Archive for February, 2021

California Republican taking on Gov. Newsom: People ‘united by frustration’ with pandemic lockdowns – Fox News

Republican candidate for California Governor Major Williams slammed Governor Gavin Newsom for continuing to lock down the state on Wednesday, claiming that his actions are a result of "poor leadership" and "mismanagement."

During an appearance on "Fox and Friends," Williams asserted that the failure of small businesses, the continuing lockdown of schools as well as the rise of homelessness and crime are due to Newsoms coronavirus response.

CALIFORNIA GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM, FACING GOP-LED RECALL, CRITICIZED BY DEMOCRATS OVER COVID-19 RESPONSE

"[Newsom] said hes going by the science but he really isnt," Williams told Steve Doocy. "Its hurtful to all Californians."

Williams added that during the pandemic, people are "unified by frustration" and that his "inclusive" campaign will not just be his campaign, but the peoples campaign.

The California Republican candidate concluded that if elected Governor, small businesses would be open with proper safety precautions in place and that he represented an "alternative" for the people of California.

California Republicans have said that they have collected 1.3 of the 1.5 million signatures needed by March to initiate their recall of Newsom.

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Many politicians have expressed interest in running against Newsom should the recall gather the signatures needed, including the former Mayor of San Diego, Kevin Falconer.

A new Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies survey of over 10,000 registered voters in California found that 46 percent approved of Newsoms job performance a sharp decline from the 64 percent approval rating he held last September.

Newsom's handling of the coronavirus appears to be at the core of his approval troubles, with less than a third of respondents saying the governor has done an "excellent" job tackling the pandemic, down from the 49 percent approval he had from pollsters last year.

Fox News Caitlin McFall contributed to this report

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California Republican taking on Gov. Newsom: People 'united by frustration' with pandemic lockdowns - Fox News

Bend’s Buehler says January events prompted him to leave Republican Party – KTVZ

(Update: Adding Buehler video, Phil Henderson comments)

'I just couldn't take it anymore,' said former state representative

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) -- Former state representative and GOP gubernatorial candidate Knute Buehler of Bend explained to NewsChannel 21 on Tuesday why he is among more than 6,000 Oregon Republicans who left the party last month and 11,000 since the November election.

"The events in January were deeply disturbing to me, starting out with President Trump's questioning of the election, and trying to strong-arm many times Republican elected officeholders to change election results," he said. "And then the encouraging of the assault on the Capitol.

"The final straw really was the Oregon Republican State Committee's resolution, claiming a conspiracy theory -- a debunked conspiracy theories- about this 'false flag' operation, and that the far left was really responsible for attacking the Capitol," Buehler added.

"I just couldn't take it anymore," he said. "That's just not responsible. And if those are the kinds of resolutions -- I don't know what a Republican really means anymore."

Buehler, like many of those who changed their registration, moved to the ranks of non-affiliated voters, which have risen by more than 10,000 statewide since the election. Democratic ranks also fell by nearly 8,500 since the election.

The former state representative, long viewedas a moderate by some and a RINO (Republican in name only) by his critics, said he's closed his involvement in politics.

"I've never seen politics as a career," he said. "I'm an orthopedic surgeon by training. I saw my political involvement as a service. After six years, that service is done. I think that's long enough.

"But I'll be happy to help other worthy candidates who really want to solve big problems for real people. It doesn't matter to me if those are Republican candidates, independent or non-affiliated candidates, or even Democratic candidates, if they are truly interested in solving real problems."

Of course, they have to be true to principles I believe in: freedom, the rule of law, defending the Constitution, providing opportunities for people.

"I don't believe in blind loyalty to any party or a person, even president," he said. I said that from the very beginning of my political involvement. I'm true to my principles. ... Nothing's changed with regard to that."

"In an old adage of Ronald Reagan, I haven't left the party, the party's left me," Buehler said. I don't know what it means to be a Republican anymore, certainly in this state."

"I feel both parties have not governed well over the last two decades," Buehler said. "There's been sweeping changes across our country, and it's knocked a lot of people off their feet, and we need to be mindful of that.

"I think it's something that President Trump recognized," he said. "Unfortunately, his leadership style and his approach just wasn't able to help those people. And I think that's why we see so much discord right now."

NewsChannel 21 also reached out to Deschutes County Commissioner and Republican Chair Phil Henderson on Tuesday about the recent voter registration changes.

"Seems like a lot of the people maybe leaving the party were in the Portland area - Washington County and a couple of other places," he said. I don't think that's been a trend in Deschutes County so far.

"But to the extent- people do change parties after elections," Henderson said. "I think people were disappointed for not winning. People were disappointed for the way the campaign went. I think it's been a very volatile political year."

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Bend's Buehler says January events prompted him to leave Republican Party - KTVZ

Marjorie Taylor Greene and the history of Republican conspiracy theories – Vox.com

Marjorie Taylor Greene, a new Republican member of Congress from Georgia, has already emerged as one of the most infamous figures of the post-Trump political era.

Most recently, CNN reported that Greene had suggested support on Facebook in recent years for the assassination of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Nancy Pelosi. But this is far from the only outlandish notion she has advanced.

Greene has promoted parts of the QAnon conspiracy theory, including the false notion that Clinton mutilated and killed a young girl. She has suggested that the 2018 Parkland, Florida, school shooting was a false flag and filmed herself harassing David Hogg, a survivor of the attack and gun control activist, on the streets of Washington, DC, shortly after the shooting. She has dabbled in 9/11 conspiracy theories, too.

She has attempted to distance herself from much of this since taking office, but the sheer volume of conspiratorial content in her past she deleted 19 tweets in a 12-hour period makes these disavowals hard to credit.

The rise of Greene and the hesitancy of House Republican leadership to hold her accountable points to the challenge the GOP poses to American democracy. Even after Trumps departure from the White House, the Republican Party has been willing to embrace the conspiracism and extremism in its midst, all for the sake of holding on to political power. Its a serious problem, and a deeper-rooted one than many might appreciate.

Historian Rick Perlstein is one of the premier experts on those roots. In his books on the conservative movements rise to power, from Barry Goldwater to Richard Nixon to Ronald Reagan, Perlstein argues that conspiratorial thinking and fringe politics were always much closer to the GOP mainstream than most people remember. Conspiracy theorists helped drive the conservative movements takeover of the previously more moderate GOP and have been an integral part of the movements coalition from the get-go.

Those people just got closer and closer to the centers of power, he told me. Its one of these things where this has always existed, but got turned up to 11 in the Trump era.

Its impossible to understand the rise of figures like Greene and of course Trump before her without understanding this darker history of the modern American right. A transcript of my conversation with Perlstein, edited for length and clarity, follows.

So QAnon seems utterly bizarre to a lot of people. But the truth, as documented in your work, is that conspiracy theories have been a major part of the American right forever.

So lets go back in time to the founding of the American conservative movement.

How about the founding of the republic? Theres a historian named Gordon Wood who points out that the founding generation was just completely saturated with conspiratorial thinking. Its part of our national patrimony.

The slavocracy, and the segregationist outlook of the 20th century, was that Negroes were perfectly content with their lot, so they were stirred up by outside agitators.

The 1920s Ku Klux Klan could not have had its strong presence were talking about millions of members and mass marches down Pennsylvania Avenue, controlling the statehouses in a couple of states without the conspiracy theory that Catholicism was a plot to take over the United States, and that Americas priests and nuns striated every community, were ready to turn into these ninja operatives at the popes command. You can see all kinds of crazy stuff like that in the 1920s: Henry Ford and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, for example.

The conspiracy theory that Franklin Roosevelt either made Pearl Harbor happen on purpose or knew it would happen and did nothing was definitely part of the generation of isolationist conservatives during World War II.

This robust conservative history of right-wing reactionary conspiracy theories is what the modern Republican Party, driven by the conservative wing, fall heir to.

So if conspiracy theories are something completely normal in the long arc of American politics, is there anything different about the modern conservative movement meaning roughly the 1950s forward versus what came before?

The conservative movement has less conspiratorial and more conspiratorial strains: William F. Buckley wasnt particularly conspiratorial. But in a lot of ways, [the conspiracists] were the vanguard or the point of the spear, the activists who really drove the partys grassroots success.

Those people just got closer and closer to the centers of power. I argue in Reaganland that a huge driver of this was the religious right. Remember, Jerry Falwell who was also, by the way, one of those conspiracy theorists who believed the civil rights movement was all directed by Moscow gave a famous sermon in 1955 saying your preachers are called to be the soul winners, not politicians. He was speaking about Martin Luther King.

Historians point out that people like Jerry Falwell explicitly getting involved in partisan politics, endorsing candidates, turning their churches into precinct houses: that could not have happened in precisely the way it did absent this theory that gays were involved in an organized conspiracy to recruit American youth, and not only recruit American youth, but recruit them in order to murder them.

That kind of conspiratorial thinking drove Reagans rise. One of the reasons George H.W. Bush came in second place in the Republican nomination contest in 1980 was the belief that because he belonged to the Trilateral Commission, he was part of the Eastern deep state conspiracy.

So it definitely plays a role in the rise of Reagan, but not nearly so clear a role as it does in the rise of Trump. This is a party surrendering more and more to the more absurd, gothic elements in its constituency.

This stuff metastasizes in a way thats harder to control and has greater and greater influence because of the change in media: the rise of social media, Fox News, and the weaponization of algorithms by bad actors and cynics and strategists.

Lets deal with the mythology that has surrounded this. If you talk to a conservative intellectual about this, the story youll get is, Well, of course there were fringe wackos in the 50s and 60s in the John Birch Society. They were part of the conservative movement, but William F. Buckley, in his brilliance, purged them. He pushed them out of the movement.

But thats more than a little incomplete, right?

Its very interesting: That was the way conservatives told their own story, right? The first generation of historians who wrote about the postwar conservative movements rise in the 1990s, myself included, largely repeated this narrative.

More recent scholarship from people like David Walsh at Princeton University, a guy named John Huntington who has a new book coming out, and some others point out that the line between the fringe and the mainstream right was always fluid. The old story is pretty much collapsing under the weight of new evidence and new research.

There was a certain element of cynicism, of opportunism: realization [among elites] that even though these are not the kinds of people that we can put in front of the camera, these are people who actually are the boots on the ground, the firebugs who really won the California primary for Barry Goldwater.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the John Birch Society the most prominent conspiracy theory group who believed that Eisenhower was behind the communist conspiracy against America was quite nimble and brilliant in finding grassroots discontent and creating platforms that advance their cause in a way that gives [the mainstream] plausible deniability.

Things like sex education in schools or the Equal Rights Amendment or a kind of anti-anti stance toward the 1960s and 70s version of movements against police brutality: These things were brilliantly exploited as organizing opportunities by the John Birch Society.

The next part of the traditional mythology is that Goldwaters 1964 primary victory not only captured the party and set the stage for Reagan to win in 1980, but also brought ideas back to a Washington that had been stifled by a boring and unimaginative liberalism. It was a triumph not just of conservatism, but of virtuous, principled, intellectual conservatism.

But in your work, you show that narrative obscures the way in which the things weve been talking about the John Birch Society and evangelical conspiracy theories about gay recruiting were as important in the Reaganite ascendance as the alleged appeal of conservative ideas.

Obviously, Reagan wins by a coalition. His coalition includes both Christians who believe that the IRS is going to force them to hire gay teachers at Christian schools and deeply learned men like [neoconservative thinker] Irving Kristol.

[In general], right-wing epistemology starts with the conclusion and then you fill in stuff, things that sound like logic and facts to support the conclusion youve already drawn.

That, going backward, has a foundation in traditional Christian apologetics: Faith is defined as evidence of things unseen, because you know revelation to be true. You can start with this ironclad source of authority in your reading of the Bible or the Constitution, and you create an intellectual infrastructure around that foundation thats accepted on faith.

One of my favorite historians to write about conspiracy theories is the historian Kathryn Olmsted, who writes a book called Real Enemies. It has a wonderful chapter on the susceptibility of the left to Kennedy conspiracy theories, all sorts of stuff. [But] liberals are liberal. Though we sometimes honor it in the breach, Democrats both of the left and center are heir to an enlightenment tradition of empiricism. And we are pluralists. It is why we arent conservatives who fundamentally believe they know what the world is, and what it demands of us, in advance, then use their intellect to justify conclusions, not arrive at them.

Take the guy whos the alpha and omega of the supposed mainstream, respectable conservatism, William F. Buckley. In his 1951 book God and Man at Yale, his whole criticism of what goes on in Yale is that they believe in intellectual laissez-faire: that the ideas that should survive and the ones that should thrive are the ones that can be supported by arguments. Its saying that the problem with Yale is its an Enlightenment institution. Their values are based on these traditions of evidence and logic rather than revealed truth.

[Now], I think theres more to life than sound scholarship which uses evidence and logic. Some of the things that bind people together are based on values that are not easily quantified, and basically play legitimate roles, as far as Im concerned, for human life and political life.

But the entire realm of conservative politics and political thought is very suggestible to creating brand narratives that represent the world in the way one believes it should be or fears that it is rather than the way it is.

Thats another way of defining conspiracy theories.

You could take that one step further. In order to win power on a platform of intellectually flimsy and unpopular ideas, like the notion that tax cuts for the wealthy help the poor, conservatives needed to build up an alternative media ecosystem and intellectual ecosystem.

Obviously, this is a major story in the Goldwater-Nixon-Reagan era, with the creation of institutions like the Heritage Foundation in 1973 and an even more important part of whats happening right now.

Its one of these things where this has always existed but got turned up to 11 in the Trump era, right?

Yeah, I mean it was obviously really bad during the Obama era, too, with Glenn Becks chalkboard and birtherism.

Also, I remember when Bill Clinton was responsible for dozens of political assassinations. There was a [conspiracy] videotape circulated by our friend Jerry Falwell, The Clinton Chronicles. That had probably millions of copies that were circulating.

You had Newt Gingrich teaching his congressional class of 1994 the kind of language they needed to perfect in order to dehumanize Democrats, and you had talk radio superstars like G. Gordon Liddy at the exact same time saying that if you run into an ATF agent, you should make sure to take a headshot because theyll be wearing body armor. A month after that, you get Timothy McVeigh and Oklahoma City.

And then, as you point out, Trump made this preexisting problem a lot worse. It just makes me think a lot of about questions of structural versus contingent theories of history: was someone like Trump an inevitable product of the way the conservative movement is structured, or was he uniquely positioned to bring us to where we are?

It seems like Trump, hes this contingency. He didnt have to go down that escalator. Nothing was predetermined about it.

Modern Republican politics seeks out and always involves careful negotiation between opening Pandoras box and a kind of respectability politics, understanding that theyre playing with fire. The example I always give is George W. Bush simultaneously exploiting anger and rage at Muslims after 9/11 to get the Iraq War, but also describing Islam as a religion of peace.

Previous generations of Republicans would kind of pull out the [conspiratorial] Ring of Power, and put it back in their pockets or in a carrying case. Donald Trump puts the damn thing on and never takes it off.

Now were in a post-Trump presidency era but for who knows how long, maybe hes going to run again in 2024. Does the party have any internal capacities left to get back to the dance that you were describing? Or has it been so thoroughly corrupted turned into Gollum, to extend your Lord of the Rings metaphor that the Marjorie Taylor Greenes of the world are its future?

Yeah, its an interesting question. I remember traveling around with John Kasich before his presidential run in 2016, and [the people around him] were strains out of something like the 1950s GOP.

This guy who has sold his business to become a philanthropist to support the arts in his small town. This state senator who has a preoccupation with fighting to end the death penalty because its racially applied but also wants lower taxes. They walk among us, these strange archaic creatures!

And theres a couple of hopeful signs. Capitalists are terrified that theyre going to be dragged into a climate of political instability, which they cant stand. Thats a very powerful variable.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene and the history of Republican conspiracy theories - Vox.com

Reed & Jacobs among NY Republicans calling for Gov. Cuomo and NYSDOH Health Commissioner to be subpoenaed over nursing home deaths – WGRZ.com

The group called on the Department of Justice to issue the subpoenas for Cuomo and his staff in a letter to Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson.

WASHINGTON Representatives Tom Reed and Chris Jacobs, along with New York's Republican Congressional delegation have joined together to call for Governor Andrew Cuomo, NYSDOH Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker and Secretary to the Governor Melissa DeRosa to be subpoenaed in regards to the recent report on COVID-19 deaths at nursing homes.

The group called on the Department of Justice to issue the subpoenas for Cuomo and his staff in a letter to Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson.

This comes after New York State Attorney General Letitia James released a report last week on the state's nursing home response to COVID-19.

Among the findings during the AG's office's investigation was that the New York State Department of Health's publicly reported data may have undercounted COVID-19 related deaths. The investigation also showed many nursing homes failed to comply with critical infection control policies that put residents at an increased risk of harm.

The AG's office has been investigating nursing homes in New York State based on allegations of patient neglect and other concerns that may have jeopardized the health and safety of residents and employees.

Thousands of New York families who lost a parent or grandparent due to New Yorks disastrous nursing home policies deserve nothing less than full transparency and accountability, said Congressman Reed in a statement. If the Biden administration and their Department of Justice are truly committed to following the spirit of independence and impartiality, they should join with us as we work to further uncover the depths of Governor Cuomo and New York States incompetence. It is the only remedy to ensuring such horrific public health mistakes never happens again.

Congressman Jacobs added, "Attorney General James report proved what we have suspected for months. The actions of Governor Cuomo, Commissioner Zucker, and administration officials have obscured the toll of the Governor's mandate forcing COVID-positive patients back into nursing homes with other high-risk elderly individuals. He had a duty to follow the science and protect the most vulnerable in our population. Instead, his order can only be categorized as a failure in leadership and a betrayal of public trust. Rather than take responsibility for his actions, and work transparently to correct such a disastrous mistake, Governor Cuomo and his administration have tried to shift blame and obstruct elected officials pursuing the truth. A full and thorough federal investigation into this cover-up must be conducted, and those responsible must be held accountable."

The New York State Attorney General's office is conducting investigations at more than 20 nursing homes across the state whose reported conduct during the start of the pandemic caused concern.

Senior Advisor to Governor Cuomo Rich Azzopardi released the following statement Wednesday evening:

"It's no surprise this QANON Trump puppet, his treason caucus, and their friends want to talk about anything other than the approaching one month anniversary of the Capitol insurrection that they helped foment and resulted in the death of a police officer. It's a naked ploy and New Yorkers see right through it. Maybe someone should investigate what he and the rest of the Trump enablers knew about the organizing and planning of this riot."

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Reed & Jacobs among NY Republicans calling for Gov. Cuomo and NYSDOH Health Commissioner to be subpoenaed over nursing home deaths - WGRZ.com

The Clintons Are Making a TV Show About Female Kurdish Fighters. That’s Absurd. – Jacobin magazine

Of the many battles in the decade-long Syrian civil war, few have captured international attention like the Battle of Koban. Fought between September 2014 and January 2015 for control of the predominately Kurdish town of Koban, the battle pitted the then-ascendant Islamic State against the Peoples Protection Units (YPG), a left-wing Kurdish militia that controlled several predominately Kurdish enclaves in northern Syria (known to Kurds as Rojava the west). The YPGs all-women wing, the Womens Protection Units (YPJ), featured prominently.

The image of young female fighters resisting the advance of ISIS, a group that enforced the most draconian forms of patriarchal rule and routinely used rape as a weapon of war, inspired many on the international left. Kurdish militias decimated ISISs ranks while building a radical enclave based on principles of direct democracy.

Yet the Kurds have also attracted some unlikely supporters namely, those who would rather focus on what theyve been against than what theyre fighting for.

The US military, hardly a fan of leftist revolutions, allied with the Kurds to counter ISIS after failing to come to an agreement with Turkey, a fellow NATO member. When President Trump pulled American forces from the Turkish border in the autumn of 2019, paving the way for an invasion by Turkish-backed Islamists, the national security establishment revolted, with Secretary of Defense James Mattis resigning. Israels right-wing prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has also expressed his solidarity with the gallant Kurdish people.

And earlier this week a day before the sixth anniversary of the YPGs victory over ISIS at Koban news broke that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her daughter, Chelsea, are developing a television series based on Gayle Tzemach Lemmons The Daughters of Kobani.

While information on the Clintons project is scant and The Daughters of Kobaniis yet to be released, Hollywood Reporter provided some details:

Daughters of Kobaniis based on hundreds of hours of interviews and on-the-ground reporting about the all-female Kurdish militia who took on ISIS in Northern Syria and won. Following the unlikely showdown emerged a fighting force who spread their own political vision and established gender equality in their corner of the Middle East and beyond. In the process, they earned the respect and significant military support of U.S. Special Operations Forces.

The Clintons are not the first to attempt to tell the story of the YPJ. In 2018 there was a release of Les filles du soleil, written and directed by French actress Eva Husson, which portrayed a French journalist and her interactions with an all-female battalion. Another French production, 2019s Surs darmes, written by French feminist and arch-secularist Caroline Fourest, focused on two young French women who traveled to Rojava to fight alongside the female militias. In 2020, yet another production on Rojava was released, Hulus No Mans Land, created by Ron Leshem, Maria Feldman, and Eitan Mansuri. This time the protagonist was a French man who journeys to Syria in search of his sister.

There are through lines in all these productions. First, they train their cameras on westerners, with the YPJ and the Syrian Civil War serving as romanticized backdrops. As one reviewer of No Mans Land noted, dont be fooled into thinking that No Mans Land is, on any level, the story of the YPJ, an elite unit of Kurdish freedom fighters, all women. Its barely, if at all, a story about the Syrian civil war.

Second, Kurdish involvement in these productions has been relatively limited. These are not Kurdish stories but stories about westerners interactions with the exotic. In the case of the two French productions, the stories seem to be more a thinly veiled salvo in their countrys cultural wars than an exploration of the Kurdish movement in Syria.

And, thirdly, they largely obscure the explicitly leftist politics of the Kurds in Syria. In its place we are presented with a generic, nonthreatening, and ultimately vacuous fight for freedom perhaps best summed up as western encounters with Jihadi-killing girl boss snipers.

So where does this leave us with The Daughters of Kobani? The author of the adapted book, journalist Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, is a close ally of Hillary Clinton and the epitome of elite girl boss feminism. An advocate of female empowerment through entrepreneurship, her literary debut, The Dressmaker of Khair Khana (2011), told the story of an Afghan businesswoman operating under the strictures of the Taliban.

In 2015, she published another tome on female emancipation, Ashleys War: The Untold Story of a Team of Women Soldiers on the Special Ops Battlefield an uplifting story of women deployed in combat roles in Afghanistan that earned endorsements and blurbs from such luminaries as Senator John McCain and Sheryl Sandberg.

The Daughters of Kobani, to be fair, wont be released until next month. However, one might be forgiven for suspecting that the anti-capitalistm of the YPG and YPJ which draws on the work of Brooklyn-born anarchist Murray Bookchin and the writings of Abdullah calan, the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), an organization that has waged war against Ankara since 1984 and that the United States sees as a terrorist organization will be omitted in favor of one that focuses on girls kicking ass.

The extensive role of female fighters in Koban wasnt some historical aberration, a curiosity brought about by the peculiarities of the Syrian civil war and discovered by Western elites. In the 1970s and 80s, several left-wing Kurdish political organizations maintained armed female units, most notably the Iranian-based group Komala. The female fighters of the YPJ can trace their historical lineage back to the PKK, which has a long tradition of female participation.

This brings us to the involvement of the Clintons and the historical irony it presents. During the 1990s, Bill Clintons administration sold and transferred vast amounts of weapons to Turkey, weapons that were primarily used in Ankaras fight against the PKK. American intelligence proved critical in the capture of Abdullah calan by Turkish special forces in 1999.

Of course, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton arent responsible for the actions of Bill Clinton. But it will be more than a little interesting to see how they tackle, for instance, the figure of calan someone venerated by the fighters of the YPJ yet reviled by the United States.

Many Kurds will be pleased at any mention of their community in western culture considering their all most complete absence. As Kurdish filmmaker Beri Shalmashi points out, Ten years ago we were pleased just to have the name Kurd mentioned. I can attest to this myself: I felt an almost irrational excitement when Cotyar Ghazi, a character in the popular Expanse series of novels, was revealed to be of Kurdish descent. There will also be some who feel a sense of satisfaction at the apoplectic rage that news of the production has triggered in the Turkish press.

Yet there is little reason to hope that a Clinton-led production based on a book by an establishment journalist will address the deficits found in earlier efforts to tell the story of Rojavas female fighters. More than likely, we will get a romantic fantasy of the Kurdish female fighter that obfuscates the real struggle in Syria and incorporates it into a broader war on terrorism that serves the interests of militarists like the Clintons.

And the vision of an egalitarian society for which the men and women of Koban have fought a vision that is antithetical to Clintonian liberalism will be hidden, once again, behind a veil of sanitized and exoticized cliches.

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The Clintons Are Making a TV Show About Female Kurdish Fighters. That's Absurd. - Jacobin magazine