Several good things happened last week, but naturally,
there are dark linings for these silver clouds.
Good News:
Hey, we improved our majority in the Senate. Now we only have to worry about
Manchin OR Sinema. Surely one or the other can be bought off persuaded
to vote for Democrat-sponsored bills.
Bad News: 1.7
million people thought sending Hershel Walker to Washington was a good idea. Thank
goodness for the 1.8 million that didn’t. This is a guy I wouldn’t have considered
qualified to work in my record store
back in the day, yet almost half the Georgia voters thought he would make a
good Senator. They should just remake the state motto to read: Georgia, the “Low
Bar” State.
The thought of Walker going to Congress left me with one distinct
mental image:
Good News: The
House passed the Respect for Marriage
Act, which is expected to be signed by the President today. The law provides
national protection for any valid marriage performed in any state, including
same-sex and inter-racial marriages, which appeared targeted in some
conservative circles. Forty-seven GOP Representatives voted for the bill.
Bad News: The
vote should have been unanimous, but there are still way too many Republicans
beholden to the Religious Right.
It also occurred to me that there might be a downside to
passing this law. Justice Thomas indicated in his concurring opinion to the
Dodd ruling (overturning Roe v Wade) that they may also look at overturning
same-sex marriage, contraception, and the right to privacy. One of the things I
thought would prevent such a ruling would be the utter disaster created by dissolving
existing marriages all over the country. It would be chaos, affecting the lives
of untold numbers of families, especially those with children. But now with the
threat of such chaos off the table, the Supremes may be more emboldened to
overturn Obergefell completely.
I’m not saying the new law is a bad thing, at all. I’m sure it allows affected
families to breathe easier, knowing their family will be intact, at least as
long as they can stand each other. But it’s unfortunate that people who are
currently single may not have the option to marry on the table in their state for
very much longer. I wonder if there’s going to be a run on same-sex marriages,
trying to get them on the books before SCOTUS torpedoes another basic human
right, just to appease a tiny percentage of religious wingnuts.
Good News: The
US enacted a prisoner swap with Russia to get Brittney Griner back from a
Russian prison, after being convicted of possession of cannabis oil. She was
sentenced to seven years in prison, for something that if not legal here, would
scarcely earn her a ticket.
Bad News: We
were not able to trade for Paul Whelan, an American serviceman held on
espionage charges. Naturally, conservatives are enraged that Griner is free and
Whelan isn’t, and expressing their displeasure with their customary grace
and dignity obnoxious hissy fits.
It looks like all the former experts on virology, tax
law, the Constitution, and computer forensics are not experts in international
diplomacy.
How the eff do they figure she “hates America?” Was she
not a two-time gold medalist for the USA? I knew this shit would blow up
for the simple Republican optics: The Black, lesbian, woman went free and the
White military man did not. Cue the strains of White Oppression.
Also, consider that there is a vast difference between a
civilian in a Russian prison for “drugs” versus US military personnel charged
with espionage. Didn’t they ever watch Sesame Street? One of these things is
not like the other. The White House says the charges are bogus, but who really
knows? They would say that even if the charges were accurate. So Russia refused
to deal on Whelan, despite multiple overtures from the US. So they took the
deal they could get, rather than leave both in prison. But then, that’s
Republican politics… “Unless I get
what I want, no one gets anything.”
I think if Whelan’s family understands the deal, everyone else should STFU. As far as I’m concerned, it’s “Anti-American” to be a misogynistic, racist, fuckwit.
More smoke and mirrors.
ReplyDeleteThey are only pro-American military when it suits them.
Didn't they cheer for Trump calling McCain a loser?
I smell BS
I've been blowing that horn for years. Republicans are only interested in the military in the abstract. They're the first to chime in that we can't do "x" for anyone else without first solving homelessness among vets. But when they have undisputed power and the opportunity to take action... crickets.
ReplyDeleteIf a Democrat had said about servicemen what TFG did, at a military gravesite in Europe, they'd have been calling for his head on a pike. But it was "their guy," so... crickets.
Some twit said to me that she doesn't deserve to be released because she had hemp/or pot or whatever. And that we should never give them dangerous people in exchange. Well, do we have sweet grandmas in there? WTF is wrong with people?
ReplyDeleteMy goodness. MTG and her 5 families meeting comments.
ReplyDeleteDoes she NOT understand that her JOB is to work for US??? Meaning us the citizens and US the united states?
Her job is NOT to sit around having mafia meetings planning attacks.
Geez Louise. Just wow. I cannot stand her.
Peg,
ReplyDeleteIf someone thinks possession of hemp or pot is worthy of a 7-year sentence in a Russian jail, then it's no use in even talking to them about it further. These "offenses" are perfectly legal in many parts of this country.
I give Biden credit for going and getting one of our people, even at the price of a criminal going free. It's the cost of doing business and exactly why Russia grabbed her up. It doesn't make any sense to leave her there just because we can't get someone else out.
Spidey,
MT Green is truly an acolyte of TFG... an idiot who thinks she's a genius. I can't imagine how dumb her constituents must be to think she is the best person to represent them.