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Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Trump Goons Storm The Capital With Seditious Intent And Violence (added current videos) !!! - The Good News: Democrats Warnock & Ossoff Take the Senate In Georgia & Praise the Lord !! - Juan Cole On The Rev. Warnock - I Think Curtis Mayfield Was Here.....


That picture does not tell the whole story. Go here and more videos on the CNN link:


[Update AT AROUND 1:00am:  Quick Note: the link to the riots below also is covering the certification of the  Electoral College votes. Spoiler: Biden is in like Flynn ! So, for a historical backdrop on the riots, stay on the link and just keep scrolling down. Looks to me like Trump is in a world of shit for inciting violence, don't miss how the Republicans one by one have turned on him, Mitt Romney was especially eloquent and correct. Goodnight y'all.]

 

  ~ From CNN:

 

In Pictures: Pro-Trump Rioters Breach the U.S. Capitol On Historic Day In Congress 

 

Are these maniacs more dangerous than the drug (and other) mafias down here?  Well, we could argue that point for hours, but suffice it to say for the time being, both are on the same level.

 

~~~~ 

 This story has just broke, so turn on your TV sets and tune in to the major news sources in the U.S.

Meanwhile, here are the updates:

 

UPDATES: Rioters Breach Capitol As Congress Certifies Biden's Win 

 

By Meg Wagner, Melissa Macaya, Mike Hayes and Melissa Mahtani, CNN

Updated 4:38 p.m. ET, January 6, 2021
 
 
~~~~~ 

If you are still here, adding this one with current videos, man I love Van Jones:
 
 
 
 

 

Democrats Take the Georgia Senate !!!

 

Awesome !

 
 Looks like Trump shot himself in his own mouth...er sorry I meant foot. I stayed up late last night just thrilled over Rev. Warnock's grande victory over the nazi bitch, but was heavy hearted going to bed thinking oh my god, what if Jon Ossoff doesn't win?  WTFB !!! He won !!!

Here are the updates with video:

 

Democrats Take Control Of the Senate 

 

By Melissa Macaya, Meg Wagner, Veronica Rocha and Mike Hayes, CNN

  Updated 4:39 p.m. ET, January 6, 2021

  ~~~~~ 

Also today, Juan Cole covers the Rev. Warnock and the many reasons why many of us cried with joy and relief last night when he defeated the Trump Loyalist and fellow racist, Kelly Loeffler:

 ~ From Informed Comment:

"The Stone of Help:" Rev. Raphael Warnock Ran For The Senate From Ebenezer Baptist Church: What That Means to American History 

 

"The Rev. Raphael Warnock, the new senator from Georgia, grew up in Savannah. His commitment to the Black Baptist tradition was deepened during his undergraduate years at Morehouse College. He told Vicky Eckenrode of the Savannah Morning News on 24 Oct 2005 of Morehouse, “It has deep Baptist roots so I became very interested in the long tradition of pastors who’d come through there, particularly those who were involved in the civil rights movement. It was the social gospel preachers that I found most attractive.”

He went north to study, at Union Theological Seminary (which is connected to Columbia University), where he earned a doctorate, and he preached at a church in Baltimore before returning south in 2005. That year, became a senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, the church at which the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. preached and which he had made a base for the Civil Rights Movement.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms endorsed Stacey Abrams for governor in 2018 at Ebenezer Baptist Church, and although Abrams narrowly lost, she has been a hurricane of activity in getting out the Black vote for the past two years. Sen. Warnock’s victory would have been impossible without her, and she may have made VP-elect Kamala Harris the tie-breaker for the senate. But also Warnock’s victory would have likely been impossible without his church base.

 

The church’s website gives the history of its founding:

    “Ebenezer was founded in 1886, nine years after reconstruction ended. A band of thirteen faithful people united under the leadership of the Rev. John A. Parker. Rev. Parker served as Ebenezer’s first pastor at the original site on Airline Street from 1886 to 1894.”

Rev. Parker, it must be noted, had been born a slave, and he began leading the small congregation in the Reconstruction Era before Southern white elites figured out ways of disenfranchising African-Americans under America’s own Apartheid, Jim Crow. This church was the headquarters for the overturning of Jim Crow legislation that ensured African-Americans had no political influence. Now, it has thrown up a credible senatorial candidate in an era where African-Americans increasingly hold significant public office. The history of the Ebenezer Baptist Church thus traverses the highs and lows of American democracy.

The name “Ebenezer” is consequential. It comes from the Book of Samuel, which speaks of the Philistines stealing the Ark of the Covenant. After 20 years, Samuel led the children of Israel to get it back, helped by the voice of God. Samuel set up a stone that he called in Hebrew Eben ha-Ezer , the Stone of Help.

The Ark of the Covenant was a gilded wooden container for the tablets of the Law brought down from Sinai by Moses.

I wonder if Rev. Parker, who had been enslaved and reduced to property by a white man before gaining his freedom with the Emancipation Proclamation, thought that during the era of slavery, the United States had lost the rule of law and the Bill of Rights to the pro-slavery faction, just as the Israelites had lost the Tablets of the Law to the Philistines. Emancipation would then have been analogous to the children of Israel recovering the Ark of the Covenant. Hence, the Ebenezer Baptist Church, a monument to the help received from God.

The church’s history page also tells us,

    “Today, Ebenezer Baptist, with a congregation of over 6,000, continues to serve the Atlanta community in the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site under the dynamic leadership of Reverend Dr. Raphael G. Warnock -– assuming the role of senior pastor in 2005. Dr. Warnock is only the fifth minister to lead the Ebenezer congregation in its 131 year history. One of his foremost accomplishments to date has been the completion of the Martin Luther King Sr. Community Resource Complex. This facility houses the Ebenezer Collaborative which provides support to the Atlanta community at large.”

Martin Luther King, Jr. joined the Ebenezer Baptist Church in 1936 at age 7. The Rev. King’s father became the pastor of the church.

In November, 1959, the church invited MLK to become co-pastor with his father, and he began early in 1960.

Dr. King preached a sermon on the kinds of love in 1962, taking off from the Greek distinctions among utilitarian love, romantic love, love among close friends, mother’s love and the ultimate, selfless love (agape).

Of utilitarian love he said,

    “I talked with a white man in Albany, Georgia, the other day, and when we got down in the conversation he said, “The thing that worries me so much about this movement here is that it’s creating so much tension, and we’d had such peaceful and harmonious race relations.” And then he went on to say, “I used to love the Negro, but I don’t have the kind of love for them that I used to have. You know, used to give money to Negro churches. And even the man who worked for me, I would give him something every year extra; I’d give him a suit. But I just don’t feel that way now. I don’t love Negroes like I used to.” And I said to myself, “You never did love Negroes (That’s right) because your love was a conditional love. It was conditioned upon the Negro staying in his place, and the minute he stood up as a man and as somebody, you didn’t love him anymore because your love was a utilitarian love that grew up from the dark days of slavery and then almost a hundred years of segregation.” This is what the system has done, you see. (Yes) It makes for the crudest level of love. Utilitarian love is the lowest level of love.”

Of selfless love, he said:

    “Let me rush on to that point which is explained by the Greek word agape. Agape is higher than all of the things I have talked about. Why is it higher? Because it is unmotivated; it is spontaneous; it is overflowing; it seeks nothing in return. It is not motivated by some quality in the object. Utilitarian love is motivated by a quality in the object, namely the object’s usefulness to him. Romantic love is motivated by some quality in the object, maybe the beauty of the object or the quality that moves the individual. A mother’s love is motivated by the fact that this is her child, something in the object before her. Move on up to friendship, it is motivated by that quality of friendliness and that quality of concern that is mutual. Go on up to humanity, humanitarian love, it is motivated by something within the object, namely a divine spark, namely something sacred about human personality. But when we rise to agape, to Christian love, it is higher than all of this. It becomes the love of God operating in the human heart. (Amen, Yes Lord) The greatness of it is that you love every man, not for your sake but for his sake. And you love every man because God loves him. (Amen, That’s right) And so it becomes all inclusive. The person may be ugly, or the person may be beautiful. The person may be tall, or the person may be short. The person may be light, or the person may be dark. The person may be rich, or the person may be poor. The person may be up and in; the person may be down and out. The person may be white; the person may be black. The person may be Jew; the person may be Gentile. The person may be Catholic; the person may be Protestant. In other words, you come to the point of loving every man and becomes an all-inclusive love. It is the love of God operating in the human heart. And it comes to the point that you even love the enemy.11 (Amen) Christian love does something that no other love can do. It says that you love every man. You hate the deed that he does if he’s your enemy and he’s evil, but you love the person who does the evil deed.”
     
The Rev. Warnock has been profoundly aware of the mantle he assumed. In this ugly political season, it has been a parlor game of Kelly Loeffler and Faux Cable News to take sentences from his sermons out of context to try to smear him. They clearly failed, and, indeed, attacks on the Black church may have majorly backfired.

Here is an excerpt from a talk Warnock gave at the Aspen Institute, which gives a clear idea of his values. America needs him.

    “Dr. King was drawn to Memphis, and I think it’s important to lift up that the movement had been fledgling and struggling in Memphis, a local movement amongst some sanitation workers, but then one day during a rainstorm, two sanitation workers, Echol Cole and Robert Walker, were literally crushed. Their bodies were literally crushed in the back of their sanitation trucks. This is 1968. It’s because they were forced to ride the back of the truck. They couldn’t seek shelter like their white colleagues, and so they sought shelter from the natural rain, but there was no security from the unnatural disaster of Jim Crow segregation a few years after the civil rights law had already been passed.

    And so Dr. King made his way to Memphis. And in the midst of that struggle emerged those iconic signs that we began to see again this year – very simple but sublime words – I am a man. Think about that – I am a man. Part of what it means to be a marginalized other, an oppressed person is that you have to have movements. You have to have a campaign to declare about yourself what ought to be obvious. So oppressed people have to have campaigns and say, I am a man. I think of Sojourner Truth in the 19th century, standing up and speaking for women’s rights and the rights of people of color and saying to her, white feminist colleagues, “ain’t I a woman.” And now of late, our younger sisters and brothers are saying, black lives matter. And when people respond to say, all lives matter, it’s obvious that they’ve missed the point.

    That is the point, that all lives matter. And if you don’t understand the contradiction, that speaks to the blindness of your own privilege. All lives matter – to say that all lives matter is like the fire engine showing up on the block and there’s a house on fire and you spray all the houses on the block because all houses matter. Some houses are on fire.”

That is Rev. Warnock speaking, but clearly it is the tradition speaking, the tradition of Rev. Parker, the ex-slave, and his successors at the Ebenezer Baptist Church.

—–

Bonus Video:

Roho: “Patience and It’s Perfect Work by Dr. Raphael Warnock” 

 

Marvelous, thank you Dr. Juan Cole you are a National Treasure.

 

~~~~~


Y'all know what this means (Dems overtaking the Georgia Senate)...in a nutshell the Trump agenda of slash and burn will be completely eradicated (keeping in mind that Vice-President Kamala Harris can and will step in to break any ties) , with the exception of Trump's goon squads...but we all know how the FBI handled the Klan, same principles will be applied to this problem. As far as Rev. Warnock, it is a giant leap forward, it took so long and so many have suffered; it is a shame that John Lewis did not live to see this day, but finally prayers have been answered. And, the battle continues.


Holy shit, I'm so glad.

 

You guys please stay safe.


With respect to Curtis Mayfield and The Chambers Brothers:

 

Trump Goons Storm The Capital With Seditious Intent And Violence (added current videos) !!! - The Good News: Democrats Warnock & Ossoff Take the Senate In Georgia & Praise the Lord !! - Juan Cole On The Rev. Warnock - I Think Curtis Mayfield Was Here.....


That picture does not tell the whole story. Go here and more videos on the CNN link:


[Update AT AROUND 1:00am:  Quick Note: the link to the riots below also is covering the certification of the  Electoral College votes. Spoiler: Biden is in like Flynn ! So, for a historical backdrop on the riots, stay on the link and just keep scrolling down. Looks to me like Trump is in a world of shit for inciting violence, don't miss how the Republicans one by one have turned on him, Mitt Romney was especially eloquent and correct. Goodnight y'all.]

 

  ~ From CNN:

 

In Pictures: Pro-Trump Rioters Breach the U.S. Capitol On Historic Day In Congress 

 

Are these maniacs more dangerous than the drug (and other) mafias down here?  Well, we could argue that point for hours, but suffice it to say for the time being, both are on the same level.

 

~~~~ 

 This story has just broke, so turn on your TV sets and tune in to the major news sources in the U.S.

Meanwhile, here are the updates:

 

UPDATES: Rioters Breach Capitol As Congress Certifies Biden's Win 

 

By Meg Wagner, Melissa Macaya, Mike Hayes and Melissa Mahtani, CNN

Updated 4:38 p.m. ET, January 6, 2021
 
 
~~~~~ 

If you are still here, adding this one with current videos, man I love Van Jones:
 
 
 
 

 

Democrats Take the Georgia Senate !!!

 

Awesome !

 
 Looks like Trump shot himself in his own mouth...er sorry I meant foot. I stayed up late last night just thrilled over Rev. Warnock's grande victory over the nazi bitch, but was heavy hearted going to bed thinking oh my god, what if Jon Ossoff doesn't win?  WTFB !!! He won !!!

Here are the updates with video:

 

Democrats Take Control Of the Senate 

 

By Melissa Macaya, Meg Wagner, Veronica Rocha and Mike Hayes, CNN

  Updated 4:39 p.m. ET, January 6, 2021

  ~~~~~ 

Also today, Juan Cole covers the Rev. Warnock and the many reasons why many of us cried with joy and relief last night when he defeated the Trump Loyalist and fellow racist, Kelly Loeffler:

 ~ From Informed Comment:

"The Stone of Help:" Rev. Raphael Warnock Ran For The Senate From Ebenezer Baptist Church: What That Means to American History 

 

"The Rev. Raphael Warnock, the new senator from Georgia, grew up in Savannah. His commitment to the Black Baptist tradition was deepened during his undergraduate years at Morehouse College. He told Vicky Eckenrode of the Savannah Morning News on 24 Oct 2005 of Morehouse, “It has deep Baptist roots so I became very interested in the long tradition of pastors who’d come through there, particularly those who were involved in the civil rights movement. It was the social gospel preachers that I found most attractive.”

He went north to study, at Union Theological Seminary (which is connected to Columbia University), where he earned a doctorate, and he preached at a church in Baltimore before returning south in 2005. That year, became a senior pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, the church at which the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. preached and which he had made a base for the Civil Rights Movement.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms endorsed Stacey Abrams for governor in 2018 at Ebenezer Baptist Church, and although Abrams narrowly lost, she has been a hurricane of activity in getting out the Black vote for the past two years. Sen. Warnock’s victory would have been impossible without her, and she may have made VP-elect Kamala Harris the tie-breaker for the senate. But also Warnock’s victory would have likely been impossible without his church base.

 

The church’s website gives the history of its founding:

    “Ebenezer was founded in 1886, nine years after reconstruction ended. A band of thirteen faithful people united under the leadership of the Rev. John A. Parker. Rev. Parker served as Ebenezer’s first pastor at the original site on Airline Street from 1886 to 1894.”

Rev. Parker, it must be noted, had been born a slave, and he began leading the small congregation in the Reconstruction Era before Southern white elites figured out ways of disenfranchising African-Americans under America’s own Apartheid, Jim Crow. This church was the headquarters for the overturning of Jim Crow legislation that ensured African-Americans had no political influence. Now, it has thrown up a credible senatorial candidate in an era where African-Americans increasingly hold significant public office. The history of the Ebenezer Baptist Church thus traverses the highs and lows of American democracy.

The name “Ebenezer” is consequential. It comes from the Book of Samuel, which speaks of the Philistines stealing the Ark of the Covenant. After 20 years, Samuel led the children of Israel to get it back, helped by the voice of God. Samuel set up a stone that he called in Hebrew Eben ha-Ezer , the Stone of Help.

The Ark of the Covenant was a gilded wooden container for the tablets of the Law brought down from Sinai by Moses.

I wonder if Rev. Parker, who had been enslaved and reduced to property by a white man before gaining his freedom with the Emancipation Proclamation, thought that during the era of slavery, the United States had lost the rule of law and the Bill of Rights to the pro-slavery faction, just as the Israelites had lost the Tablets of the Law to the Philistines. Emancipation would then have been analogous to the children of Israel recovering the Ark of the Covenant. Hence, the Ebenezer Baptist Church, a monument to the help received from God.

The church’s history page also tells us,

    “Today, Ebenezer Baptist, with a congregation of over 6,000, continues to serve the Atlanta community in the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site under the dynamic leadership of Reverend Dr. Raphael G. Warnock -– assuming the role of senior pastor in 2005. Dr. Warnock is only the fifth minister to lead the Ebenezer congregation in its 131 year history. One of his foremost accomplishments to date has been the completion of the Martin Luther King Sr. Community Resource Complex. This facility houses the Ebenezer Collaborative which provides support to the Atlanta community at large.”

Martin Luther King, Jr. joined the Ebenezer Baptist Church in 1936 at age 7. The Rev. King’s father became the pastor of the church.

In November, 1959, the church invited MLK to become co-pastor with his father, and he began early in 1960.

Dr. King preached a sermon on the kinds of love in 1962, taking off from the Greek distinctions among utilitarian love, romantic love, love among close friends, mother’s love and the ultimate, selfless love (agape).

Of utilitarian love he said,

    “I talked with a white man in Albany, Georgia, the other day, and when we got down in the conversation he said, “The thing that worries me so much about this movement here is that it’s creating so much tension, and we’d had such peaceful and harmonious race relations.” And then he went on to say, “I used to love the Negro, but I don’t have the kind of love for them that I used to have. You know, used to give money to Negro churches. And even the man who worked for me, I would give him something every year extra; I’d give him a suit. But I just don’t feel that way now. I don’t love Negroes like I used to.” And I said to myself, “You never did love Negroes (That’s right) because your love was a conditional love. It was conditioned upon the Negro staying in his place, and the minute he stood up as a man and as somebody, you didn’t love him anymore because your love was a utilitarian love that grew up from the dark days of slavery and then almost a hundred years of segregation.” This is what the system has done, you see. (Yes) It makes for the crudest level of love. Utilitarian love is the lowest level of love.”

Of selfless love, he said:

    “Let me rush on to that point which is explained by the Greek word agape. Agape is higher than all of the things I have talked about. Why is it higher? Because it is unmotivated; it is spontaneous; it is overflowing; it seeks nothing in return. It is not motivated by some quality in the object. Utilitarian love is motivated by a quality in the object, namely the object’s usefulness to him. Romantic love is motivated by some quality in the object, maybe the beauty of the object or the quality that moves the individual. A mother’s love is motivated by the fact that this is her child, something in the object before her. Move on up to friendship, it is motivated by that quality of friendliness and that quality of concern that is mutual. Go on up to humanity, humanitarian love, it is motivated by something within the object, namely a divine spark, namely something sacred about human personality. But when we rise to agape, to Christian love, it is higher than all of this. It becomes the love of God operating in the human heart. (Amen, Yes Lord) The greatness of it is that you love every man, not for your sake but for his sake. And you love every man because God loves him. (Amen, That’s right) And so it becomes all inclusive. The person may be ugly, or the person may be beautiful. The person may be tall, or the person may be short. The person may be light, or the person may be dark. The person may be rich, or the person may be poor. The person may be up and in; the person may be down and out. The person may be white; the person may be black. The person may be Jew; the person may be Gentile. The person may be Catholic; the person may be Protestant. In other words, you come to the point of loving every man and becomes an all-inclusive love. It is the love of God operating in the human heart. And it comes to the point that you even love the enemy.11 (Amen) Christian love does something that no other love can do. It says that you love every man. You hate the deed that he does if he’s your enemy and he’s evil, but you love the person who does the evil deed.”
     
The Rev. Warnock has been profoundly aware of the mantle he assumed. In this ugly political season, it has been a parlor game of Kelly Loeffler and Faux Cable News to take sentences from his sermons out of context to try to smear him. They clearly failed, and, indeed, attacks on the Black church may have majorly backfired.

Here is an excerpt from a talk Warnock gave at the Aspen Institute, which gives a clear idea of his values. America needs him.

    “Dr. King was drawn to Memphis, and I think it’s important to lift up that the movement had been fledgling and struggling in Memphis, a local movement amongst some sanitation workers, but then one day during a rainstorm, two sanitation workers, Echol Cole and Robert Walker, were literally crushed. Their bodies were literally crushed in the back of their sanitation trucks. This is 1968. It’s because they were forced to ride the back of the truck. They couldn’t seek shelter like their white colleagues, and so they sought shelter from the natural rain, but there was no security from the unnatural disaster of Jim Crow segregation a few years after the civil rights law had already been passed.

    And so Dr. King made his way to Memphis. And in the midst of that struggle emerged those iconic signs that we began to see again this year – very simple but sublime words – I am a man. Think about that – I am a man. Part of what it means to be a marginalized other, an oppressed person is that you have to have movements. You have to have a campaign to declare about yourself what ought to be obvious. So oppressed people have to have campaigns and say, I am a man. I think of Sojourner Truth in the 19th century, standing up and speaking for women’s rights and the rights of people of color and saying to her, white feminist colleagues, “ain’t I a woman.” And now of late, our younger sisters and brothers are saying, black lives matter. And when people respond to say, all lives matter, it’s obvious that they’ve missed the point.

    That is the point, that all lives matter. And if you don’t understand the contradiction, that speaks to the blindness of your own privilege. All lives matter – to say that all lives matter is like the fire engine showing up on the block and there’s a house on fire and you spray all the houses on the block because all houses matter. Some houses are on fire.”

That is Rev. Warnock speaking, but clearly it is the tradition speaking, the tradition of Rev. Parker, the ex-slave, and his successors at the Ebenezer Baptist Church.

—–

Bonus Video:

Roho: “Patience and It’s Perfect Work by Dr. Raphael Warnock” 

 

Marvelous, thank you Dr. Juan Cole you are a National Treasure.

 

~~~~~


Y'all know what this means (Dems overtaking the Georgia Senate)...in a nutshell the Trump agenda of slash and burn will be completely eradicated (keeping in mind that Vice-President Kamala Harris can and will step in to break any ties) , with the exception of Trump's goon squads...but we all know how the FBI handled the Klan, same principles will be applied to this problem. As far as Rev. Warnock, it is a giant leap forward, it took so long and so many have suffered; it is a shame that John Lewis did not live to see this day, but finally prayers have been answered. And, the battle continues.


Holy shit, I'm so glad.

 

You guys please stay safe.


With respect to Curtis Mayfield and The Chambers Brothers:

 

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

I Smell T-R-O-U-B-L-E

Courtesy Informed Comment

 

 Well, here's hoping the beginning of your New Year was better than ours. On 12/30 we had to go up to get my pre-op for the left eye...but both eyes were so dilated afterwards I couldn't go into the stores to get what  we needed.  So, we reluctantly chose to return the next day, which was a mistake except for the Mexican fish chowder at Asada's (so delicious, except I thought it needed just a pinch of oregano). Troubling is what the Doc told me which I did not know: that the two new strains of COVID (in Africa and England) are different.

 Despite the traffic and crowds, everyone was nice and just trying to get through the whole shebang. We didn't come back home until late, and then kaboom around midnight, the electricity went out - from the looks of it, all SADM was affected. The problem is that it didn't come back on for over 24 hours later and when it did two of our major appliances blew out in spite of the surge protectors which put a crimp in my style...so we have been scrambling.Mike did go back to work, but he has to return for another MRI & assorted doctor follow ups..

 Then, one neighbor wanted to know why I didn't play more country music. But of course, the big event was Trump's nasty phone call - so trying to catch up here we go:

 

 ~ From PBS:

Full Episode Jan 4, 2021

  

~~~~~

 

 ~  From Informed Comment: (with video on link)

Tragedies, Farces and Trump's coup d'etat: The History of an Idea 

 

 

"Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – Amy Gardner at the Washington Post got the scoop. In an hour-long telephone call to Georgia officials, including the the secretary of state, Trump browbeat them and hinted around that he could arrange jail time for them or foment unrest or spoil the January 5 senatorial run-off unless they found him enough votes to overcome Joe Biden’s slim lead in the state.

Former Obama acting solicitor general Neal Katyal said that Trump was talking like an organized crime boss, and I had the same thought. The heavy atmosphere of threat, the pointed question “how are we going to make this right,” the baseless assertions of owning something that didn’t belong to him, all made Trump sound very much like a wannabe Godfather.

Preet Bharara and others suggested that the president had committed “criminal solicitation” of election fraud both under federal and Georgia statutes.

Conservative Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin titled her op ed on the affair, “It’s impeachable. It’s likely illegal. It’s a coup.”

What does it mean for this telephone call to be a “coup,” and why do we call it that?

The term “coup” is short for the phrase coup d’état (koo day taah) which comes into English from the French for “blow to the state.”

In its meaning of a sudden change or overthrow of government it is a nineteenth-century borrowing into English, I think mainly from the 1850s. The Oxford English Dictionary gives two examples in that century:

1811 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1838) VIII. 352 “I shall be sorry to commence the era of peace by a coup d’état such as that which I had in contemplation.”

1859 T. P. Thompson Audi Alteram Partem II. xcviii. 87 “A coup d’état as effectual for the time as that of Louis Napoleon [2 Dec. 1851].”

T. P. Thompson was a Radical member of parliament who was upset that the conservative prime minister, Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley, the Earl of Derby, dissolved parliament. He saw it as a ploy to avoid having the elected legislators exert influence over the foreign ministry. This was at a time when war seemed on the verge of breaking out between France and Austria over the Italian nationalist movement led by Cavour and Garibaldi. He referred to the Executive sidelining the Legislature on a matter of foreign policy as a coup d’état, comparing Derby’s actions to the 1851 coup in France.

This citation points to the importance for the adoption of the term into English of the 2 December 1851 self-coup undertaken by Charles Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, the nephew of Napoleon I. Bonaparte was already president, but faced going out of office in 1852, and to stay in power, he made a coup d’état and styled himself Napoleon III. You can see the big spike in the use of the phrase (in all languages) in the wake of his coup in this Google Books ngram:


Courtesy Google Books Ngram viewer.

Karl Marx had a poor opinion of Louis-Napoléon, and the coup inspired him to observe archly, “Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.”

That is, the uncle, Napoleon Bonaparte, was an example of tragedy. The nephew was just laughable. He was supported by the rich who delegated him to do his emperor schtick on their behalf. He also attracted the allegiance of street riffraff who lacked a real blue collar job and attendant stable class interests, and who therefore shifted politically here and there, open to the blandishments of the clown-in-chief.

With Trump’s attempted coup d’état in his Saturday telephone call with Georgia officials, we have now entered yet a third Hegelian appearance, this time in the form of a sinister organized-crime buffoonery.

Louis-Bonaparte’s coup signaled the death knell of the democratic revolutions of 1848 and was viewed with alarm by progressives. The abolitionist MP from Martinique, Victor Schoelcher, denounced the Second Empire and warned Britain against allying with it, lamenting that Bonaparte had bribed the generals to let him come to power.

An essay in The American Whig Review that appeared not long after Louis-Napoléon’s coup d’état satirized the possibility of an American coup. I presume the subtext here was the presidential race between Whig nominee Gen. Whinfield Scott and Democratic Party standard bearer Franklin Pierce. Pierce won fair and square, even garnering both the electoral college and the popular vote.

So we’ve gone in America, from light-hearted satire about it happening over here to a concerted attempt to make it happen."

Exactly. Which is why I smell trouble...Trump and his cult are ruthless liars and relentless. Meanwhile, everyone else is fat and happy, Paris loves her new bed and Rubio has fully recovered. Totsie is just plain precious.

 

Go here too:

Democracy Now ! 

 

~~~~~

 

Stay Safe Guys ! 


I Smell T-R-O-U-B-L-E

Courtesy Informed Comment

 

 Well, here's hoping the beginning of your New Year was better than ours. On 12/30 we had to go up to get my pre-op for the left eye...but both eyes were so dilated afterwards I couldn't go into the stores to get what  we needed.  So, we reluctantly chose to return the next day, which was a mistake except for the Mexican fish chowder at Asada's (so delicious, except I thought it needed just a pinch of oregano). Troubling is what the Doc told me which I did not know: that the two new strains of COVID (in Africa and England) are different.

 Despite the traffic and crowds, everyone was nice and just trying to get through the whole shebang. We didn't come back home until late, and then kaboom around midnight, the electricity went out - from the looks of it, all SADM was affected. The problem is that it didn't come back on for over 24 hours later and when it did two of our major appliances blew out in spite of the surge protectors which put a crimp in my style...so we have been scrambling.Mike did go back to work, but he has to return for another MRI & assorted doctor follow ups..

 Then, one neighbor wanted to know why I didn't play more country music. But of course, the big event was Trump's nasty phone call - so trying to catch up here we go:

 

 ~ From PBS:

Full Episode Jan 4, 2021

  

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 ~  From Informed Comment: (with video on link)

Tragedies, Farces and Trump's coup d'etat: The History of an Idea 

 

 

"Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – Amy Gardner at the Washington Post got the scoop. In an hour-long telephone call to Georgia officials, including the the secretary of state, Trump browbeat them and hinted around that he could arrange jail time for them or foment unrest or spoil the January 5 senatorial run-off unless they found him enough votes to overcome Joe Biden’s slim lead in the state.

Former Obama acting solicitor general Neal Katyal said that Trump was talking like an organized crime boss, and I had the same thought. The heavy atmosphere of threat, the pointed question “how are we going to make this right,” the baseless assertions of owning something that didn’t belong to him, all made Trump sound very much like a wannabe Godfather.

Preet Bharara and others suggested that the president had committed “criminal solicitation” of election fraud both under federal and Georgia statutes.

Conservative Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin titled her op ed on the affair, “It’s impeachable. It’s likely illegal. It’s a coup.”

What does it mean for this telephone call to be a “coup,” and why do we call it that?

The term “coup” is short for the phrase coup d’état (koo day taah) which comes into English from the French for “blow to the state.”

In its meaning of a sudden change or overthrow of government it is a nineteenth-century borrowing into English, I think mainly from the 1850s. The Oxford English Dictionary gives two examples in that century:

1811 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1838) VIII. 352 “I shall be sorry to commence the era of peace by a coup d’état such as that which I had in contemplation.”

1859 T. P. Thompson Audi Alteram Partem II. xcviii. 87 “A coup d’état as effectual for the time as that of Louis Napoleon [2 Dec. 1851].”

T. P. Thompson was a Radical member of parliament who was upset that the conservative prime minister, Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley, the Earl of Derby, dissolved parliament. He saw it as a ploy to avoid having the elected legislators exert influence over the foreign ministry. This was at a time when war seemed on the verge of breaking out between France and Austria over the Italian nationalist movement led by Cavour and Garibaldi. He referred to the Executive sidelining the Legislature on a matter of foreign policy as a coup d’état, comparing Derby’s actions to the 1851 coup in France.

This citation points to the importance for the adoption of the term into English of the 2 December 1851 self-coup undertaken by Charles Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, the nephew of Napoleon I. Bonaparte was already president, but faced going out of office in 1852, and to stay in power, he made a coup d’état and styled himself Napoleon III. You can see the big spike in the use of the phrase (in all languages) in the wake of his coup in this Google Books ngram:


Courtesy Google Books Ngram viewer.

Karl Marx had a poor opinion of Louis-Napoléon, and the coup inspired him to observe archly, “Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.”

That is, the uncle, Napoleon Bonaparte, was an example of tragedy. The nephew was just laughable. He was supported by the rich who delegated him to do his emperor schtick on their behalf. He also attracted the allegiance of street riffraff who lacked a real blue collar job and attendant stable class interests, and who therefore shifted politically here and there, open to the blandishments of the clown-in-chief.

With Trump’s attempted coup d’état in his Saturday telephone call with Georgia officials, we have now entered yet a third Hegelian appearance, this time in the form of a sinister organized-crime buffoonery.

Louis-Bonaparte’s coup signaled the death knell of the democratic revolutions of 1848 and was viewed with alarm by progressives. The abolitionist MP from Martinique, Victor Schoelcher, denounced the Second Empire and warned Britain against allying with it, lamenting that Bonaparte had bribed the generals to let him come to power.

An essay in The American Whig Review that appeared not long after Louis-Napoléon’s coup d’état satirized the possibility of an American coup. I presume the subtext here was the presidential race between Whig nominee Gen. Whinfield Scott and Democratic Party standard bearer Franklin Pierce. Pierce won fair and square, even garnering both the electoral college and the popular vote.

So we’ve gone in America, from light-hearted satire about it happening over here to a concerted attempt to make it happen."

Exactly. Which is why I smell trouble...Trump and his cult are ruthless liars and relentless. Meanwhile, everyone else is fat and happy, Paris loves her new bed and Rubio has fully recovered. Totsie is just plain precious.

 

Go here too:

Democracy Now ! 

 

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Stay Safe Guys ! 


Sunday, December 27, 2020

The Possessed One Signs The COVID Relief Bill - Rubio Rushed To VCA - Dos From Fabulous Don Caron Wow !


 

Oh brother....after making everyone wait for days on pins and needles, dumb shit finally signs the COVID Relief Bill.

Here it is: 

 

 ~ From The Washington Post via MSN: 

 

Trump Signs Stimulus and Government Spending Bill Into Law, Averting Shutdown 


 

 ~ From CNN: 

 

Trump Signs Coronavirus Relief and Government Funding Bill Into Law After Lengthy Delay 

 


(;

The Possessed One Signs The COVID Relief Bill - Rubio Rushed To VCA - Dos From Fabulous Don Caron Wow !


 

Oh brother....after making everyone wait for days on pins and needles, dumb shit finally signs the COVID Relief Bill.

Here it is: 

 

 ~ From The Washington Post via MSN: 

 

Trump Signs Stimulus and Government Spending Bill Into Law, Averting Shutdown 


 

 ~ From CNN: 

 

Trump Signs Coronavirus Relief and Government Funding Bill Into Law After Lengthy Delay 

 


(;

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Merry Christmas !

Merry Christmas Y'all  !
 


 

******

 

Best wishes and hopes for a better happy and healthy New Year for you and those dear to you, maybe we'll get lucky and I hate to mention his name...but maybe they will throw him in jail.

Maggie, Mike, Paris, Rubio, Totsie and  the Feral Cats

Merry Christmas !

Merry Christmas Y'all  !
 


 

******

 

Best wishes and hopes for a better happy and healthy New Year for you and those dear to you, maybe we'll get lucky and I hate to mention his name...but maybe they will throw him in jail.

Maggie, Mike, Paris, Rubio, Totsie and  the Feral Cats

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Speaking Of "The Stimulus Bill"...What Exactly Is Trump's Motive ? - Trump's Absolute Shameful Pardons of Murderers (The Blackwater 4) and Criminals - Mr. Chris Cuomo

I won't be able to get over here tomorrow, I'm baking all day.  But we should have known after listening today to Biden blast Trump over the Russian Hack (and "blast " is being too kind, I should have said he fuc*in blasted Trump) and promised the people of the U.S. that the present standing Stimulus Bill was really just a down payment and that more help was on the way after his official swearing in that Trump would finally implode like a ten ton balloon..  Just remember, the Democrats always wanted two grand from the get go  and the GOP refused to let them have it.

So, was it all just a plot ? Was the GOP already aware of what Trump was going pull and simply stringing the Democrats along ?

Here's the scoop and am adding the Cuomo review from earlier this evening - wanted to get the entire interview he had with Sam Donaldson but couldn't find it; and of course more words of wisdom from William Rivers Pitt.

  ~~~~~

 

 ~ From The Washington Post via MSN: (with videos on the link)

Trump Calls On Congress To Approve $2,000 Stimulus Checks Hinting He Might Not Sign Relief Bill Without Changes 

 

 

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Stay Safe Y'all !