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Vladimir Putin: the Authentic Leader of the Republican Party
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Feb 21, 2022 09:31:04   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
Republicans | Vladimir Putin
by Mike Lofgren | February 21, 2022 - 7:17am


Despite losing the last e******n by seven million v**es, it is conventional wisdom that Donald Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party. Partly this reflects the Republican base. The media also plays its role: they would rather cover him like an ESPN announcer extolling Tom Brady than filling airtime with colorless androids like Mitch McConnell or Kevin McCarthy.

Trump did not achieve this status purely on his own merit. There was another, formidable, force putting its thumb on the scale in the 2016 e******n campaign on his behalf. That force’s minions even built his pre-p**********l business model, helping him out of bankruptcy. Its enemies – Ukraine, the European Union – became trump’s enemies.

Of course, we are talking about Vladimir Putin. Just to look at how Putin and Trump interacted when they met speaks volumes about the body languages of dominance and supplication. It is therefore instructive to cut out the middleman, or stooge, and focus on the prime mover when considering the GOP’s ideological inspiration.

Although one can find several examples Republican-connected groups, like the Religious Right or the NRA, eagerly becoming fellow travelers of the Kremlin, the affinities are mostly unconscious and demonstrate a decades-long convergent evolution of beliefs within the GOP and ruling circles in Russia.

The development of the Russian Federation from the rubble of the USSR has mostly been a case of the new boss being the same as the old boss. If we substitute the oligarchs for the nomenklatura, polonium 210 for ice picks, and military threats against Ukraine for the Ukrainian famine, we find that Russia is much like the old Soviet Union. There’s even an ex-KGB guy running the place: shades of 1982.

But there is one crucial difference. However miserable circumstances were, the USSR labored to represent itself as working towards a better future for humanity. True c*******m wasn’t there yet, but the Soviet people were working to achieve a state where there was no exploitation or alienation. The shortcomings of today were the sacrifices necessary to reach utopia.

Russia under Putin makes no such claims. His propaganda apparatus, as extensive as the USSR’s and more sophisticated, does not aim to make the world’s people into c*******ts. It seeks to make them cynical. Given prevailing global attitudes, it’s a wise move. “You think we’re bad? You’re no better, just more hypocritical,” is the theme. As for foreign reporting about actual conditions in Russia, they’re all just f**e news from the lying media.

Russia’s foreign policy seeks less to influence foreign audiences positively than simply to create chaos abroad. Hacking, online trolling, and ransomware are part of this strategy. Calling out these actions merely elicits denials, accusations that the targets of the attacks did it to themselves, and cries of being an innocent victim of smears.

Does this sound familiar in the context of domestic politics? Once upon a time, the Republican Party actually enacted policies – damaging they may have been, but at least they were policies in traditional political terms. Since the Tea Party hysteria of around 2010 at the latest, the GOP has ceased offering policies (beyond the very narrow one of protecting the finances of America’s own oligarchs) and is now solely dedicated to obstruction, publicity stunts, trolling, and clawing into power and staying there forever.

Such laws as it enacts in the states bear no relation to solving any public problem, be it health, safety, t***sportation, or education. Their “policies” are a catalogue of complaints, publicity-seeking, and trolling on issues like C***D, v*****es or a******n, signaling the base, and obstruction (or effective prohibition) of any political opposition.

The throngs who cheerfully v**e GOP are not going to benefit materially from this – nor do they expect to. It is enough that their party tells them they are salt-of-the-earth Americans and harasses groups they don’t like: all very much like Russian citizens who v**e for Putin’s Russia United Party and despise Alexei Navalny for the unpatriotic crime of promising to prevent the oligarchs from ripping them off.

Putin uses his tame courts to disqualify inconvenient candidates like Navalny; in America, the GOP prevents supporters for opposition candidates from v****g. In case the e******n result still might be too close, the Russian leader creates bogus candidates he controls to divide the opposition. In America, there is the GOP’s manipulation of Kanye West. The differences in technique are mere details.

The Kremlin’s current line is that Navalny is an agent of the West, or even poisoned himself to make Russia look bad. It echoes Republicans’ claim that the J****** 6th i**********nists were tourists, or FBI provocateurs, or a****a. Under Putin, Russia is said to be a place where nothing is true and everything is possible. In like fashion, The Republican Party is in a protracted war with the empirical reality, leaving only endless conspiratorial possibilities known as alternative facts.

Airbrushing the facts extends to history books; as George Orwell said, “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” Putin has rehabilitated Stalin as a great patriot, and those who document Stalin’s crimes are persecuted. In the same manner, Republicans whitewash bloody i**********n on behalf of s***ery as being about “heritage,” and seek to preserve statues honoring s***eholders and t*****rs.

Just as pointing out unpleasant t***hs about the N**i-Soviet Pact gets you prosecuted in Russia, GOP legislators now want to make it illegal for any teacher to "teach or incorporate into any course or class any 'd******e concept.'" That the bill illustrates what should be taught by citing the debate between Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass when Lincoln’s opponent was Stephen Douglas only adds to the surrealism.

One could go on with these comparisons: the false machismo of the Russian leader posing bare-chested like Mussolini, playing hockey games with professional teams who obligingly let him pile up goals, and so on. This play-acting dovetails with the tough-guy affectation of Republican politicians: the supposed hillbilly cred of a Yale graduate and Wall Streeter named J.D. Vance running for US Senate in Ohio, or the intentional crudeness of politicians who claim to speak for the trailer parks while groveling to their donors at $1500-a-plate fundraisers.

At this point we should ask, where did these similarities come from? Even if the Kremlin directly influenced a few screwballs like Dana Rohrabacher and a handful of party operatives, why is this behavior deeply embedded in so many Republicans, to the point where it is now quite popular in the conservative media-entertainment complex ? The GOP, like Putin and his United Russia Party, are both deeply authoritarian, but why?

Corey Robin, in The Reactionary Mind, talks of the Right’s “narrative of loss and promised restoration.” This is true of Putin, the KGB colonel who saw the Soviet empire collapse and called its demise “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.” The threats over Ukraine are a consequence of this attitude.

We should bear in mind that it is occurring against a backdrop of sharp demographic decline. In the past year, Russia experienced a population loss of nearly one million, following many years of decrease. The economy has also steadily dropped since 2014. Its population is now smaller than Bangladesh and its per capita income lower than the Maldives. Male life expectancy is also below that of Bangladesh. Does this sound familiar?

The heart of the Republican base lives in counties that for many years have suffered population decline, such as in Iowa. This was mostly the result of outmigration due to the lack of good jobs, adequate health care, or educational opportunities. The 2020 census shows the trend has accelerated, with 90 percent of US counties that lost population in the last decade supporting Trump.

The outmigration is now accompanied by “deaths of despair” (suicide, drugs, etc.) among the white working class, a phenomenon that Anne Case and Angus Deaton discovered even before the C***D p******c. While it is occurring all over the country, it is most severe in rural states like West Virginia. The trend is further exacerbated by failure to take sensible social distancing precautions or get v******ted. Rural Americans are dying at twice the rate of urban dwellers. Owsley County, KY, has a life expectancy similar to that of Russia.

Weirdly, the reaction of GOP politicians to their own constituents’ die-off is to double down on what is k*****g them, as we have seen with Florida’s Ron DeSantis and South Dakota’s Kristi Noem. In my state of Virginia, the first act of the new governor, whose e*******l stronghold is the rural parts of the Commonwealth, was to ban urban northern Virginia’s mask and v*****e mandates. Never mind that the protocols were already in effect and working. His action did nothing to help the former mining towns of southwest Virginia that v**ed for him, but it was a thumb in the eye of the godless city folk.

This parallels Russia. Most of its population loss since the beginning of the p******c is suspected to be considerably underreported C***D deaths on top of the traditional deaths by suicide, misadventure, and vodka. Russia’s disinformation campaign against Western v*****es has backfired on its own population, making it mistrustful of v******tion. The country’s own v*****e, Sputnik, is only a little more effective than Republicans’ own cure-alls like horse de-wormer or Clorox.

Demographics explain why, despite the machismo and the fascination with dominance, the deeper note is one of bleating victimhood among Putin and his followers, and the GOP and its base. "We have nowhere to retreat. They have taken it to the point where we simply must tell them: ‘Stop!’” says Putin. This strongly resembles Trump’s whining assertion of injustice: "We don't want other leaders and other countries laughing at us anymore, and they won't be."

Despite their endless bellicosity, leaders like Putin, Trump, Jair Bolsonaro, or Viktor Orban are rarely bellicose towards one another; they usually get along famously. It has often been noted that there is probably human chemistry among authoritarian personalities.

But they also have a solid community of political interest. They seek to rule polities that are socially or economically damaged, and to do that they attract aggrieved and nihilistic followers. They remain on top by continuing to inflame existing wounds as they steal everything that isn’t nailed down. An outbreak in self-government to benefit the people in any one country might threaten the others by example

They have a common destiny: they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 09:33:02   #
Milosia2 Loc: Cleveland Ohio
 
*** They have a common destiny:
they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.****

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 09:45:56   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Republicans | Vladimir Putin
by Mike Lofgren | February 21, 2022 - 7:17am


Despite losing the last e******n by seven million v**es, it is conventional wisdom that Donald Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party. Partly this reflects the Republican base. The media also plays its role: they would rather cover him like an ESPN announcer extolling Tom Brady than filling airtime with colorless androids like Mitch McConnell or Kevin McCarthy.

Trump did not achieve this status purely on his own merit. There was another, formidable, force putting its thumb on the scale in the 2016 e******n campaign on his behalf. That force’s minions even built his pre-p**********l business model, helping him out of bankruptcy. Its enemies – Ukraine, the European Union – became trump’s enemies.

Of course, we are talking about Vladimir Putin. Just to look at how Putin and Trump interacted when they met speaks volumes about the body languages of dominance and supplication. It is therefore instructive to cut out the middleman, or stooge, and focus on the prime mover when considering the GOP’s ideological inspiration.

Although one can find several examples Republican-connected groups, like the Religious Right or the NRA, eagerly becoming fellow travelers of the Kremlin, the affinities are mostly unconscious and demonstrate a decades-long convergent evolution of beliefs within the GOP and ruling circles in Russia.

The development of the Russian Federation from the rubble of the USSR has mostly been a case of the new boss being the same as the old boss. If we substitute the oligarchs for the nomenklatura, polonium 210 for ice picks, and military threats against Ukraine for the Ukrainian famine, we find that Russia is much like the old Soviet Union. There’s even an ex-KGB guy running the place: shades of 1982.

But there is one crucial difference. However miserable circumstances were, the USSR labored to represent itself as working towards a better future for humanity. True c*******m wasn’t there yet, but the Soviet people were working to achieve a state where there was no exploitation or alienation. The shortcomings of today were the sacrifices necessary to reach utopia.

Russia under Putin makes no such claims. His propaganda apparatus, as extensive as the USSR’s and more sophisticated, does not aim to make the world’s people into c*******ts. It seeks to make them cynical. Given prevailing global attitudes, it’s a wise move. “You think we’re bad? You’re no better, just more hypocritical,” is the theme. As for foreign reporting about actual conditions in Russia, they’re all just f**e news from the lying media.

Russia’s foreign policy seeks less to influence foreign audiences positively than simply to create chaos abroad. Hacking, online trolling, and ransomware are part of this strategy. Calling out these actions merely elicits denials, accusations that the targets of the attacks did it to themselves, and cries of being an innocent victim of smears.

Does this sound familiar in the context of domestic politics? Once upon a time, the Republican Party actually enacted policies – damaging they may have been, but at least they were policies in traditional political terms. Since the Tea Party hysteria of around 2010 at the latest, the GOP has ceased offering policies (beyond the very narrow one of protecting the finances of America’s own oligarchs) and is now solely dedicated to obstruction, publicity stunts, trolling, and clawing into power and staying there forever.

Such laws as it enacts in the states bear no relation to solving any public problem, be it health, safety, t***sportation, or education. Their “policies” are a catalogue of complaints, publicity-seeking, and trolling on issues like C***D, v*****es or a******n, signaling the base, and obstruction (or effective prohibition) of any political opposition.

The throngs who cheerfully v**e GOP are not going to benefit materially from this – nor do they expect to. It is enough that their party tells them they are salt-of-the-earth Americans and harasses groups they don’t like: all very much like Russian citizens who v**e for Putin’s Russia United Party and despise Alexei Navalny for the unpatriotic crime of promising to prevent the oligarchs from ripping them off.

Putin uses his tame courts to disqualify inconvenient candidates like Navalny; in America, the GOP prevents supporters for opposition candidates from v****g. In case the e******n result still might be too close, the Russian leader creates bogus candidates he controls to divide the opposition. In America, there is the GOP’s manipulation of Kanye West. The differences in technique are mere details.

The Kremlin’s current line is that Navalny is an agent of the West, or even poisoned himself to make Russia look bad. It echoes Republicans’ claim that the J****** 6th i**********nists were tourists, or FBI provocateurs, or a****a. Under Putin, Russia is said to be a place where nothing is true and everything is possible. In like fashion, The Republican Party is in a protracted war with the empirical reality, leaving only endless conspiratorial possibilities known as alternative facts.

Airbrushing the facts extends to history books; as George Orwell said, “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” Putin has rehabilitated Stalin as a great patriot, and those who document Stalin’s crimes are persecuted. In the same manner, Republicans whitewash bloody i**********n on behalf of s***ery as being about “heritage,” and seek to preserve statues honoring s***eholders and t*****rs.

Just as pointing out unpleasant t***hs about the N**i-Soviet Pact gets you prosecuted in Russia, GOP legislators now want to make it illegal for any teacher to "teach or incorporate into any course or class any 'd******e concept.'" That the bill illustrates what should be taught by citing the debate between Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass when Lincoln’s opponent was Stephen Douglas only adds to the surrealism.

One could go on with these comparisons: the false machismo of the Russian leader posing bare-chested like Mussolini, playing hockey games with professional teams who obligingly let him pile up goals, and so on. This play-acting dovetails with the tough-guy affectation of Republican politicians: the supposed hillbilly cred of a Yale graduate and Wall Streeter named J.D. Vance running for US Senate in Ohio, or the intentional crudeness of politicians who claim to speak for the trailer parks while groveling to their donors at $1500-a-plate fundraisers.

At this point we should ask, where did these similarities come from? Even if the Kremlin directly influenced a few screwballs like Dana Rohrabacher and a handful of party operatives, why is this behavior deeply embedded in so many Republicans, to the point where it is now quite popular in the conservative media-entertainment complex ? The GOP, like Putin and his United Russia Party, are both deeply authoritarian, but why?

Corey Robin, in The Reactionary Mind, talks of the Right’s “narrative of loss and promised restoration.” This is true of Putin, the KGB colonel who saw the Soviet empire collapse and called its demise “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.” The threats over Ukraine are a consequence of this attitude.

We should bear in mind that it is occurring against a backdrop of sharp demographic decline. In the past year, Russia experienced a population loss of nearly one million, following many years of decrease. The economy has also steadily dropped since 2014. Its population is now smaller than Bangladesh and its per capita income lower than the Maldives. Male life expectancy is also below that of Bangladesh. Does this sound familiar?

The heart of the Republican base lives in counties that for many years have suffered population decline, such as in Iowa. This was mostly the result of outmigration due to the lack of good jobs, adequate health care, or educational opportunities. The 2020 census shows the trend has accelerated, with 90 percent of US counties that lost population in the last decade supporting Trump.

The outmigration is now accompanied by “deaths of despair” (suicide, drugs, etc.) among the white working class, a phenomenon that Anne Case and Angus Deaton discovered even before the C***D p******c. While it is occurring all over the country, it is most severe in rural states like West Virginia. The trend is further exacerbated by failure to take sensible social distancing precautions or get v******ted. Rural Americans are dying at twice the rate of urban dwellers. Owsley County, KY, has a life expectancy similar to that of Russia.

Weirdly, the reaction of GOP politicians to their own constituents’ die-off is to double down on what is k*****g them, as we have seen with Florida’s Ron DeSantis and South Dakota’s Kristi Noem. In my state of Virginia, the first act of the new governor, whose e*******l stronghold is the rural parts of the Commonwealth, was to ban urban northern Virginia’s mask and v*****e mandates. Never mind that the protocols were already in effect and working. His action did nothing to help the former mining towns of southwest Virginia that v**ed for him, but it was a thumb in the eye of the godless city folk.

This parallels Russia. Most of its population loss since the beginning of the p******c is suspected to be considerably underreported C***D deaths on top of the traditional deaths by suicide, misadventure, and vodka. Russia’s disinformation campaign against Western v*****es has backfired on its own population, making it mistrustful of v******tion. The country’s own v*****e, Sputnik, is only a little more effective than Republicans’ own cure-alls like horse de-wormer or Clorox.

Demographics explain why, despite the machismo and the fascination with dominance, the deeper note is one of bleating victimhood among Putin and his followers, and the GOP and its base. "We have nowhere to retreat. They have taken it to the point where we simply must tell them: ‘Stop!’” says Putin. This strongly resembles Trump’s whining assertion of injustice: "We don't want other leaders and other countries laughing at us anymore, and they won't be."

Despite their endless bellicosity, leaders like Putin, Trump, Jair Bolsonaro, or Viktor Orban are rarely bellicose towards one another; they usually get along famously. It has often been noted that there is probably human chemistry among authoritarian personalities.

But they also have a solid community of political interest. They seek to rule polities that are socially or economically damaged, and to do that they attract aggrieved and nihilistic followers. They remain on top by continuing to inflame existing wounds as they steal everything that isn’t nailed down. An outbreak in self-government to benefit the people in any one country might threaten the others by example

They have a common destiny: they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.
Republicans | Vladimir Putin br by Mike Lofgren | ... (show quote)


you're ignorance is showing in so many ways. Trump took 2016 because people were sick to death of the Dem promises that never came true. "Evidence"-look at their promises for the inner cities, then look at the outcomes. We were sick to death of career politicians making a fortune at the expense of middle class America. The Hooray Clinton"s who could sit on the stand and say "what's it matter now" about the loss of men in B******i, you know the fathers, sons, brothers, friends who loss their lives there. So much more but I'm sure you wouldn't understand because you don't want to!

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 09:49:40   #
Wolf counselor Loc: Heart of Texas
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Republicans | Vladimir Putin
by Mike Lofgren | February 21, 2022 - 7:17am


Despite losing the last e******n by seven million v**es, it is conventional wisdom that Donald Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party. Partly this reflects the Republican base. The media also plays its role: they would rather cover him like an ESPN announcer extolling Tom Brady than filling airtime with colorless androids like Mitch McConnell or Kevin McCarthy.

Trump did not achieve this status purely on his own merit. There was another, formidable, force putting its thumb on the scale in the 2016 e******n campaign on his behalf. That force’s minions even built his pre-p**********l business model, helping him out of bankruptcy. Its enemies – Ukraine, the European Union – became trump’s enemies.

Of course, we are talking about Vladimir Putin. Just to look at how Putin and Trump interacted when they met speaks volumes about the body languages of dominance and supplication. It is therefore instructive to cut out the middleman, or stooge, and focus on the prime mover when considering the GOP’s ideological inspiration.

Although one can find several examples Republican-connected groups, like the Religious Right or the NRA, eagerly becoming fellow travelers of the Kremlin, the affinities are mostly unconscious and demonstrate a decades-long convergent evolution of beliefs within the GOP and ruling circles in Russia.

The development of the Russian Federation from the rubble of the USSR has mostly been a case of the new boss being the same as the old boss. If we substitute the oligarchs for the nomenklatura, polonium 210 for ice picks, and military threats against Ukraine for the Ukrainian famine, we find that Russia is much like the old Soviet Union. There’s even an ex-KGB guy running the place: shades of 1982.

But there is one crucial difference. However miserable circumstances were, the USSR labored to represent itself as working towards a better future for humanity. True c*******m wasn’t there yet, but the Soviet people were working to achieve a state where there was no exploitation or alienation. The shortcomings of today were the sacrifices necessary to reach utopia.

Russia under Putin makes no such claims. His propaganda apparatus, as extensive as the USSR’s and more sophisticated, does not aim to make the world’s people into c*******ts. It seeks to make them cynical. Given prevailing global attitudes, it’s a wise move. “You think we’re bad? You’re no better, just more hypocritical,” is the theme. As for foreign reporting about actual conditions in Russia, they’re all just f**e news from the lying media.

Russia’s foreign policy seeks less to influence foreign audiences positively than simply to create chaos abroad. Hacking, online trolling, and ransomware are part of this strategy. Calling out these actions merely elicits denials, accusations that the targets of the attacks did it to themselves, and cries of being an innocent victim of smears.

Does this sound familiar in the context of domestic politics? Once upon a time, the Republican Party actually enacted policies – damaging they may have been, but at least they were policies in traditional political terms. Since the Tea Party hysteria of around 2010 at the latest, the GOP has ceased offering policies (beyond the very narrow one of protecting the finances of America’s own oligarchs) and is now solely dedicated to obstruction, publicity stunts, trolling, and clawing into power and staying there forever.

Such laws as it enacts in the states bear no relation to solving any public problem, be it health, safety, t***sportation, or education. Their “policies” are a catalogue of complaints, publicity-seeking, and trolling on issues like C***D, v*****es or a******n, signaling the base, and obstruction (or effective prohibition) of any political opposition.

The throngs who cheerfully v**e GOP are not going to benefit materially from this – nor do they expect to. It is enough that their party tells them they are salt-of-the-earth Americans and harasses groups they don’t like: all very much like Russian citizens who v**e for Putin’s Russia United Party and despise Alexei Navalny for the unpatriotic crime of promising to prevent the oligarchs from ripping them off.

Putin uses his tame courts to disqualify inconvenient candidates like Navalny; in America, the GOP prevents supporters for opposition candidates from v****g. In case the e******n result still might be too close, the Russian leader creates bogus candidates he controls to divide the opposition. In America, there is the GOP’s manipulation of Kanye West. The differences in technique are mere details.

The Kremlin’s current line is that Navalny is an agent of the West, or even poisoned himself to make Russia look bad. It echoes Republicans’ claim that the J****** 6th i**********nists were tourists, or FBI provocateurs, or a****a. Under Putin, Russia is said to be a place where nothing is true and everything is possible. In like fashion, The Republican Party is in a protracted war with the empirical reality, leaving only endless conspiratorial possibilities known as alternative facts.

Airbrushing the facts extends to history books; as George Orwell said, “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” Putin has rehabilitated Stalin as a great patriot, and those who document Stalin’s crimes are persecuted. In the same manner, Republicans whitewash bloody i**********n on behalf of s***ery as being about “heritage,” and seek to preserve statues honoring s***eholders and t*****rs.

Just as pointing out unpleasant t***hs about the N**i-Soviet Pact gets you prosecuted in Russia, GOP legislators now want to make it illegal for any teacher to "teach or incorporate into any course or class any 'd******e concept.'" That the bill illustrates what should be taught by citing the debate between Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass when Lincoln’s opponent was Stephen Douglas only adds to the surrealism.

One could go on with these comparisons: the false machismo of the Russian leader posing bare-chested like Mussolini, playing hockey games with professional teams who obligingly let him pile up goals, and so on. This play-acting dovetails with the tough-guy affectation of Republican politicians: the supposed hillbilly cred of a Yale graduate and Wall Streeter named J.D. Vance running for US Senate in Ohio, or the intentional crudeness of politicians who claim to speak for the trailer parks while groveling to their donors at $1500-a-plate fundraisers.

At this point we should ask, where did these similarities come from? Even if the Kremlin directly influenced a few screwballs like Dana Rohrabacher and a handful of party operatives, why is this behavior deeply embedded in so many Republicans, to the point where it is now quite popular in the conservative media-entertainment complex ? The GOP, like Putin and his United Russia Party, are both deeply authoritarian, but why?

Corey Robin, in The Reactionary Mind, talks of the Right’s “narrative of loss and promised restoration.” This is true of Putin, the KGB colonel who saw the Soviet empire collapse and called its demise “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.” The threats over Ukraine are a consequence of this attitude.

We should bear in mind that it is occurring against a backdrop of sharp demographic decline. In the past year, Russia experienced a population loss of nearly one million, following many years of decrease. The economy has also steadily dropped since 2014. Its population is now smaller than Bangladesh and its per capita income lower than the Maldives. Male life expectancy is also below that of Bangladesh. Does this sound familiar?

The heart of the Republican base lives in counties that for many years have suffered population decline, such as in Iowa. This was mostly the result of outmigration due to the lack of good jobs, adequate health care, or educational opportunities. The 2020 census shows the trend has accelerated, with 90 percent of US counties that lost population in the last decade supporting Trump.

The outmigration is now accompanied by “deaths of despair” (suicide, drugs, etc.) among the white working class, a phenomenon that Anne Case and Angus Deaton discovered even before the C***D p******c. While it is occurring all over the country, it is most severe in rural states like West Virginia. The trend is further exacerbated by failure to take sensible social distancing precautions or get v******ted. Rural Americans are dying at twice the rate of urban dwellers. Owsley County, KY, has a life expectancy similar to that of Russia.

Weirdly, the reaction of GOP politicians to their own constituents’ die-off is to double down on what is k*****g them, as we have seen with Florida’s Ron DeSantis and South Dakota’s Kristi Noem. In my state of Virginia, the first act of the new governor, whose e*******l stronghold is the rural parts of the Commonwealth, was to ban urban northern Virginia’s mask and v*****e mandates. Never mind that the protocols were already in effect and working. His action did nothing to help the former mining towns of southwest Virginia that v**ed for him, but it was a thumb in the eye of the godless city folk.

This parallels Russia. Most of its population loss since the beginning of the p******c is suspected to be considerably underreported C***D deaths on top of the traditional deaths by suicide, misadventure, and vodka. Russia’s disinformation campaign against Western v*****es has backfired on its own population, making it mistrustful of v******tion. The country’s own v*****e, Sputnik, is only a little more effective than Republicans’ own cure-alls like horse de-wormer or Clorox.

Demographics explain why, despite the machismo and the fascination with dominance, the deeper note is one of bleating victimhood among Putin and his followers, and the GOP and its base. "We have nowhere to retreat. They have taken it to the point where we simply must tell them: ‘Stop!’” says Putin. This strongly resembles Trump’s whining assertion of injustice: "We don't want other leaders and other countries laughing at us anymore, and they won't be."

Despite their endless bellicosity, leaders like Putin, Trump, Jair Bolsonaro, or Viktor Orban are rarely bellicose towards one another; they usually get along famously. It has often been noted that there is probably human chemistry among authoritarian personalities.

But they also have a solid community of political interest. They seek to rule polities that are socially or economically damaged, and to do that they attract aggrieved and nihilistic followers. They remain on top by continuing to inflame existing wounds as they steal everything that isn’t nailed down. An outbreak in self-government to benefit the people in any one country might threaten the others by example

They have a common destiny: they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.
Republicans | Vladimir Putin br by Mike Lofgren | ... (show quote)





Reply
Feb 21, 2022 10:00:39   #
Weasel Loc: In the Great State Of Indiana!!
 
Milosia2 wrote:
*** They have a common destiny:
they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.****


Putin does have some indearing qualities







Reply
Feb 21, 2022 10:16:16   #
son of witless
 
Milosia2 wrote:
Republicans | Vladimir Putin
by Mike Lofgren | February 21, 2022 - 7:17am


Despite losing the last e******n by seven million v**es, it is conventional wisdom that Donald Trump remains the leader of the Republican Party. Partly this reflects the Republican base. The media also plays its role: they would rather cover him like an ESPN announcer extolling Tom Brady than filling airtime with colorless androids like Mitch McConnell or Kevin McCarthy.

Trump did not achieve this status purely on his own merit. There was another, formidable, force putting its thumb on the scale in the 2016 e******n campaign on his behalf. That force’s minions even built his pre-p**********l business model, helping him out of bankruptcy. Its enemies – Ukraine, the European Union – became trump’s enemies.

Of course, we are talking about Vladimir Putin. Just to look at how Putin and Trump interacted when they met speaks volumes about the body languages of dominance and supplication. It is therefore instructive to cut out the middleman, or stooge, and focus on the prime mover when considering the GOP’s ideological inspiration.

Although one can find several examples Republican-connected groups, like the Religious Right or the NRA, eagerly becoming fellow travelers of the Kremlin, the affinities are mostly unconscious and demonstrate a decades-long convergent evolution of beliefs within the GOP and ruling circles in Russia.

The development of the Russian Federation from the rubble of the USSR has mostly been a case of the new boss being the same as the old boss. If we substitute the oligarchs for the nomenklatura, polonium 210 for ice picks, and military threats against Ukraine for the Ukrainian famine, we find that Russia is much like the old Soviet Union. There’s even an ex-KGB guy running the place: shades of 1982.

But there is one crucial difference. However miserable circumstances were, the USSR labored to represent itself as working towards a better future for humanity. True c*******m wasn’t there yet, but the Soviet people were working to achieve a state where there was no exploitation or alienation. The shortcomings of today were the sacrifices necessary to reach utopia.

Russia under Putin makes no such claims. His propaganda apparatus, as extensive as the USSR’s and more sophisticated, does not aim to make the world’s people into c*******ts. It seeks to make them cynical. Given prevailing global attitudes, it’s a wise move. “You think we’re bad? You’re no better, just more hypocritical,” is the theme. As for foreign reporting about actual conditions in Russia, they’re all just f**e news from the lying media.

Russia’s foreign policy seeks less to influence foreign audiences positively than simply to create chaos abroad. Hacking, online trolling, and ransomware are part of this strategy. Calling out these actions merely elicits denials, accusations that the targets of the attacks did it to themselves, and cries of being an innocent victim of smears.

Does this sound familiar in the context of domestic politics? Once upon a time, the Republican Party actually enacted policies – damaging they may have been, but at least they were policies in traditional political terms. Since the Tea Party hysteria of around 2010 at the latest, the GOP has ceased offering policies (beyond the very narrow one of protecting the finances of America’s own oligarchs) and is now solely dedicated to obstruction, publicity stunts, trolling, and clawing into power and staying there forever.

Such laws as it enacts in the states bear no relation to solving any public problem, be it health, safety, t***sportation, or education. Their “policies” are a catalogue of complaints, publicity-seeking, and trolling on issues like C***D, v*****es or a******n, signaling the base, and obstruction (or effective prohibition) of any political opposition.

The throngs who cheerfully v**e GOP are not going to benefit materially from this – nor do they expect to. It is enough that their party tells them they are salt-of-the-earth Americans and harasses groups they don’t like: all very much like Russian citizens who v**e for Putin’s Russia United Party and despise Alexei Navalny for the unpatriotic crime of promising to prevent the oligarchs from ripping them off.

Putin uses his tame courts to disqualify inconvenient candidates like Navalny; in America, the GOP prevents supporters for opposition candidates from v****g. In case the e******n result still might be too close, the Russian leader creates bogus candidates he controls to divide the opposition. In America, there is the GOP’s manipulation of Kanye West. The differences in technique are mere details.

The Kremlin’s current line is that Navalny is an agent of the West, or even poisoned himself to make Russia look bad. It echoes Republicans’ claim that the J****** 6th i**********nists were tourists, or FBI provocateurs, or a****a. Under Putin, Russia is said to be a place where nothing is true and everything is possible. In like fashion, The Republican Party is in a protracted war with the empirical reality, leaving only endless conspiratorial possibilities known as alternative facts.

Airbrushing the facts extends to history books; as George Orwell said, “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” Putin has rehabilitated Stalin as a great patriot, and those who document Stalin’s crimes are persecuted. In the same manner, Republicans whitewash bloody i**********n on behalf of s***ery as being about “heritage,” and seek to preserve statues honoring s***eholders and t*****rs.

Just as pointing out unpleasant t***hs about the N**i-Soviet Pact gets you prosecuted in Russia, GOP legislators now want to make it illegal for any teacher to "teach or incorporate into any course or class any 'd******e concept.'" That the bill illustrates what should be taught by citing the debate between Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass when Lincoln’s opponent was Stephen Douglas only adds to the surrealism.

One could go on with these comparisons: the false machismo of the Russian leader posing bare-chested like Mussolini, playing hockey games with professional teams who obligingly let him pile up goals, and so on. This play-acting dovetails with the tough-guy affectation of Republican politicians: the supposed hillbilly cred of a Yale graduate and Wall Streeter named J.D. Vance running for US Senate in Ohio, or the intentional crudeness of politicians who claim to speak for the trailer parks while groveling to their donors at $1500-a-plate fundraisers.

At this point we should ask, where did these similarities come from? Even if the Kremlin directly influenced a few screwballs like Dana Rohrabacher and a handful of party operatives, why is this behavior deeply embedded in so many Republicans, to the point where it is now quite popular in the conservative media-entertainment complex ? The GOP, like Putin and his United Russia Party, are both deeply authoritarian, but why?

Corey Robin, in The Reactionary Mind, talks of the Right’s “narrative of loss and promised restoration.” This is true of Putin, the KGB colonel who saw the Soviet empire collapse and called its demise “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.” The threats over Ukraine are a consequence of this attitude.

We should bear in mind that it is occurring against a backdrop of sharp demographic decline. In the past year, Russia experienced a population loss of nearly one million, following many years of decrease. The economy has also steadily dropped since 2014. Its population is now smaller than Bangladesh and its per capita income lower than the Maldives. Male life expectancy is also below that of Bangladesh. Does this sound familiar?

The heart of the Republican base lives in counties that for many years have suffered population decline, such as in Iowa. This was mostly the result of outmigration due to the lack of good jobs, adequate health care, or educational opportunities. The 2020 census shows the trend has accelerated, with 90 percent of US counties that lost population in the last decade supporting Trump.

The outmigration is now accompanied by “deaths of despair” (suicide, drugs, etc.) among the white working class, a phenomenon that Anne Case and Angus Deaton discovered even before the C***D p******c. While it is occurring all over the country, it is most severe in rural states like West Virginia. The trend is further exacerbated by failure to take sensible social distancing precautions or get v******ted. Rural Americans are dying at twice the rate of urban dwellers. Owsley County, KY, has a life expectancy similar to that of Russia.

Weirdly, the reaction of GOP politicians to their own constituents’ die-off is to double down on what is k*****g them, as we have seen with Florida’s Ron DeSantis and South Dakota’s Kristi Noem. In my state of Virginia, the first act of the new governor, whose e*******l stronghold is the rural parts of the Commonwealth, was to ban urban northern Virginia’s mask and v*****e mandates. Never mind that the protocols were already in effect and working. His action did nothing to help the former mining towns of southwest Virginia that v**ed for him, but it was a thumb in the eye of the godless city folk.

This parallels Russia. Most of its population loss since the beginning of the p******c is suspected to be considerably underreported C***D deaths on top of the traditional deaths by suicide, misadventure, and vodka. Russia’s disinformation campaign against Western v*****es has backfired on its own population, making it mistrustful of v******tion. The country’s own v*****e, Sputnik, is only a little more effective than Republicans’ own cure-alls like horse de-wormer or Clorox.

Demographics explain why, despite the machismo and the fascination with dominance, the deeper note is one of bleating victimhood among Putin and his followers, and the GOP and its base. "We have nowhere to retreat. They have taken it to the point where we simply must tell them: ‘Stop!’” says Putin. This strongly resembles Trump’s whining assertion of injustice: "We don't want other leaders and other countries laughing at us anymore, and they won't be."

Despite their endless bellicosity, leaders like Putin, Trump, Jair Bolsonaro, or Viktor Orban are rarely bellicose towards one another; they usually get along famously. It has often been noted that there is probably human chemistry among authoritarian personalities.

But they also have a solid community of political interest. They seek to rule polities that are socially or economically damaged, and to do that they attract aggrieved and nihilistic followers. They remain on top by continuing to inflame existing wounds as they steal everything that isn’t nailed down. An outbreak in self-government to benefit the people in any one country might threaten the others by example

They have a common destiny: they will succeed as long as the people of their countries are made to fail.
Republicans | Vladimir Putin br by Mike Lofgren | ... (show quote)


Putin did not threaten Ukraine during Trump's Presidency. He took part of it during Obama and now threatens the rest under Biden. Those are facts that show everything you are now saying is wrong.

Do not ever let reality catch up with you. It would severely frighten you if it did.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 10:22:16   #
Tiptop789 Loc: State of Denial
 
microphor wrote:
you're ignorance is showing in so many ways. Trump took 2016 because people were sick to death of the Dem promises that never came true. "Evidence"-look at their promises for the inner cities, then look at the outcomes. We were sick to death of career politicians making a fortune at the expense of middle class America. The Hooray Clinton"s who could sit on the stand and say "what's it matter now" about the loss of men in B******i, you know the fathers, sons, brothers, friends who loss their lives there. So much more but I'm sure you wouldn't understand because you don't want to!
you're ignorance is showing in so many ways. Trum... (show quote)


I think T***p w*n in 2016 because many disliked Clinton. Part of the reason Biden won in 2020.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 10:30:06   #
Tiptop789 Loc: State of Denial
 
Weasel wrote:
Putin does have some indearing qualities


If you like him do much, why not return to the "motherland"? Some of his other qualities are jailing & murdering those that criticize him.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 10:34:14   #
Skiladi
 
Sick,sickMilosia

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 11:09:40   #
Carlos Caliente
 
Lots of words, all biased nonsense.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 11:25:50   #
permafrost Loc: Minnesota
 
microphor wrote:
you're ignorance is showing in so many ways. Trump took 2016 because people were sick to death of the Dem promises that never came true. "Evidence"-look at their promises for the inner cities, then look at the outcomes. We were sick to death of career politicians making a fortune at the expense of middle class America. The Hooray Clinton"s who could sit on the stand and say "what's it matter now" about the loss of men in B******i, you know the fathers, sons, brothers, friends who loss their lives there. So much more but I'm sure you wouldn't understand because you don't want to!
you're ignorance is showing in so many ways. Trum... (show quote)


You people are so numb....

Lady Hillary comment "what's it matter now" as you say was not about the loss of men but rather the why of the event.. but you do not care about the t***h, it does not serve your purpose..

t***p w*n 2016 because of a 20 unrelenting attack of lies on the democrats and Hillary.. and with the help of the Russians under Putin..

Do not mind if you are opposed to government for Americans by Americans, but try and limit your lies once in a while..

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 11:41:41   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
Tiptop789 wrote:
I think T***p w*n in 2016 because many disliked Clinton. Part of the reason Biden won in 2020.


Nah, that's not why Biden "won". Remember he was in the basement and couldn't get 200 people in a parking lot rally.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 11:45:25   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
permafrost wrote:
You people are so numb....

Lady Hillary comment "what's it matter now" as you say was not about the loss of men but rather the why of the event.. but you do not care about the t***h, it does not serve your purpose..

t***p w*n 2016 because of a 20 unrelenting attack of lies on the democrats and Hillary.. and with the help of the Russians under Putin..

Do not mind if you are opposed to government for Americans by Americans, but try and limit your lies once in a while..
You people are so numb.... br br Lady Hillary co... (show quote)


People like you are so stooped. Her comment, event or not, had the same inpacked. It mattered because we loss four good men unnessaccetily! Families, friends, siblings. Color it any color you want "it mattered then and it matters now".

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 12:22:04   #
Tiptop789 Loc: State of Denial
 
microphor wrote:
Nah, that's not why Biden "won". Remember he was in the basement and couldn't get 200 people in a parking lot rally.


True, he won because he got more v**es. Even Pence v**ed for Biden.

Reply
Feb 21, 2022 12:48:39   #
Michael Rich Loc: Lapine Oregon
 
permafrost wrote:
You people are so numb....

Lady Hillary comment "what's it matter now" as you say was not about the loss of men but rather the why of the event.. but you do not care about the t***h, it does not serve your purpose..

t***p w*n 2016 because of a 20 unrelenting attack of lies on the democrats and Hillary.. and with the help of the Russians under Putin..

Do not mind if you are opposed to government for Americans by Americans, but try and limit your lies once in a while..
You people are so numb.... br br Lady Hillary co... (show quote)



Funny thing..
Suicide Queen (she's no lady) Hillary Clinton said that T*****r James Comey caused her to lose the e******n.

Reply
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