerous task of monitoring.  incomes.

XIII. Gap Psychology (The desire of those near the top of any social scale to distance themselves from those below, and the desire of those below to approach those above) is the prime driver of bigotry, poverty and street crime in America. Curing those social problems will require dealing with Gap Psychology.

XIV. Gold, silver, or any other physical substance never were money, nor have they ever “backed” money nor provided safety for money. They merely are products the federal government periodically decides to purchase or sell at prices stipulated by the whim of the federal government.

If I were writing a book, every paragraph, I – XIV, would warrent a separate chapter and supporting data. Instead, I’ll address your comments and questions, and most importantly, I’ll provide supporting data, as I hope you will. Hoping to receive many objections, so we all can learn. Sincerely, Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The banking mess and the one solution*

Imagine you own a Las Vegas casino, but instead of running it yourself, you hire a management firm to run it.

After a while, you discover that the management firm was incompetent or crooked.

Their incompetence was costing you money, and their stealing was costing you even more money.

What would you do?How Pros Cheat Casinos - Can Gamblers Really Trick Casino Employees?

Would you fire the management firm and hire a new one?

Would you vow to create stricter rules and to supervise them more closely, only to discover the same thing happening again?

And again.

And again.

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Even Adam yielded to temptation.

At what point would you finally realize that the combination of incompetence and the powerful temptation to steal simply are too great for you to supervise someone else running your casino?

At what point would you run the casino yourself?

That is the question the federal government again has before it. 

Federal regulators were racing on Saturday to seize and sell the troubled First Republic Bank before financial markets open on Monday, according to four people with knowledge of the matter, in a bid to put an end to a banking crisis that began last month with the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

The effort, led by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, comes after First Republic’s shares tumbled 75 percent since Monday, when the bank disclosed that customers had withdrawn more than half of its deposits.

It became clear this past week that nobody was willing to ride to First Republic’s rescue before a government seizure because larger banks were worried that buying the company would saddle them with billions of dollars in losses.

At the beginning of what we call “America,” the government wrote laws, among which were laws that created the U.S. dollar.

Because the federal government created the U.S. dollar, you might think the federal government would understand that U.S. dollar banking is the responsibility of the dollar’s creator

But, seemingly, the federal government (and the public) don’t get it. Allowing for-profit, private banks to handle that responsibility, competently and without stealing, requires an impossible level of supervision along with a naive belief in the purity of the human spirit.

The words, “for-profit” are key.

Instead of their goal being the efficient and honest distribution of dollars, according to the rules and safeguards established by the government, the goal of the for-profit banks is, of course, profits.

Each time the government sees that incompetence combined with dishonesty and the easy availability of billions of dollars leads to losses for the public, new, stricter rules are created, followed by promises of even stricter supervision.

But temptation and incompetence, along with the bribing of lawmakers proves that even the strictest supervision never can overcome human nature to prevent further incompetence and larceny.

So, the government created Federal Deposit Insurance.

This, in effect, said,

We never will be able to stop these incompetent miscreants from stealing or otherwise losing depositors’ money, so we might as well, just reimburse depositors for the money that was stolen or lost.

“At least that will prevent panicky runs on the banks.”

But even that was not sufficient to guarantee the survival of the most crooked and incompetent banks, which repeatedly tended to fail, leaving the question, “Who will run the bank after it fails, but still has assets and liabilities?” 

The F.D.I.C. has been talking with banks that include JPMorgan Chase and PNC Financial Services about a potential deal, two of the people said.

A deal could be announced as soon as Sunday, these people said, cautioning the situation was rapidly evolving and might still change.

Any buyer would most likely assume the deposits of First Republic, eliminating the need for a government guarantee of deposits in excess of $250,000 — the limit for deposit insurance.

It’s difficult to justify the $250,000 limit (which the FDIC can and does ignore, at its whim). The Monetarily Sovereign federal government could, with equal ease, insure any limit. Why not $500,000? Or a trillion?

But here is where we are:

  1. Private, for-profit banks will continue to bend the rules, cheat the public, and fail, after which the federal government will enter cure-and-recover mode by passing new laws, later to rescind them.
  2. In many cases, the federal government will run a failed bank until another for-profit entity can be found to take it over. The federal government knows how to run banks and needs no profit motive. 
  3. The federal government will absorb all the losses, up to certain limits (that $250,00 per account, except when the government decides to absorb more than that. It’s all at the discretion of the government which has the unlimited ability to absorb losses.)
  4. Nothing changes. The “solution” will be stricter regulations until Congress is again bribed to loosen the regulations. Typically, Democrats get tougher, and Republicans get looser, but no one is willing to explain the obvious solution*.

Fed will consider tougher banking rules after SVB failure
Courtenay Brown, Kate Marino

The Federal Reserve is considering stricter regulations for banks after an internal review found that looser rules were one key culprit behind Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse — the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.

Why it matters: The review, released Friday, lays blame on the bank itself, as well as Fed supervisors charged with overseeing it and a regulation rollback, for the failure. The episode forced the government to take extraordinary action to backstop the banking system.

And here we go again. The rules are tightened until again, they are loosened.

But rules don’t just “get” loosened. Politicians loosen them

What they’re saying: “SVB’s failure demonstrates that there are weaknesses in regulation sand supervision that must be addressed,” Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice chair for supervision who led the review, said in a statement.

Nothing learned. No amount of regulation and supervision can prevent a profit-motivated organization, with its sticky fingers on billions of dollars, from stretching the rules or outright stealing.

In a press release, Fed chair Jerome Powell endorsed that takeaway, saying he supported “recommendations to address our rules and supervisory practices.”

Details: The 114-page report, completed in a little over a month, is the most comprehensive look so far at the failures on the parts of supervisors and bank executives that led to the collapse of the bank.

Why did the supervisors and bank executives “fail”? The profit motive impelled them to fail. Adam failed that test. Humanity fails that test.

But underpinning those failures are 2019 changes that loosened regulations and requirements for financial institutions similarly sized to Silicon Valley Bank, Barr said.

Which party was in charge in 2019? The party that boasts how “good for business” it is. (“Good for business,” is another way to say, “You boys do whatever you want, and if get caught, you won’t be prosecuted, and the government will mop up the mess you made.“)

Where it stands: Those rule changes, which came in response to federal legislation, and a “shift in the stance of supervisory policy impeded effective supervision by reducing standards, increasing complexity, and promoting a less assertive supervisory approach,” Barr said.

Barr said that the Fed plans to reevaluate those rule changes, which applied to banks with $100 billion or more in assets.

The big picture: Barr also proposed tougher rules related to capital and liquidity requirements, as well as the format of periodic stress tests — all of which had been under consideration before Silicon Valley Bank’s failure.

The event, however, intensified the urgency for review, according to senior Fed officials.

Barr is also looking to improve “speed, force, and agility of supervision,” all of which he said appeared to fall short in the case of Silicon Valley Bank.

Of note: A senior Fed official was confident the recommendations would be approved. But even if that’s the case, the process is lengthy so any new rules — particularly those related to liquidity requirements — likely wouldn’t take effect for several years.

So, for “several more years” (i.e. forever) it will be business as usual, because no one is willing to admit there is one solution* to the entire mess.

Between the lines: The report details the extent to which some of Silicon Valley Bank’s troubles were identified by Fed supervisors but not followed up on.

Silicon Valley Bank’s “foundational problems were widespread and well-known, yet core issues were not resolved, and stronger oversight was not put in place,” the report says.

For instance, by the time Silicon Valley Bank failed, it had accumulated 31 supervisory warnings — triple the average received by peers — about a list of issues that ultimately led to the bank’s demise.

No one did anything about those warnings, because being “good for business,” they had been bribed to do nothing.

The bank’s supervisors also identified problems in the bank’s interest rate risk management in annual exams dating back to 2020, but did not issue findings until 2022.

Supervisors “planned” to downgrade a key rating for the Silicon Valley Bank, but the bank collapsed before that rating was finalized.

Sure, they were “planning” to do something at some time in the distant future, but somehow, never managed to do it in time.

Meanwhile: The FDIC on Friday released a report of its own, on the failure of Signature Bank. This agency, too, highlights weaknesses in its supervision — but it blames those failings in part on being under-staffed.

Why are they “understaffed”? Could it be for the same reason the IRS is understaffed? The rich don’t want regulators to function so they bribe Congress to withhold funds from regulators, then claim this is good for business.

The document also reads as a scathing report card on Signature Bank’s management and board, who the FDIC says are ultimately to blame for the bank’s failure.

Private bankers succomb to the profit-motive.

Management “did not prioritize good corporate governance practices, did not always heed FDIC examiner concerns, and was not always responsive or timely in addressing FDIC supervisory recommendations,” according to the report.

Why should management do any of those things? Crooked bank managers don’t serve jail time. That’s reserved for shoplifters and other petty crooks.

They also dropped the ball when it comes to crypto, the report finds. “[Signature] failed to understand the risk of its association with and reliance on crypto industry deposits or its vulnerability to contagion from crypto industry turmoil that occurred in late 2022 and into 2023,” it said.

Worth noting: A separate report from the GAO, also issued Friday, highlights inadequate bank supervision in both banks’ failures.

The bottom line: The regulatory response to this year’s bank failures — which may soon include another one — is only just beginning.

That is exactly what was said following the Great Recession of 2008, which was caused in part, by bankers’  thievery. No bankers went to jail, though their stunning criminality cost America trillions.

The regulatory response is always “just beginning.” Five years, and ten years, and fifty years from now, after numerous more bank failures, there will be regulatory responses that are “just beginning.”

THE SOLUTION*

There is a solution, though because the rich hate it, it never will happen unless the public catches on to the swindle.

The problem lies with the profit motive. Remember “Lead me not to temptation”? Hang millions of dollars in front of even the most honest man’s nose, and he will graduate from stealing office pencils to stealing everything. Period.

The solution is:

  1. The federal government knows how to run banks.
  2. The federal government creates the lending rules.
  3. The federal government creates the bank investing rules.
  4. The federal government determines the bank security rules.
  5. The federal government determines interest rates
  6. The federal government is the one entity in America that has no profit motive.
  7. The federal government cannot go bankrupt.
  8. The federal government insures the banks’ customer against loss.
  9. The federal government supervises the banks
  10. The solution to private bank insolvency is for private banking to end. The federal government should own and manage all the banks.

There is no public purpose served by allowing the private sector to run banking. The federal government should run the banking industry itself. No other “solution” will work. 

This is not difficult to see, unless one if being bribed not to see it.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

“Grooming” and today’s version of the religious witch hunt.

Donald Trump complains about being witch-hunted, but not many people really understand that a witch-hunt is not just something Trump doesn’t like being done to him (he claims).

Ron DeSantis has instituted his own version of witch-hunting with his battle against “grooming,” the hair-brained, fact-devoid belief that gay people try to influence otherwise straight children to become gay.

The similarities between 14th through 20th-century actual witch-hunting and today’s GOP “woke-hunting” are frightening.

Here are excerpts from an article in the May 2023 issue of Scientific American Magazine:

Edet Eyo, a 69-year-old woman from Cross River State in Nigeria, and four others were murdered in October 2022, allegedly by a group of young men who charged that her witchcraft had caused a recent motorcycle crash.

Her family says that suspicions had been dogging her for years, arising from jealousy of her prosperity. It is also the tale of Martha Carrier, who was hanged in Salem, Mass., in 1692.

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Punishment for witches

Of the accusations against her, one of the most salient was by a neighbor with whom her family had a property dispute.

Carrier became one of 35 people executed for witchcraft in the British colonies of New England—“crimes” of which some of them still have not been exonerated.

The narrative could be set in Germany in 1581, India in 2003Uganda in 2018 or Papua New Guinea in 2021.

Every year more than 1,000 people around the world, including men and children, are tortured, expelled from their homes or killed after being charged with witchcraft—using magic, usually to cause harm.

Far from declining with modernization, as some 20th-century scholars predicted, witch hunts are holding steady in some places and may be happening more often in others.

Multiple roots entwine to produce a witch hunt. A belief in sorcery, a patriarchal society, sudden and a paucity of health care, inaccessible justice systems that give impunity to attackers, a triggering disaster—all of these contribute.

But as Silvia Federici has argued in her 2004 book Caliban and the Witch and subsequent publications, what sustained periods of witch-hunting have in common, across time, space and culture, is a backdrop of social and economic dislocation.

Today’s triggering disaster was the COVID pandemic exacerbated by the Trump (“It will just go away) adminstration’s incompetence and lying, leading to more than a million American deaths.

Although popular imagination regards the trials as outbreaks of mass delusion or superstition, the fact that they peaked between the 1580s and the 1630s, a time of massive upheaval as a capitalist economy emerged, suggests a different story.

Church leaders had initiated witch hunts in the late 15th century, in part as a way of policing social mores.

Now the state, which was closely allied with religious, political and economic elites, took the lead.

In the 16th century rulers across Europe introduced new laws to make sorcery punishable by death—and the trials moved from ecclesiastical to secular courts, such as in duchies and towns.

Historian Christina Larner writes that in Scotland, authorities systematically incited panic against witches, traveling from village to village to instruct people on how to recognize them and sometimes even bringing along lists of women to denounce.

In sum, witch-hunting was a systematic campaign of terror that eliminated the resistance to dispossession that had simmered for decades after the peasant protests were crushed.

The accusations and persecution died down only in the latter half of the 18th century. Historical records indicate that by that time, roughly 50,000 people had been executed for sorcery.

That was then. Now, review what a modern witch-hunt looks like. Here are excerpts from a July 1, 2022 article in Vanity Fair Magazine:

Ron DeSantis has a not-insignificant chance of becoming president in 2024.

Like Trump, the Florida governor takes immense pride in being a bully; he bullied the Special Olympics, he bullied Disney, he bullies anyone who disagrees with him.

What might the country look like should DeSantis ascend to the White House?  It’ll be the kind of place where teachers are warned not to display rainbow flags for fear of being prosecuted.

On Friday, Desantis’s Parental Rights in Education Act, a.k.a. the “Don’t Say Gay” law, went into effect in Florida, and it’s hard to overstate how terrifying this whole thing is.

In addition to banning any talk of gender identity and sexual orientation in kindergarten through third grade, it also prohibits such discussions all the way through high school, saying that such topics cannot be discussed in any grade in a manner that is not “age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate.”

(Naturally, the law does not specify what is considered “appropriate”; that definition may not come from the state’s Department of Education until next summer.)

Critics believe the law was written in an intentionally broad manner to scare school districts, which parents can sue if they believe the measure has been violated.

“When we talk about the culture of fear that this bill has created and the chilling effect, we’re talking about the fact that educators and school districts are scared to approach anything related to LGBTQ people or issues out of fear of lawsuits and professional ruin,” said Florida representative Carlos Guillermo Smith.

Ironically, the law is based on not wanting students to “feel uncomfortable.” Instead, it makes teachers and gay students terrified, and the rest of the students, vigilantes. 

The common elements between the earlier witch-hunts and today’s GOP witch hunts are:

  1. Politically weak scapegoats (Often women, teachers, gays, Jews, aliens).
  2. Religious interpretations of morality
  3. Unproven, fact-free lies about the scapegoats.
  4. Politically powerful bigots who amass power by appealing to the ignorance, hatred and fears of the common populace.

The article continues:

For instance, the Orange County Classroom Teachers Association accused school officials this week of telling teachers not to wear clothing with rainbows on them and to get rid of “safe space” stickers and photos of their same-sex spouses.

Last month, according to Palm Beach County high school special education teacher Michael Woods, the Palm Beach County School District “sent out a questionnaire asking its teachers to review all course material and flag any books with references to sexual orientation, gender identity or race.”

Hitler would be proud.

The district removed the books I Am Jazz and Call Me Max, for seemingly referencing gender identity.

Medieval mask of shame

And, the Leon County School Board approved a “LGBTQ Inclusive Guide,” which includes a clause that says parents must be informed if a student who is “open about their gender identity” is in their child’s gym class or with them on an overnight school trip.

Apparently, that gay child represents some sort of threat to other children. (In reality, the other children represent a threat to a gay child.)

“Upon notification or determination of a student who is open about their gender identity, parents of the affected students will be notified of reasonable accommodation options available,” the guidelines state.

“Reasonable accommodations” for the gay child? For the straight children? What does that mean”

“Parents or students who have concerns about rooming assignments for their student’s upcoming overnight event based on religious or privacy concerns may request an accommodation.”

Because, as “everyone” knows, gay children have a reputation for attacking straight children. I never heard of that happening — the straights usually attack the gays — but one can’t be too careful because rooming with a gay child might turn a straight child gay. Right?

Jewish Badges During the Holocaust: The Othering of Jews Across Nazi Europe
The “badge of shame” during the Holocaust

At any rate, we have done our job by stigmatizing the gay children, thus assuring they will be bullied in school, which is exactly what any God-fearing parent should want. Right?

What next? Brand gay students with a “G” on their foreheads? Make them wear yellow armbands as the Jews had to, during the German Nazi period? Make them play in a separate schoolyard, so they don’t contaminate the “normal” kids?

From Wikipedia: In England, under the Poor Act 1697, paupers in receipt of parish relief were required to wear a badge of blue or red cloth on the shoulder of the right sleeve in an open and visible manner, in order to discourage people from collecting relief unless they were desperate, as while many would be willing to collect relief, few would be willing to do so if required to wear the “shameful” mark of the poor in public

Brandon Wolf,press secretary for Equality Florida, said, “We’ve always understood what we’re up against in the state of Florida. We know these lawmakers, we know the rightward shift that has happened under Governor Ron DeSantis.”

He fears the measure will only increase anti-LGBTQ+ violence, which increased from 2020 to 2021 and is on track to be worse in 2022, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

But we DeSantis supporters don’t care about anti-LGBTQ+ violence, do we. Those gay kids have it coming for violating my religious beliefs. Right?

The Scarlet Letter: Part 1. “The Scarlet Letter” by Nathaniel… | by Lynn  Moynahan | Medium
The scarlet letter

“It feels very ominous that in a state that saw the deadliest attack on LGBTQ people in this nation’s history…that we would be having conversations about erasing our history, our lives, our lived experiences from classrooms,” Wolf said.

Meanwhile, in Texas… A group of “educators” proposed that slavery should be called “involuntary relocation.”

Yes, really!

Opposition to the suggested change, which would sort of be like calling Hitler’s systemic murder of 6 million Jews “population downsizing,” apparently came up during a June 15 meeting, at which a Democrat who represents Dallas and Fort Worth noted that the new wording would not be a “fair representation” of the slave trade.

How about calling the Romans’ feeding of Christians to lions, “animal welfare nourishment”?

And then there was this bit of witch-hunt bigotry, courtesy of religion (Why is bigotry so often based on supposed religious belief?)

‘Religious freedom’ rule could cause ‘significant damage’ to LGBTQ health care, advocates say

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a final rule earlier this week expanding health care workers’ ability to refuse services on religious grounds.

How about, “My religion doesn’t recognize Jews, so no service for you.”

Or, “My religion tells me that blacks are evil, so you can’t rent in my building”?

Or, “My religion says gay people are breaking God’s laws, so off  to jail with you?”

Or, “My religion says abortion is murder, so despite what your religion says, all abortions will be prosecuted as capital crimes, and everyone involved — doctors, lawyers, those facilitating travel for abortions, everyone — will be punished by death?”

That ought to do it.

A number of LGBTQ advocates and health care experts have warned the measure could have a negative impact on the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community.

That’s the whole point. Why do you think we made you queers scapegoats? We’re trying to get the bigot vote in America.

The rule, Protecting Statutory Conscience Rights in Health Care, revises existing HHS regulations to ensure “vigorous enforcement of Federal conscience and anti-discrimination laws” and strengthens health care workers rights so they are “free from coercion or discrimination” on account of their “religious beliefs or moral convictions.”

The measure, first proposed over a year ago, “fulfills President Trump’s promise to promote and protect the fundamental and unalienable rights of conscience and religious liberty, according to a statement issued by the HHS.

What we mean is the “fundamental and unalianable rights of me,” not the rights of anyone who thinks differently, looks different or acts differently from me.

See it’s like this: Any person’s claimed religious beliefs are more important than the actual health and lives of gay people.

Ron DeSantis has not yet announced that he will run for president in 2024, but when and if he does, there’s a campaign slogan he should definitely consider—Ron DeSantis: If you like petty tyrants, he’s your guy.

Yes, in the latest round of the Florida governor versus the state’s largest employer, DeSantis threatenedon Monday to punish the company through any array of absurd measures, including building a prison complex next to the theme park.

(DeSantis’s threats were obvious retribution for the way Disney outmaneuvered him by passing covenants that rendered his handpicked governing board basically powerless.)

At a press conference held near Disney World, DeSantis sneered and spoke of the company: “They are not superior to the laws that are enacted by the people of the state of Florida. That’s not going to work, that’s not going to fly.”

Actually, the laws were not enacted by the people. They were enacted by DeSantis and his flunkees, who care only about their power, and nothing about innocent gay people.

Then, after announcing that the Republican-controlled legislature would try to change state law in order to subject the theme park to new inspections, he suggested that the land next to Disney World might be turned into a rival park or perhaps a state prison.

Oh, and the board he personally installed may look into raising Disney’s taxes too.

But that’s not the “weaponizing of the government against political opponents” that the GOP loves to whine about.

As a reminder, all of this is happening because Disney dared to criticizethe wildly bigoted, DeSantis-backed “Don’t Say Gay”legislation last year in Florida, where you’re apparently not allowed to disagree with the authoritarian governor.

Even former New Jersey governor and potential 2024 Republican candidate for president Chris Christie recognized the lunacy of DeSantis’s antics, asking, “Where are we headed here now, that if you express disagreement in this country, the government is allowed to punish you?

On Monday, Disney seemingly responded to DeSantis’s threats by publicizing “Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite,” a two-night event that will be held in June to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community and its allies.

Oh, that does it. No doubt the “Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite” will “groom” dozens if not thousands of straight kids to convert to a lifestyle that guarantees they forever will be scapegoat for the religious. Who could resist such an option?

We’re assuming that didn’t go over so great in the governor’s mansion, and that DeSantis is currently asking his lawyers to look into whether he can have Mickey executed.

DeSantis probably doesn’t harbor a true hatred of gays, blacks, Mexicans, immigrants, Muslims et al. He is just trying to live off the precudices of Florida voters.

Presumably, his massive victory in the most recent elections indicated he judged his constituency correctly.

Fortunately, the rest of America is not Florida, and DeSantis’s national polling number are dropping.

But unfortuately, that leaves the bigoted GOP with Donald Trump, the guy who whines about witch-hunting while endorsing it.

Get the ducking stools and yellow arm bands, ready.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty
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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

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