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A Taxonomy of Right-Wing Dog Whistles – The Atlantic

The first time I witnessed the birth of a right-wing talking point, I was sitting in a crowded ballroom at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center, in National Harbor, Maryland. This was the 2019 Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, and I was listening to Sebastian Gorka deliver remarks that fell somewhere on the spectrum from venting to fomenting.

There he was in his three-piece suit, voice booming: They want to take your pickup truck. They want to rebuild your home. They want to take away your hamburgers. As I jotted down the line about the hamburgers, a sudden sense of unreality came over me.

Democrats want to take my hamburgers? It seemed too preposterous a threat to alarm even the most willing rube. Knowing the origin of the line was perhaps revealing, but made it no less ridiculous. Republicans had taken left-wing concerns about the environmental effects of factory farming and animal slaughter and contorted those worries, casting the Democrats as not just an anti-hamburger party, but a coalition of hamburger thieveshamburglars, if you will.

Thats the secret of these GOP talking points: Theyre sticky enough to be memorable, theyre designed to elicit an emotional response, they typically target an ideologically symbolic bogeyman, and they contain a sliver of truth that can be blown up into something completely unrecognizable.

Franklin Foer: The Republican Party used to fight communism

As the American political machinery grinds into action ahead of the midterms and (gulp) the next presidential election, Ive started tracking the talking points that Republicans are testing, refining, and blasting out to the world in TV spots and campaign emails. Once you start hearing these phrases, youll notice them everywhere for what they arecoded in-group language designed to stir very specific reactions.

Vladimir Putin, misunderstood guy

The thought leader of the Republican Party, the Fox News host Tucker Carlson, floated this idea in a fascinating, bizarre soliloquy. It may be worth asking yourself, he said: Why do I hate Putin so much? Has Putin ever called me a racist? Has he threatened to get me fired for disagreeing with him?

Adding to the chorus of pro-Putin rhetoric, in a radio interview broadcast February 22, former President Donald Trump called Putins actions in Ukraine genius, and Putin himself savvy. He mused about copying Putins peacekeeping move in Ukraine by sending the military to our southern border.

Im old enough to remember when Republicans were against power-hungry autocrats rolling up on other countries.

Crack pipes for racial equity

Have you heard the one about federally funded crack pipes yet? This talking point paints Democrats as hopelessly woke and also as wasting your tax dollars on a group of people whom many Republicans resent: poor addicts. As far as I can tell, it took off in The Washington Free Beacon with a February 7 story titled Biden Admin to Fund Crack Pipe Distribution to Advance Racial Equity. I know youre going to be shocked (shocked, I say!) to hear this, but this characterization is a blatant misrepresentation of what this program is and what it does. The federal grant initiative, which provides tools to minimize risks associated with drug use, is actually focused on harm reduction, a concept that has been around for decades. You can argue against harm reduction, which is based on the premise that the government should not necessarily expect abstinence from addicts in trying to help keep them safe. As a sober person, I am extremely uncomfortable with this approach. But no one in this administration or in the world is using crack pipes to advance racial equity. (According to The Washington Post, both the White House and [the Department of Health and Human Services] denied the funds would be spent on the pipes.)

However, despite being both debunked and patently absurd, the talking point worked so well on the senior senator from Tennessee, Marsha Blackburn, that she threatened to hold up a crucial government-funding bill because of the nonexistent crack pipes. The congressional candidate Blake Harbin, running in Georgias Sixth District, is already fundraising on the line There wont be a single cent of government money spent on crack pipes. To which a reasonable response might be: Well, huh. What a refreshing pledge to halt something that, to be clear, is not happening.

Democrats let Putin attack Ukraine. This never would have happened under Trump.

This ones big this week, for obvious reasons: the idea that if Trump were still president, Putin wouldnt have dared try to seize Ukraine. Of course, theres no way to know what Putin would have done in this alternate realityand theres only the flimsiest logic to support the notion that because an invasion didnt happen up until this moment, it didnt happen earlier because Trump was president. In my mind, a more likely scenario is that if Trump were still president, he would have just let Putin take Ukraine. After all, Trump has repeatedly praised Putin for his strengtheven doing so as the invasion was about to unfold: I mean, hes taking over a country for $2 worth of sanctions. Id say thats pretty smart, Trump told donors at Mar-a-Lago on February 23.

David A. Graham: Putins useful idiots

Masking is child abuse

Early in the pandemicokay, fine, throughout the pandemic the public-health messaging about masking was confusing at best and chaotic at worst. But it became clear that masks were a worthwhile tool to prevent the transmission of COVID-19, and that reasoning was good enough for plenty of responsible citizens to wear them. Republicans have decided that this global tragedy is a political opportunity, and theyve zeroed in on mask requirements for children as a form of abuse.

Because this is a talking point, it needs to be maximally blown up for dramatic effect, hence the abuse part. In April, Carlson told his audience, As for forcing children to wear masks outside, that should be illegal. Your response when you see children wearing masks while they play should be no different to seeing someone beat a kid in Walmart. Call the police. Contact Child Protective Services. Keep calling until someone arrives. Masking is still relatively popular, depending on where you live, but my guess is that Republicans are banking on the idea that masking wont continue to be popular in a few months. One can see this narrative taking shape in this J. D. Vance tweet: Republicans should pass a law giving every parent in the country the ability to sue school administrators for the developmental issues and emotional distress caused by the mask mandates forced on their children.

Let parents decide

This one is an outgrowth of the child-masking debate. The idea is to tap into parental rage about school closures, and use it to target the teaching of the role of race in American history. Some pundits claim its why Glenn Youngkin won the gubernatorial election in Virginia last year, helping fuel a surge around the country of exaggerations and lies about critical race theory. But according to recent polling, 57 percent of Virginia voters oppose banning the teaching of critical race theory, something that Youngkin has made a central plank of his governorship. Not clear yet is whether this polling will keep Youngkin from going full Ron DeSantis.

Read: Red parent, blue parent

The walls are closing in on Hillary Clinton

John Durham, the special counsel appointed by former Attorney General Bill Barr, may have disavowed the right-wing-media claims that a motion he recently filed showed the Clinton campaign had a mole in Trump Tower and the White House. (The reaction included this Laura Ingraham tweet: Finally the walls are closing in on the Clinton campaign. Get the popcorn ready.) But unsurprisingly, most conservative pundits havent. In a more recent filing, Durham wrote, If third parties or members of the media have overstated, understated or otherwise misinterpreted facts contained in the governments motion, that does not in any way undermine the valid reasons for the governments inclusion of this information.

My guess is that the Hillary Clinton is a mastermind talking point will be trotted out in the midterms, a full six years after she ran for president. This ones almost too easy. Hating the Clintons is catnip for conservatives, and its a formula that has worked for them for decades.

The New York Post has published numerous versions of the same HRC-Russia talking point. One version includes this baffling line: Hillary Clintons 2016 presidential campaign paid an internet company to surveil servers at Trump Tower and the White House in order to link Donald Trump to Russia, a bombshell new legal filing alleges. Another version of this talking point was the completely unprovable assertion that the Durham report proves Hillary Clintonnot Trumpwas Putins puppet. Especially as tensions between Russia and the West escalate, you can expect to see much more variation on the theme that Clintonnot Trumphad some kind of nefarious relationship with Putin.

In a world filled with information, theres only so much any of us can absorb, and the Republicans have figured this out. Theres an argument that these talking points are too silly to be believed, but thats just it: They dont need to be completely believed to work. They just need to muddy the waters enough so that voters put up their hands in dismay and start to wonder if maybe theres something to this Clinton-and-Russia thing.

Also, Hillarys running

Republicans remain obsessed with Clinton, and obsessed with the possibility of her running for president. No matter what she says to the contrary, this ones not going anywhere.

Fauci lied, people died

Last spring, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene introduced the Fire Fauci Act, which aims to fire the National Institutes of Healths Anthony Fauci for his evolving and contradictory advice on COVID-19. (Lets just hope she doesnt sic the gazpacho police on him.) In 2020, a Cornell study analyzed 38 million articles about the pandemic and came to the conclusion that Trump was likely the single largest driver of COVID falsehoods, but sure, lets censure Fauci, free-speech protections be damned.

Watch out! Socialism!

Socialism, socialism, socialism. You get the idea. Its bad. Its coming. Not clear when or how or why, but be afraid.

Democrats want to defund the police

It doesnt matter how many times Joe Biden says, No, I dont support defunding the police, nor does it matter if the Democrat running for office is a former police chief, like U.S. Senate candidate and current Representative Val Demings of Florida. Republicans think they can win by painting Democrats as soft on crime, as theyve been doing for years.

Democrats want open borders

The southern border is a particular Republican obsession, but the notion that Democrats want people freely streaming into the United States is ludicrous. (Biden has in fact retained a lot of Trumps immigration policies.) The Washington Posts Catherine Rampell summed it up best when she wrote, The disconnect between GOP claims about open borders and Bidens actually-quite-Trumpy border policies, is enormous.

The real villain? Justin Trudeau.

The far-right celebrity Candace Owens offered perhaps the most galaxy-brained take on Russias war against Ukraine when she tweeted, STOP talking about Russia. Send American troops to Canada to deal with the tyrannical reign of Justin Trudeau Castro. I didnt have war with Canada' on my dystopian-hellscape bingo card, but I suppose 2022 is still just getting started.

The rest is here:
A Taxonomy of Right-Wing Dog Whistles - The Atlantic

Clinton: What’s left of the GOP must stand against those giving ‘aid and comfort’ to Putin – MSNBC

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McFaul: We need to brace ourselves; there's more horror to come09:18

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George Conway: 'The evidence is piling up' against Trump and campaign06:13

Russia's Lavrov says country has a 'nuclear doctrine', not 'insane people'07:45

Engel: People in Kyiv waiting for possible ground assault03:21

Sen. Warren: Insulin should be available; we should be doing it generically07:39

Brokaw: Putin has not changed. He was a KGB agent then, and he's operating as one now.09:05

'Manfred is killing baseball': Joe slams 'greedy, selfish pigs' for Opening Day cancelation08:26

Vets exposed to toxic burn pits during service could receive care if House passes bill11:34

'It was absolutely terrifying': Reporter in Ukraine details soldiers searching car06:18

Joe: A return to normalcy for the State of the Union address05:14

Heavy shelling, airstrikes pound Ukrainian cities03:20

Joe: The president tonight needs to channel Churchill, JFK, Reagan10:37

Reporter details experiences 'Trapped in Kharkiv's bloody bubble'04:27

'I am in awe of what I'm seeing': Chef travels to Ukraine in effort to feed refugees04:00

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton joins Morning Joe to discuss the Republican party's softness towards Russian President Vladimir Putin, and how "what's left of the Republican party" must stand up to those giving "aid and comfort" to leaders like Putin.Feb. 25, 2022

UP NEXT

Kyiv residents getting on any train that will go west04:50

'I don't see a good option for the Russian generals,' says general04:56

McFaul: We need to brace ourselves; there's more horror to come09:18

'Who raised him?': Joe slams DeSantis for 'rude' criticism of teenagers over masks07:42

Russian military 'bogged down' but has the advantage: Armed Services Committee member05:51

Inside the harrowing journey of Ukrainian refugees04:36

Link:
Clinton: What's left of the GOP must stand against those giving 'aid and comfort' to Putin - MSNBC

The ‘many worlds’ of Huma Abedin – Jewish Insider

Growing up in Saudi Arabia was one of the greatest gifts given to Huma Abedin by her parents, she said in the newest episode of Jewish Insiders Limited Liability Podcast. The longtime aide to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recalled her early upbringing in the Gulf nation in conversation with co-hosts Richard Goldberg and Jarrod Bernstein. Abedin, who was born in Michigan, moved to Saudi Arabia as a toddler in 1977 on her parents one-year sabbatical (they were both academics), which they kept extending her mother still lives in the Gulf nation. I loved growing up there. she said.

Everybody was an expatriate. I mean, it was sort of flush with oil money. All these institutions were brand new, and they were basically importing foreign talent, Abedin recalled of the country in 1977. It was a few years after [the] very popular, moderate King Faisal was murdered by his nephew. So it was rather a tumultuous time in the Middle East. A lot was happening. Israel and Egypt just negotiated a peace deal. And the siege of Mecca took place while we were living there. So a lot was happening.

Abedin said she didnt mind living in the conservative Saudi society, given her frequent opportunities to visit Europe and the United States. If that was the only life I had known, it would have been one thing. But I just knew that it was a plane ride away, that freedom, that ability to to go anywhere and do anything.

While she said the killing of columnist Jamal Khashoggi on the order of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman made her sick to my stomach, Abedin spoke positively of the reforms enacted under the current Saudi regime. Every year that Ive gone back since, what has surprised me is how, yes, things that my friends and family were not able to do, they can now. I go to Saudi Arabia, my sister-in-law now drives me around. There are movie theaters; there were no movie theaters growing up, Abedin said. Its just a different culture. Its on a different timeline. But certainly I see things now that were unheard of when I was growing up.

Abedin, who began her career working in the Clinton White House for the then-first lady, recalled an assignment in 1998 to prepare for the presidents upcoming trip to Israel. That trip changed my life, Abedin said, describing, among other experiences, her visit to Masada and her surprised discovery of a Shabbat elevator. At the end of the trip, a member of the Israeli Foreign Ministry told Abedin that, despite the presence of Jewish staffers on the delegation, we like you because youre the most like us.

Though her role as a Clinton had largely placed her behind the scenes, Abedin first garnered significant press coverage when then-Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) questioned her allegiance to the United States, falsely asserting a connection between Abedins family and the Muslim Brotherhood.

It was fake news based on a fake video, Abedin explained, but the allegation was not without a negative impact. We went on an official State Department trip and a member of the Coptic Christian community sat across from Hillary and said, Were not sure we can trust you because of your aide, who is whispering all kinds of things in your ear, Abedin recalled.

What Michele Bachmann did and the five Republican members of Congress who joined her was essentially question my patriotism and essentially suggested that I, and not just me, it was other high-ranking Muslims serving in government, that we essentially were not loyal to this government, and that we should be investigated, Abedin continued.

All I can do is try as best as I can to just serve my country and to do what I think is right. And I dont know how to undo all the untruths, but I refute every single accusation.

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The 'many worlds' of Huma Abedin - Jewish Insider

‘The Batman’ Leans Hard Into the Emo Revival – WIRED

Gotham fatigue is real. Over the past 17 years there have been roughly a half-dozen big screen Batmen outings, and all of them, from Christopher Nolans Dark Knight to Zack Snyders Batfleck, have been the same: a weary, hardened hero gearing up to fight another day. That Bruce Wayne is nowhere to be found in The Batman. Instead, director Matt Reeves alleviates the burnout by capturing the Caped Crusader at a different point in his life20 years after his parents were killed, but only two years into his quest for vengeance. Its a time that allows Reeves to build his Bat anew, and craft a compelling standalone story with a distinct style and tone.

And that tone is undeniably, unashamedly My Chemical Romance video circa 2005.

Make no mistake, this is the most emo Batman movie youll ever see. Thats meant as a compliment. Normally, comic book heroes are pretty hard to identify withall muscled super-soldiers or principled scientists. Even the ordinary ones plucked from obscurity by spider bite or radioactive incident have some deep well of courage to draw from that, if were being honest, is almost entirely alien to most people (and thats before you even get to the actual aliens). So early in the film, when Nirvanas Something in the Way kicks in and the Caped Crusader rips off his mask to reveal Twilights Robert Pattinson looking like Gerard Way, with his hair covering his eyes and his makeup running down his face, my 17-year-old self thought: Finally, a Batman I can relate to.

Not since Peter Parker got infected by Venom in Spider-Man 3 has there been a superhero more likely to shop at Hot Topic. This is a vulnerable, sophomore Bat, one in full amateur detective mode, trying to find his feet as he tracks down a mysterious killer targeting Gothams political elite. In showing us this proto-Batman, Reeves explicitly frames Bruce Waynes fight for justice as a misguided coping mechanism for dealing with tragedyalthough, because of Batmans vow never to murder, his teen angst does not actually have a body count. This Dark Knight is far more comfortable in the suit than he is as himselfwhen we see Pattinson venture out as Wayne he looks every inch the awkward adolescent. There are layers of camouflage.

Production on The Batman, out Friday, predates the recent emo revival on TikTok, which sparked a brief resurgence in popularity for the angsty guitar-heavy music, swoopy hair, and skinny jeans that dominated the early 2000s. But the movies emo-ness goes beyond the eyeliner and sartorial choices; its also the general vibe. The rain pours down in sheets. Gothams elite hang out in an underground club (run by the Penguin, a snarling mob fixer playedunbelievablyby Colin Farrell). Andy Serkis Alfred wears a waistcoat and shirt with the sleeves rolled up, like an indie rock bass player. (Youre not my father, Bruce shouts at Alfred at one point, before presumably storming up to his room to scroll tearily through MySpace.) When hes not stomping around the city in his knee-high boots, he broods, vampire-like, in a gothic skyscraper. He keeps a journal.

Theres also the city itself. Reevesperhaps best known for his gritty reboot of the Planet of the Apes franchisehas crafted one of the better renditions of Gotham City ever put on screen. In the Nolan films the metropolis seems like an afterthoughtjust a series of set pieces knitted together. It didnt feel lived in. This one does. Theres a dampness to it, a rot. Old ledgers crumble and flake away. Paint peels off walls. The city pulses with lifeit feels bigger than this rookie Batman, liable to swallow him up.

Even the main villain, played with an unsettling intensity by Paul Dano, has something of the scene about him. Danos Riddlera disaffected man, angry at the city and his circumstanceshas the feel of a singer in a mathy Midwest band: all strange time signatures and quiet-loud dynamics. Its an admirably serious and shockingly plausible take on a very unserious character; this version inspired more by the Zodiac killer and alt-right uprisings than the campy, green-clad source material.

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'The Batman' Leans Hard Into the Emo Revival - WIRED

What They Are Saying: Ketanji Brown Jackson is Immensely Qualified. – Democrats – Democrats.org

Despite the Republican Partys desperate attempts to smear Judge Ketanji Brown Jacksons historic appointment to the Supreme Court, legal experts, lawmakers, and organization leaders are all saying the same thing: Ketanji Brown Jackson is immensely qualified to serve on the nations highest court.

Judge Jackson has more judicial experience than four sitting justices had COMBINED when confirmed. Dont let anyone tell you shes not qualified:

Joyce Vance, MSNBC Legal Analyst: Judge Jackson is highlyqualified, and we should expect no less.

Steven Lubet, Williams Memorial Professor at the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law: Though some Republicans objected to Bidens stated commitment to name a Black woman to the court, derailing her nomination on this account seems an unlikely hill for them to try to climb. On any metric, Jackson is supremelyqualifiedfor the Supreme Court and more than ready for a return appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Senator Chuck Schumer: With her exceptionalqualificationsand record of evenhandedness, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will be a justice who will uphold the Constitution and protect the rights of all Americans, including the voiceless and vulnerable.

NAACP President Derrick Johnson: President Biden has met this moment with an extraordinarilyqualifiednominee, who has stellar credentials and an impeccable background.

Donna Brazile: There were lots of exceptionallyqualifiedcapable women to choose from, but Bidens selection of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson demonstrates that theres no need for Americas highest court to be off limits to Black women anymore.

Bishop Leah Daughtry, Co-Convenor, Power Rising: We applaud President Biden and Vice President Harris on their selection of this exceptionallyqualified, deeply experienced jurist. Her voice will help to ensure that our justice system reflects the diversity of all of us.

Representative Frederica Wilson: To have a Black woman and then to have a Black woman who, you know, is eminentlyqualified, who has stood the test of time.

Professor Amy Wildermuth, dean of the University of Pittsburgh Law School: This is a highly, highlyqualifiedindividual, and I personally am just delighted that shes been nominated.

Fatima Goss Graves, President, National Women Law Center: Judge Jackson is an eminentlyqualifiedpublic servant with distinguished experience as a federal judge, and her historic nomination promises an end to the erasure of Black women from our most sacred legal institutions.

Jocelyn Frye, President, National Partnership for Women and Families: President Biden has taken our nation a giant step closer to realizing the vision of equal justice under the law in putting forward a nominee in Judge Jackson who is both eminentlyqualifiedand the first Black woman nominated to the nations highest court.

Sheila Katz, Chief Executive Officer, National Council of Jewish Women: Based on National Council of Jewish Womens criteria of determining whether nominees are fair, independent, andqualifiedfor lifetime tenure on the federal court, including the Supreme Court, NCJW is thrilled to support Judge Jacksons nomination to the highest court of the land.

Laphonza Butler, President, EMILYs List: One of the nations best legal minds, she is unquestionablyqualifiedto serve, will bring a unique understanding of our judicial system, and will undoubtedly build a strong legacy on the court.

Carlos Moore, President, National Bar Association: Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is exceptionallyqualifiedto serve on our nations highest court, and represents all the tenets of excellence, ethics, and intellect that are needed on the SCOTUS bench.

Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer: Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is an exceptionallyqualifiedcandidate for the Supreme Court.

Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock: I applaud the historic nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court. Georgians want a nominee who is fair,qualified, and has a proven record of protecting Americans constitutional rights and freedoms.

New Hampshire Senator Jeanne Shaheen: Through her background in public service and experience as a federal public defender and on the DC Circuit, Jackson is eminentlyqualifiedto serve on the highest bench in the land.

Former Attorney General Eric Holder: There is absolutely no reason why this eminentlyqualifiedwoman should not be swiftly confirmed. Ignore the partisan noise.

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What They Are Saying: Ketanji Brown Jackson is Immensely Qualified. - Democrats - Democrats.org