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Deutschmeister's avatar

1) “'Donald Trump’s social media account on Monday shared a video referencing a "unified reich" in a post about how the country will change if he becomes president again,' Politico reports.

Much ado about nothing, Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt insists: 'This was not a campaign video, it was created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word, while the President was in court'.”

Which is yet another excellent illustration of why the nation (though not all of its occupants) deserves the fate that it gets if P01135809 gets back into office. There should be universal outrage. There is not. There should be mass revulsion at the imagery of it. There is not. And there should be a clear denunciation and vigorous repudiation from his team. There is not. More and more I feel like I am the passenger strapped into a car being driven by a very drunk driver, careening at obstacles until it inevitably hits one (or more) with tragic results, but can do nothing to stop the ride or take the keys away from the impaired driver.

2) "This has been the White House’s all-purpose inflation line for years. Is it politically useful? Sure, maybe—trying to get Americans to associate literally anybody else with inflation is a win in Biden’s book, and anti-corporate saber-rattling is hoary old boilerplate for Democrats. It’s also ridiculous. Are corporations greedier today than they were before the pandemic? Or are corporations by nature profit-maximizing entities just as workers are by nature wage-maximizing ones? Corporate profits are at record highs; so are wages."

Oh, so it's all really that simple. Got it.

Even in my most lockstep Republican voting days I knew this was apologizing for the worst excesses of Big Business, giving them a free pass in the name of making money as if that's all that matters with them and they are shielded from both blame and accountability otherwise if they are successful. To take just one branch from that tree, I see now that Target is joining McDonald's and some others in lowering their prices somewhat, on some items, because they say they feel our pain with inflation. Gee, swell, and thanks. Maybe. The obvious question is, if they are doing so now (because they can afford to), why didn't they do it sooner? Maybe there are some unstated ulterior motives. Like, say, good public relations? Maybe spin-and-deflect from other issues they are facing? Perhaps to draw people into their businesses to buy still more things that they don't necessarily need and that weren't on their purchase list? Bottom line: they are doing it for themselves first and foremost, and for the rest of us much lower down the list. That too is hoary old boilerplate. But you know that.

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Bryan Fichter's avatar

It's blackly humorous that the voters angry about inflation might replace Biden with Trump, whose policy proposals are all wildly inflationary.

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