Archive for May, 2020

Edward Snowden will not be pardoned in his lifetime, says author of new book on the NSA whistleblower – Yahoo News

The Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter who documented the scope of the U.S. governments surveillance on its own citizens after receiving leaked National Security Agency documents from Edward Snowden told Yahoo News that he believes the former NSA contractor will not be pardoned in his lifetime.

Barton Gellman, now a staff writer at the Atlantic, was one of three reporters Snowden first approached in 2013 with the archive of documents showing mass surveillance of American citizens by their own government. Gellmans book about Snowden,Dark Mirror: Edward Snowden and the American Surveillance State,was released Tuesday. Gellman, who is sympathetic to Snowden but raises questions about some of his actions, said Snowden will not be able to return to America in his lifetime unless he comes in handcuffs.

Getting pardoned is going to be a very, very big lift for any president, Gellman told Yahoo News Skullduggery podcast. The intelligence community, the national security community, loathes Snowden and have long memories for this sort of thing, and I dont think hell be pardoned in his lifetime.

Gellman has spent significant time with Snowden since first meeting him in 2013 and said his books title reflects his own view of the U.S. governments surveillance capabilities and efforts.

Were transparent to our government, our government is opaque to us, and that creates distortions in the balance of power, he said.

Still, Gellman is clear that his book is not meant to be a full-throated defense of Snowden, who remains in Russia, where he has been since shortly after Gellman and other Washington Post reporters first revealed the NSAs illegal mass data collection efforts thanks to Snowdens disclosures.

Snowden had been a Hawaii-based NSA contractor before he made the decision to give Gellman the trove of documents. Snowden then traveled to Hong Kong before continuing on to Moscow in what he has said was a bid to make his way to Ecuador, which has historically refused to extradite criminal suspects to the U.S. After the Guardian and Gellman at the Washington Post first published their stories, Snowden then sharedhighly classifiedmaterial with the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post revealing NSA targets inside China, a revelation that seemed unrelated to his professed concern about wanting to protect the privacy of American citizens.When asked to explain why Snowden chose to leak information about U.S. intelligence gathering efforts in China to the South China Morning Post, Gellman said he would not defend what Snowden did.

Story continues

I have no defense of the South China Morning Post story; Snowdens view was that he was showing that even universities and hospitals that is, not defense facilities or foreign ministers were a target, Gellman said of the disclosures to a hostile foreign government. I would not have published that story, because I dont publish stories that warn specific foreign targets of legitimateforeign adversaries that theyre being spied on.

Download or subscribe on iTunes:Skullduggery from Yahoo News

Over the years, Gellman and Snowden have debated the surveillance state and its importance, sometimes ending up on opposite sides of the debate. Gellman said Snowden intrigues him in part because of how far he was willing to go to reveal sensitive and previously unknown NSA practices such as the illegal bulk collection of phone records. Congress outlawed the practice in 2015, a step that almost definitely would not have happened without Snowdens revelations.

Why do people like Snowden do what they do? Gellman asked. Most people are going to go along and get along. ... It requires a supreme confidence in your own sense of right and wrong, which Snowden does have. And it requires a sensibility that cant tolerate inaction.

Gellman said that despite speculation by others that Snowden is aRussian spy, he just doesnt believe it based on his experiences with the whistleblower. Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Snowden reached out to Russian diplomats based in Hong Kong during the two weeks he spent there before the story broke, but Gellman said he spent significant time investigating Snowdens relationship with Russia and has concluded that Snowden is not a Russian asset.

Gellman pointed to the fact that Snowden ended up in Moscow when his passport was revoked en route to Cuba and then Ecuador Gellman said he has seen Snowdens plane ticket, which showed a final destination in Ecuador. And Snowden urged him not to bring any of the documents he shared with him on a trip to Russia, hardly a warning one would expect from a Russian intelligence operative hoping to access as much material as possible. As for what Putin said, Gellman concludes the Russian president may have wanted to leave a false trail or to poke the Americans.

Whatever Snowdens historical relationship with the Russian government, it is evident that Putin sees tremendous value in having Snowden remain in Moscow, where U.S. authorities cant touch him. Gellman said he believes Putin enjoys his role as international human rights defender protecting a whistleblower like Snowden. Even Snowden realizes he is a prize for Putin and is open about it, Gellman said.

Snowden has also acknowledged to me, and I thought it was very interesting, that Putin has reason to protect him, because although he is not in fact a Russian agent, he might look that way to other people and Putin does not want to discourage walk-ins by foreign intelligence officers of other countries, Gellman said. If he sent Snowden back, that would make people wary ... so Snowden says, Even though I am not a spy, he is treating me as though I were so that he doesnt blow chances with somebody else.

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Edward Snowden will not be pardoned in his lifetime, says author of new book on the NSA whistleblower - Yahoo News

DOJ Tries To Thwart Reality Winner’s Appeal For Release From Prison – Shadowproof

The coronavirus may infect NSA whistleblower Reality Winner while she is incarcerated at a womens prison hospital. She has a history of respiratory illness that makes her exceptionally vulnerable. Yet, the United States government contends they have no record of Winner ever submitting a request for relief. Prosecutors further suggesteven if the warden for Federal Medical Center Carswell received a request for release from Winnerthat she did not follow the appropriate process so her appeal should be denied.

Winner pled guilty in 2018 to one count of violating the Espionage Act when she disclosed an NSA report to The Intercept. She believed the report contained evidence that Russian hackers targeted United States voter registration systems during the 2016 election.

She has served more than half of her 63-month sentence, and her attorneys urged a federal court to release her to home confinement to serve the remaining 19 months of her sentence.

But Judge Randal Hall sided with the Justice Department on April 24 and contended the medical prison, where Winner is incarcerated, is presumably better equipped than most to deal with any onset of COVID-19 in its inmates.

Hall refused to grant Winner a hearing to present specific evidence on the risks posed to her health by the coronavirus. In response to the U.S. government, Winners attorneys said [PDF] prosecutors presented no grounds to deny Winners request to treat her motion for compassionate release as the life-and-death matter it (and COVID-19) really is. Winners request for compassionate release presents compelling and extraordinary reasons to justify the relief she seeks, they added. Her good luck thus far is the only thing that separates her from the thousands of inmates in the Bureau of Prisons custody who have contracted COVID-19 on BOPs watch.Her attorneys point out 57 people in BOP custody died and paid the ultimate price for BOPs egregious mishandling. The manner in which the government is bureaucratically seeking to thwart Winners appeal does not bode well for prisoners seeking to invoke the First Step Act to win compassionate release. Prosecutors claim [PDF], Winner alleged, without documentary support, that on April 8, 2020, she submitted a written request to the warden of FMC Carswell in Fort Worth, Texas, asking that he petition the Bureau of Prisons for a reduction of her sentence. [Note: Part of this is quoted from Winners appeal, but the government didnt include an end quote.]The government insists it inquired, and the BOP never received any request. Only in her reply brief did Winner attempt to provide evidence showing she actually submitted a request. None of the documents though were Winners actual request or detailed what the basis of the request was. This is important because the date, as well as the content, of the request determines whether the defendant has appropriately exhausted her administrative remedies prior to filing in district court, the government added.As of May 1, according to BOP, seventy percent of the prisoners, who correctional staff choose to test, have tested positive for the coronavirus. Reuters special report, Death Sentence, which documented the hidden coronavirus toll in U.S. jails and prisons, called attention to figures compiled by the U.S. government, which appear to undercount the number of infections dramatically in correctional settings. Still, the government presses on. Because Winner did not include among her reply briefs exhibits a copy of her request to BOP, neither the district court nor this court can ascertain if she (as many inmates do) asked to be placed on home confinement rather than to be compassionately released. To this argument, Winners attorneys note they had Alison Grinter, one of Winners Texas-based attorneys, submit a statement to the appeals court under penalty of perjury that she helped Winner file a request not once, but twice. Realitys BOP correctional counselor Bill Pendergraft provided Reality with the form as emailed to him by Ms. Grinter, and BOP staff-member Mary Gruszka assured Reality that she would hand-deliver the completed form to the warden.

Finally (nearly a month later and after necessitating an appeal), the government acknowledges what Reality knew all alongthat BOP received the request(s) at least as of April 20, 2020. But the government claims it was not reviewed as a request for compassionate release. This is astounding given that the written request cited to the applicable compassionate release statute, Winners attorneys declare.If the BOP is not aware that Reality is seeking compassionate release under the First Step Act, members of the press have had no trouble following along, and the district court, Reality, and the government have all briefed the issue under the compassionate release statute.

The governments response fits in with a culture at the Justice Department under Attorney General Bill Barr, which has resulted in the release of only 1.8 percent of people in BOP custody during the pandemic. On May 26, ProPublica reported the Bureau of Prisons has a secret policy that made it harder for prisoners to qualify for release. A federal judge accused officials at the Elkton Federal Correctional Institution in Ohio the site of a deadly coronavirus outbreak cited by Barr in his order of moving too slowly to release inmates and thumbing their noses' at a directive Barr issued on releasing prisoners into home confinement. The judge instructed the government to expand the class of inmates eligible for home confinement by including inmates not only with minimum-risk scores, but also those said to have a low risk.The same day the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a request from the Justice Department to halt the lower courts order. There are 837 medically vulnerable inmates potentially eligible for transfer.Aside from the game being played by the BOP and prosecutors, Winners attorneys suggest one of the reasons the government is able to shiftily claim they never received a request is because the district court did not hold a hearing on evidence relevant to the case. The court could have heard from stakeholders at BOP and FMC Carswell about the BOP response generally and specifically at FMC Carswell, her attorneys assert. Winners legal team could have introduced via subpoenaed documents or testimony Realitys more recent medical records, which are (of course) in the possession, custody, and control of the government. All of this is critical evidence the district court needed in order to actually, appropriately, and effectively exercise its discretion. Unfortunately, Judge Randal Hall was largely uninterested in exercising discretion and deferred to the arguments of prosecutors. He did not verify statements prosecutors made about the BOPs coronavirus response. Billie Winner-Davis, who is Realitys mother, remains deeply concerned about the irreparable damage that is being done to her daughters mental state.

I have heard my daughter tell me, Mom, I am not okay, and as her mother, this tears me apart.

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DOJ Tries To Thwart Reality Winner's Appeal For Release From Prison - Shadowproof

How intelligence agencies of USA, and doubtlessly China, are hoovering up data that can be used against you – Sai Kung Buzz

Ministry of Public Security and Ministry of State Security of the Peoples Republic of China (Beijing) Photo: Wikimapia

As Beijing moves to impose a national security law and mainland security agencies prepare to enter Hong Kong in larger numbers, people struggling to understand the peril they may face should read Edward Snowdens new book. Permanent Record, published last year, gives a full picture of the mass surveillance the U.S. has set up of your every email, website browse, social media interaction and phone call. The Chinese Communist Party is hoovering up similar information through its agencies.

First what is coming from our compatriots in Beijing. When needed, relevant national security organs of the Central Peoples Government will set up agencies in (Hong Kong) to fullfil relevant duties to safeguard national security, Chinese official Wang Zhen told the National Peoples Congress. The new law being imposed by Beijing empowers this. Residents can expect to see the Partys tough organisations such as the Ministry for State Security, the main domestic and external intelligence service, operating openly in the city, according to the Financial Times. This ministry, modeled on the Soviet Unions KGB, has been accused of arbitrary arrests and detentions as well as torture. Soon no resident of Hong Kong will be immune from the 3:00 am knock on the door and extraordinary rendition to a mainland court and jail.

Turning to Snowdens book we learn what the intelligence agencies of the USA and doubtlessly the Chinese Community Party are doing right now. For the somewhat less than tech-savvy the book is daunting. To simplify we turn to Pages 224 and 225 to give you an insight into what is being done to you and yours every day.

Imagine you are sitting in front of a computer, about to visit a website. You open a web browser, type in a URL, and hit Enter. The URL is, in effect, a request, and this request goes out in search of its destination server. Somewhere in the midst of its travels, however, before your request gets to that server, it will have to pass through TURBULENCE, one of the NSAs (National Security Agency) most powerful weapons.

Snowden, who worked for the CIA and NSA in several countries, writes that your request passes through black servers stacked one on top of another, together about the size of a four-shelf bookcase. These are installed at private telecommunications buildings throughout allied countries, as well as US embassies and military bases. They contain two critical tools. TURMOIL handles passive collection, copying data coming through. TURBINE is in charge of active collection actively tampering with the users.

You can think of TURMOIL as a guard positioned at an invisible firewall through which Internet traffic must pass, Snowden writes. Seeing your request, it checks its metadata for selectors, or criteria, that mark it as deserving of more scrutiny. These selectors can be whatever NSA (or the Communist Party) chooses, whatever they find suspicious: a particular email address, credit card or phone number; the geographic origin or destination of your Internet activity; or just certain keywords such as democracy or protest.

If TURMOIL flags your traffic as suspicious, it tips it over to TURBINE, which diverts your request to NSAs servers. There, algorithms decide which of the agencys exploits malware programmes to use against you. This choice is based on the type of website youre trying to visit as much as on your computers software and Internet connection. These chosen exploits are sent back to TURBINE, which injects them into the traffic channel and delivers them to whatever website you requested.

Snowden said the end result is, you get the content you want, along with all the surveillance you dont, and it all happens in less than 686 milliseconds. Completely unbeknownst to you.

Once the exploits are in your computer, the NSA can access not just your metadata, but your data as well. Your entire digital life now belongs to them.

Chinas Great Firewall, operated by the Cyberspace Administration of China, is the entity charged with translating the Communist Partys policies into technical specifications. Carrie Lams Government insists it does not affect Hong Kong. Only the naive will believe, given the new security law, the rising number of Party agencies that will set up in Hong Kong and Ms Lam and her ministers prostrate posture before their Party bosses, that this will be true for much longer and likely isnt even now.

Seven years ago, Edward Snowden shocked the world by busting out of the American intelligence establishment, where he worked as a brilliant young systems analyst and administrator. He revealed the USA was secretly pursuing the means to collect and store every phone call, text message, email and internet browse made by everyone on the planet. As Permanent Record explains all your personal data is now stored by American intelligence agencies and they will have it forever. Soon the Communist Party will have similar data that it can potentially use against you, if it doesnt already.

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How intelligence agencies of USA, and doubtlessly China, are hoovering up data that can be used against you - Sai Kung Buzz

Combatting the Taliban, the Nazi, in Ourselves – High Plains Reader

by Charlie Barber | .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) | Last Word | May 26th, 2020

#6 of On Tyranny: Be wary of paramilitaries When the men with guns who have always claimed to be against the system start wearing uniforms and marching with torches and pictures of a leader, the end is nigh. When the pro-leader paramilitary and the official police and military intermingle, the end has come. Timothy Snyder

Men who rape, kill, torture, and mutilate because they dont like how another person looks or behaves, what he or she believes, or for whom he or she works deserve no mercy from historians, politicians or any other Americans. Yet we all must remember that these angry chants and threats have long been a part of the larger American chorus that, if it were ever to surrender the urge to hate and kill, might also break into song. - Catherine McNicol Stock, Rural Radicals

#7 of On Tyranny: Be reflective if you must be armed If you carry a weapon in public service, may God bless you and keep you. But know that evils of the past involved policemen and soldiers finding themselves, one day, doing irregular things. Be ready to say no. Timothy Snyder

The need is not really for more brains, the need is now for a gentler, a more tolerant people than those who won for us against the ice, the tiger, and the bear. The hand that hefted the ax, out of some old blind allegiance to the past fondles the machine gun as lovingly. It is a habit man will have to break to survive, but the roots go very deep. Loren Eiseley, The Immense Journey

Stalin...displayed his special form of political genius: interpreting the disastrous consequences of his own policies as a reason to punish his political opponents (real or imagined)...his reasoning now liberated itself from the burden of contact with empirical reality...security organs would find the truth they were ordered to find...In this new world, the past was no guide...No arguments could be advanced against what Stalin chose to call a fact...(He) presided over the death of millions, and greeted human catastrophe as political success. - Timothy Snyder, Stalins Famine, Sketches From a Secret War

No body, no problem. - attr. to J. Stalin No (accurate ) body count, no problem. attr. to D. Trump

You cant tell it like it is, unless, you, first, tell it like it was. - Chicago Dog

Men who did not know that they were slaves do not know that they have been freed. - Milton Mayer

As Planned Parenthood gears up for an all out assault on the Rights of Women with a clinic for women seeking natal and abortion assistance in southern Illinois, the Midwests bluest State, a map marks this location as geographically convenient to women who are despised, in law, by men in States to the South, Southwest and East. That map also marks the jumping off point for General U.S. Grants Army of the Tennessee that waged war from 1861-1865, against a way of thinking that had a concrete form in the Confederacy, but also, a spiritual racism and male chauvinism that affected all regions of America back then, and, unfortunately, now as well.

Violent words from President Trump, his propaganda machine in the White House, FOX news, Congressional Republicans like Jim Jordan (OH).Matt Gaetz (FL), Lindsay Graham (SC) and Mitch McConnell (KY) have defended a nihilistic, lawless leadership. A refusal by Attorney General William Barr on May 18, 2020 to break the law in pursuit of fictitious deep state, conspiracy theories about former President Barack Obama may stymie his Hater-in-Chief, but will not stop hatefulness spawned by Barrs previous pandering to power. Desperate despots of demagogy incite a civil war of words that evokes the violence of slavery advocates of yesteryear, and todays would be dictators. As civilized Americans face issues laying bare very uncivilized emotions and actions, I turned, once again, to the wisdom of my KGB animal companions.

High Plains Reader: Hello dear friends! Why does rhetoric of Trump supporters in the White House, Congress, and on Trump (FOX) TV, resemble Taliban tribalism in Afghanistan? Weve spent much treasure and many lives over there, yet we, like them, have men in power here who hate women, white people in power who fear and loathe people of color, and Christians who do not really love their neighbor, if their neighbor doesnt suit their brand of belief or appearance?

Lena: Hate viruses, or bacteria of bullsh*t are easier to spread than tolerance antidotes of the Sermon on the Mount and words of Shakespeares King Lear (None doth offend). Perhaps you should meet our newest friend: Ms. Recovering Republican Lap Dog. Her parents were bred where Lapland overlaps Norway and Vladimir Putins Russia, for export to suburban women all over the United States. However, her breed became estranged from a country club cocoon way-of-life, when their mistresses became estranged from the ABCs of Suburbia (Adultery, Booze and Crabgrass), the Republican Party, and the dogmatic misogyny of their husbands.

Ms. RRLD: Those who wish to dominate others never get their way when folks translate daily live and let live behavior into political action and vote such democratic convictions. That is hard to do, however, when propagandists turn ordinary, descriptive, yet debatable terms, like liberal and conservative, into masks or weapons.

Schickelgruber: Hitler and Goebbels did win the propaganda war in World War II by the way. German soldiers, supposedly invincible, were jacked up on speed, while their home folks were jacked up on lies, and the German High Command was given monetary bribes.

Mr. Crying Wolf: To counter the Nazi onslaught of illusions, FDRs commander, General George Marshall, tapped a top propagandist, Hollywood Producer/Director, Corporal Frank Capra, to produce counter propaganda in the Why We Fight Series. The problem was that Capra ended up repeating the sauerkraut-is-liberty-cabbage mistake. He taught Americans to hate all things German rather than just Nazism, despite a quarter of American troops and officers in World War II (Eisenhower [DDay], Nimitz [Midway], Eichelberger [New Guinea], Spaatz [Bomber Command-England], and Wedemeyer [General Staff]) being of German descent.

Kim Dog Un: As for the Japanese Empire, no problem. White Americans already were racist towards Asian peoples. Trump and his alleged freedom fighters still are.

Mr. Swamp Fox: Failure to distinguish between Nazism in World War II, as well as the Kaisers Imperialism in World War I, and the German heritage of so many Americans, blinded you to the inherent Nazism of lynching black folks, Christianitys Racism (Anti-Semitism) against Jews, race hatred against all peoples of color, and contempt for women.

Omar Khayyam: Nazi, Taliban, or similar mutations of the intolerance virus have been around much longer than Covid-19. Trump merely exploits them for his own sick power trips, along with a few permanent, willing executioners like Stephen Miller, and other part time schemers and mismanagers. Trump and Miller can dehumanize and kill off the powerless in private (lucrative) prisons and (lucrative) immigrant concentration camps, but they cannot intimidate a former federal prosecutor of Crime Boss John Gotti, about to weigh in on their efforts to free Mike Flynn. With AG Barr blinking over bogus charges against Trumps predecessor, the White House backwards parade to medieval savagery and lawlessness, has been temporarily halted.

Schickelgruber: The Nazi horror wasnt just application of technology to genocide, but its clear rejection of humanism and humanitarianism that separated the savage Europe of 16th Century religious wars and 17th Century slave trading and the 20th Century Europe built upon the 18th Century Enlightenment and the 19th Century Industrial Revolution. Angela Merkels Germans represent the better angels in human nature, the way that many of their 1930s forbearers did not.

HPR: And Donald Trumps amoral, AR-15, paranoid, Americans?

Rasputin: The world pities America today; less for Trumps inept Federal response to Covid- 19, than because you have fallen away from ideals of freedom and equality that the world respected you for, even more than for your military might. The nastier truth is that the same 1% that desperately supports Donald Trump today in their fear that times they are a-changin, also stood in the way of those ideals of freedom back then, but at least you had tried. Now you let Trump and his propagandists pump up numerous idiots to politicize a Covid-19 mask. Pathetic!

Ms. RRLD: Trumps and McConnells cramped vision of America has not yet prevailed, but struggle is on in earnest, as Trumps elderly supporters are dropping like flies to an enemy that has no color or gender, while many others desert him as the enemy of their health and welfare.

Putin: Conservative judges actually conserving rule of law are joined by a host of federal, state, and local law enforcement officials; worried about their families and friends, as well as their duty to preserve and protect. Lawlessness of law enforcement in Georgia might be more rare than it was the rule 100 years ago, but it is a reminder of how quickly this country could slip back if you dont cut off the effectiveness of Trumps dog whistles of hatred from the White House.

HPR: But this is 2020! We are supposed to be more civilized, and yet a woman is killed by local police in Georgia for sleeping while black. A young man down there is also gunned down by some stump jumping, KKK wannabes for jogging while black. And neo-Nazis with Trump banners are camped out with their AR-15s at the Michigan State Capitol!

Schickelgruber: Michigans gutsy Governor, Gretchen Whitmer, has the overwhelming support of her people, unlike Bavarian State Police of 1923 firing into the ranks of Hitler and his Storm Troopers. A single masked nurse, with I stand with Whitmer written on her arm, put the lie to a Reality TV, very fine people, Trump/Confederacy/Nazi menace in Lansing, MI. Besides, it was white privilege that protected these phony freedom fighters from being gunned down, not their armament. Murdered, unarmed black folks still require the steady, heroic, stoic activism of Georgias Stacy Abrams (Fair Fight), New Yorks Reverend Al Sharpton, and their white allies, like Democratic Presidential nominee, former Obama Vice President Joe Biden, who will, if the rest of us show half as much courage, take out these morons with ballots instead of bullets.

Chicago Dog: Things were worse in Chicago on December 4, 1969. Two men were killed in cold blood by Cook County States Attorney Ed Hanrahans police for the crime of sleeping while Black Panthers. A local version of FOX news, WGN news, filmed many bullet holes exiting the doorframe entered by Fast Eddies search and destroy team. This fiction was demolished by NBCTV reporter Len OConnor, who filmed the actual nail holes outside the West Side apartment that had been reported as bullet holes. States Attorney Hanrahan didnt indict himself, of course, but was, instead, turned out of office in 1972 by angry black, white progressive and moderate voters, a coalition leading to victories of Chicagos first black Mayor, Harold Washington, in 1983 and 1987, and the successful candidacy of President Barack Obama.

Ms. RRLD: The spiritual, intellectual, and organizing enema required to exorcize bigotry and oppression in Chicago of yore is being prepared by Recovering Republicans, the Lincoln Project, to hit Trump where it hurts the most, with TV ads that destroy his image with his own base.

Schickelgruber: One of our members doubles as a pet for one of the Lincoln Project members in D.C. While accompanying his master, shortly after Trump gave that whiny interview with the Lincoln Memorial as a stage prop, complaining he had been treated worse than our countrys greatest President, they managed to bury this sonnet there, where one of us could find it:

Lock Up Ignorance; Not People!

Mismanagement is such a special skill; That only fools like Trump can bring to bear Upon our body politic; to wear Us out, and break our countrys sagging will.

Thats only if we let Trump do it though; As he begins to wreck his own, sad base Of haters; Cynics twards the human race. Lets end Trumps mess to let our freedom grow!

The Democrats have plans, a man and more; Recovering Republicans, who know Just how to hurt Trump; make him feel the pain Above the neck; his addled brain made sore By truth exposing lies he sought to sow. Make sanity and science great again! - Chicago Dog

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Combatting the Taliban, the Nazi, in Ourselves - High Plains Reader

Is This the Blueprint for Sanders and AOC to Take Over the Democratic Party? – New York Magazine

Photo: Minnesota Historical Society/Corbis via Getty Images

When [Donald] Trump assumed the presidency after a 2016 election that Democrats should have won by a landslide writes John Nichols in his new book, the crisis came into focus. It was not the Republican Party that was ruining our politics. Rather, the lack of a coherent and appealing opposition to the Republicans was the problem.

You have probably seen versions of this argument hundreds of times. It is the standard left-wing critique of the Democratic Party. The feckless Democrats keep losing because they stand for nothing. Having abandoned their progressive principles and sold out to the corporate Establishment, they have forfeited the trust voters had given them during the glorious New Deal era. Most of these critiques point to the 1970s as the moment when the party turned neoliberal and set itself along the path of political and moral ruin.

But Nichols advances a different argument. In his new book, The Fight for the Soul of the Democratic Party, Nichols, the Nations national correspondent, locates the pivotal moment some three decades earlier. The Democrats lost their way in 1944, when they removed vice-president Henry Wallace from the ticket, denying him his place as Franklin Roosevelts successor. Wallace, argues Nichols, would have kept alive the New Deal flame that was instead extinguished by the moderate Harry Truman. Instead, Trumans great betrayal (in Wallaces words, which Nichols endorses) of Roosevelts legacy veered the Democrats onto the neoliberal path. The lost soul of the Democratic Party was a man, he argues, and his name was Henry Wallace.

Nichols has ambitions beyond mere historical reinterpretation. He presents his history as a blueprint for the revival of the Democratic Partys left wing, concluding with a rousing chapter casting Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as heirs to the Wallace tradition. His blurbs from progressives like Sanders, Ro Khannna, Ilhan Omar, and Democratic Socialists of America director Maria Svart, rather than from historians underscore Nicholss vision of his protagonist as a redemptive model.

Nichols is correct to see parallels between Wallace and the left-wing movement built around Sanders. What he fails to understand is that many of the same errors that destroyed Wallace as a political force also drove Sanders to his demise.

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Nicholss emphasis on Wallace as a model has one clear advantage over the traditional left-wing focus: He is able to account for the tension between liberals and leftists that long predated the 1970s. After all, if the neoliberal turn took place only after Nixon appeared on the scene, what would explain the lefts contempt for what it called the corporate liberals of the Kennedy-Johnson era? Or the bitter attacks on Truman that Nichols documents? Both the international economy changed and the Republican Partys economic program changed in the 1970s, but the Democratic Partys ideological orientation was relatively stable. It did not stop being a social democratic or labor-dominated party in the neoliberal era because it was not one before then, either.

But Nicholss attempt to make Wallace the rightful heir to FDR runs into problems of its own. The most obvious one is that, if Wallace was a faithful adherent of Roosevelts legacy, and Truman a Judas, why did Roosevelt throw Wallace off the ticket and replace him with Truman?

Nichols tries to explain this away as a devious scheme foisted upon an unwitting Roosevelt by the partys conservative elements. The bosses took advantage of an ailing and distracted Franklin Roosevelt to force [Wallace] off the ticket, he writes. This explanation gives too little credit to Roosevelt (who was ailing, but who was not too distracted to spend time in Georgia with his mistress). When recounting the narrative, Nichols notes in passing that Wallace himself was gone on a strenuous trip across Siberia and China before the convention where he was replaced. He does not mention that Roosevelt sent Wallace on this trip in order to keep him from campaigning to save his job.

Second, Nicholss attempt to bracket Roosevelt with Wallace as visionary progressives, and Truman as the first of a long line of corporate sellouts, requires him to judge Roosevelt and Truman by very different standards. Truman, to be sure, accomplished relatively little in the domestic sphere. But this was because he inherited a Congress dominated by a coalition of Republicans and conservative Democrats. Roosevelts New Deal reforms had already ground to a halt before Truman took office.

Nichols gets around this problem by judging Roosevelt by his rhetoric, and Truman by his practical results. He lavishes praise on Roosevelt for his soaring Four Freedoms speech, without acknowledging Roosevelt did not (and could not) turn those principles into policy. He doesnt credit Truman for his own soaring populist rhetoric (like his proposal for a Fair Deal, which would have created national health insurance, public housing, aid for education, and a rollback of Taft-Hartley anti-union legislation.)

At one point, Nichols does acknowledge that Roosevelt, too, was hardly a consistent liberal: He would lurch left and then edge back; he would welcome the hatred of the bankers and plutocrats and then meet the investors and business owners whose buy-in he needed to retool the economy. And yet he generally falls into the progressive trap of treating Roosevelt as if his lurches to the left constituted the entirety of his political identity.

Roosevelts self-definition was generally that of a liberal, counterpoised between radicals (who supported him sporadically) and conservatives. Roosevelt once observed that a radical was a man with both feet firmly planted in the air, and a conservative a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned to walk forward, while, a liberal is a man who uses his legs and his hands at the behest at the command of his head. Trumans habit of tacking between left and center, market and state, and conciliating business and labor was a more faithful continuation of Roosevelts political style than Wallaces.

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After Roosevelt replaced him on the ticket in 1944, Wallace rejoined the cabinet. But he left in 1946 when he broke with Truman, whose administration was reorienting its foreign policy around resistance to the Soviet Union. After a stint as editor of the (then) left-wing New Republic, where he built his following, he ran against Truman as a left-wing splinter candidate in 1948.

The movement that grew around Wallace in the middle and late 40s many ways resembles the one built by Sanders over the last five years. Both Wallace and Sanders presented themselves as the true heir to Roosevelt, proposing to steer the party back to its New Deal roots after it had lost its way. Wallace, like Sanders, mobilized a passionate base whose intensity at times obscured how few people the movement actually represented. Both came to rely on the energy supplied by their most passionate and ideologically extreme supporters, some of whom were hostile to the Democratic Party and had no use for it except as a vehicle for a left-wing takeover. And both Sanders and Wallace tended to delude themselves into thinking they represented the true sentiment of the partys voters, and by mobilizing a populist rebellion, they could seize it back from the corrupt nexus of financial interests that had gained nefarious control.

Nichols rightly credits Wallace for his moral clarity in denouncing segregation. Barnstorming the South and holding integrated rallies, Wallace was well ahead of his time in an era when the Democratic Party had a devils bargain with Jim Crow.

But Nicholss emphasis on civil rights is difficult to square with his valorization of Roosevelt. While the New Deal drew northern black voters into the Democratic Party with economic relief, Roosevelt did almost nothing to challenge white supremacy. He allowed Southern Democrats to bottle up even meager steps toward civil rights like anti-lynching laws, and (as Ira Katznelson documented) was forced to craft many of his social-welfare measures to deny helping disenfranchised black voters in the South.

Meanwhile, it was Truman who took the first real steps toward making Democrats the party of civil rights. Trumans outrage at lynchings of returning black soldiers drove him to integrate the military. Truman fought for a strong civil rights platform at the 1948 Democratic convention, where Hubert Humphrey declared, The time has arrived in America for the Democratic Party to get out of the shadow of states rights and to walk forthrightly into the bright sunshine of human rights. Wallace dismissed integration of the armed forces as an empty gesture. But the partys lurch toward civil rights was significant enough that Strom Thurmond left to run a splinter campaign as the Dixiecrat, foreshadowing the demise of the Solid South.

The disparate way Nichols describes the behavior of Roosevelt and Truman is telling. He gently chides Roosevelts civil rights record (FDR had fallen far short) while crediting him for attracting black voters. Later he attacks Truman as cautious and calculating. Its difficult to reconcile his gentle treatment of Roosevelt and harsh treatment of Truman, when Trumans civil rights record undeniably surpassed Roosevelts.

Its even harder to understand how Nichols can castigate Truman and his Democratic successors for forfeiting Roosevelts massive New Deal coalition. The overwhelming reason white voters left the party was that the party moved left on race. Nichols blames Democrats for losing white voters while blaming them for failing to move farther and faster on the very issues that caused white voters to defect.

Wallace had an answer to this contradiction. He believed moving left would attract, not repel, white Southern voters. He believed white racism was nothing but a plot by economic elites from the North. When his Southern rallies faced violence, he blamed northern industrialists who dominated these communities for inciting it, and claimed whenever one found racial injustice in the South there look for the long string of dividends that lead to Wall Street. (Here, and in some other places where I provide context Nichols omits, I am citing Thomas Devines 2013 history, Henry Wallaces 1948 Presidential Campaign and the Future of Postwar Liberalism.)

Wallaces insistence of dismissing racism as a metaphenomenon driven by economic concerns, and his inability to take it seriously as an authentic belief system, anticipated the errors Sanders has made in 2016 and 2020. Both men believed that if white racists were told they were being duped by Wall Street, they would awaken from their false consciousness and vote their class interest. Both likewise failed to understand the calculations of African-American voters, who preferred to leverage their vote with political allies who could promise and deliver concrete steps in the right direction. More than three-quarters of black voters supported Truman in 1948, and rather than question his flawed assumptions of his candidacy, Wallace bitterly concluded the black vote had let him down.

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It was foreign policy that drove Wallace out of Trumans cabinet in 1946 and formed the most irreparable breach with his former party. From Wallaces point of view, Truman was betraying Roosevelts alliance with the Soviets. It is of course correct that Trumans policy toward Moscow was more hostile than Roosevelts. The error made by Wallace and his supporters is to attribute that difference to Truman abandoning Roosevelts vision, rather than the two presidents facing very different circumstances. Had Roosevelt survived his fourth term, his posture with Stalin would have surely changed after the Nazi threat had disappeared and the Soviets began gobbling up Europe.

Nichols defends Wallaces warning about the rise of fascism in the United States, pointing to Donald Trumps right-wing authoritarianism as an indication that Wallace was prophetic. But Wallaces definition of fascism was far broader than anything that might be traced forward to Trumpism. He insisted that American support for a democratic government in Germany was a plot to revive Nazi-style fascism. Wallace insistently described American foreign policy actions as offensive and Soviet actions as defensive.

Nichols justifiably credits Wallace for his unvarnished denunciations of British imperialism, but fails to note that Wallace turned a blind eye to Soviet imperialism. When the Soviets sponsored a coup in Czechoslovakia, Wallace blamed Truman for provoking them, and compared Russias actions to the American position in France. When the Soviets imposed a blockade on Berlin, Wallace assailed Truman for airlifting in supplies.

Nichols, incredibly, credits Wallace with forcing Truman to temper the bombastic Truman Doctrine in favor of the more cooperative Marshall Plan to give billions of dollars in aid to rebuild Europe. He does not inform his readers that Wallace opposed the Marshall Plan. It was a blueprint for war concocted by militarists and Wall Street monopolists to suppress the democratic movements in Europe that would convert western Europe into a vast military camp, with freedom extinguished, he testified.

Nichols has no affection for Soviet expansionism. Rather, he echoes the same view of communism that was articulated by Wallace and many of his enthusiasts. They viewed communists as allies, and viewed almost any attack on them as unfair red-baiting. Wallaces anti-anti-communism consisted more of an intense suspicion of any anti-communist policy than a positive defense of Stalins regime. Their method was very similar to the anti-anti-Trumpism that defines many conservatives today.

The debate over communism dominated American politics at the time. There were essentially three positions. The center-left, epitomized by Truman, proposed instead to contain communism, through a combination of aid for non-communist states and military deterrence against further Soviet expansion. The right wanted to roll back communism, going to war if necessary (which it would have been). Conservatives denounced containment as a form of appeasement. Richard Nixon mocked Trumans foreign policy as the cowardly college of communist containment. Wallaces left, which was far smaller than either of the other two camps, opposed containment as a provocation that would, and was designed to, lead to war.

The domestic analogue to this debate centered on the increasingly paranoid form of anti-communism that Joe McCarthy stoked. McCarthys tactic was to equate New Deal liberals with communism, asserting that Roosevelt and Truman had been manipulated by Soviet spies. Wallace, for his part, equated all anti-communism with McCarthyism.

From the right, anybody who opposed rollback and McCarthyism was a communist sympathizer. From the left, anybody who opposed communism was a warmonger and a red-baiter. In both their foreign and domestic aspects, both the right and the far left sought to flatten three-sided debates into a more convenient binary.

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Wallaces political crusade was not merely about left-wing domestic or foreign policy. It was an attempt to revive a political strategy called the Popular Front, a strategic alliance that joined liberals with the far left, including avowed communists.

During the 1930s and 40s, the Communist Party line was set in Moscow and followed by communists across the world. At some points in time, communists refused to cooperate with any other left-of-center party, believing that it was better to allow fascists to destroy them to hasten the revolution. (The pursuit of this course helped Hitler crush the German Social Democrats.) At other times, they urged communists to support other anti-fascist parties by forming a Popular Front. Many American communists and fellow travelers joined Roosevelts government, an arrangement that was tenable while the United States was fighting a world war on the Soviet side, but became untenable as the end of the war drew within sight.

The logic of the Popular Front was often summarized in an expression no enemies to the left, and its ethos of refusing to draw lines of contrast against the left was foundational. The two Bernie Sanders campaigns have both followed a version of this strategy. Sanders brought into his campaign organizations like the Democratic Socialists of America, and some radical activists, who otherwise view the Democratic Party with indifference or outright hostility. Nichols admires Wallaces method of absorbing smaller left-wing parties into a broad left-wing movement to capture the party.

What Nichols does not seem to recognize is that this very practice helped lead to Wallaces demise, and had the same effect on Sanders.

Wallace stirred wild passions among his enthusiasts, who packed stadiums for his speeches and could mobilize impressive armies of volunteers. One demonstration of strength came in February 1948, when a Wallace-backed candidate won a special election for a House seat in the Bronx against the Democrat. The jubilant left interpreted the result as a wholesale repudiation of the Truman administration, recounts Devine much like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezs shocking primary upset, which many progressives saw as a harbinger of a nationwide uprising against the party leadership.

But most Democrats recognized that Wallace had merely activated a fervent but tiny faction. Removed from the hothouse atmosphere of the liberal civil war, they were less likely to overestimate the former vice-presidents potential strength or the electoral clout of the Democratic Partys left wing, writes Devine, in a passage written several years before Sanderss first presidential campaign, but which nonetheless captures it perfectly, even though Wallace claimed to have the backing of the common man, his primary base of support had always been limited to a relatively small group of left-leaning intellectuals, middle-class professionals, and CIO labor leaders.

The Wallace campaign was a debacle. He won just 2.37 percent of the national vote, and 37 percent of his votes came from New York City. Whatever passions he had stirred among the intelligentsia, Wallace gained almost no inroads among regular Democrats, despite having served four years as vice-president andeight more years as a high-profile cabinet official.

Nichols criticizes Wallaces decision to run as a third-party candidate, arguing instead for a Sanders-style popular-front strategy within the Democratic Party. But he fails to understand that Wallaces refusal to distance himself from the far left made him toxic to the party base. For instance, 90 percent of the public opposed his plan to let the Soviets take Berlin. Nichols instead attributes his problems mainly to the machinations of segregationists and party bosses, not to any genuine distrust his message might have created with the voters.

He does allow that Wallaces communist-dominated campaign may have committed some mistakes. Yes, an argument can be made that taking less advice from the Communist Party tacticians who hung around the progressive party headquarters in New York might have made for more strategically sound choices, he concedes. But he reels back even that remarkably tepid criticism in the next sentence: But a parallel argument can be made that many of the ablest grassroots campaigners for Wallace in the campaigns closing days were Communists, fellow travelers, or independent leftists who refused to abide any form of anti-communism. (There were very fine people on both sides of the Stalin issue.) This seems more like a description of the problem that comes with handing your campaign over to its most extreme adherents than a persuasive defense of doing so.

Social movements can change the world. But they can also become powerful vehicles for self-delusion. Wallace tapped into a movement that came to believe it represented The People, and lost all ability to see what the actual people outside the movement thought about them. Inevitably they came to see their defeats as the product of a scheme. Nichols detects many parallels between Wallaces movement and the Bernie movement. But the lessons he draws seem to be mostly the wrong ones.

Analysis and commentary on the latest political news from New York columnist Jonathan Chait.

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Is This the Blueprint for Sanders and AOC to Take Over the Democratic Party? - New York Magazine