Hairy Caul wrote: Fri Jul 01, 2022 10:04 am
This narrative about Ginsburg needs to stop, it's astronomically facile.
Which narrative, the hero narrative or the egotistical fool narrative? The game is rigged but she still played her hand terribly. Everybody knew when it was time to call her boat in. Prattling on in that last interview about all her achievements that she was so proud of. Never mind that she'd blown up the whole thing. Well, her and gutless Obama and gutless Biden. Tired, pathetic old Biden, the man of the moment. Mitch McConnell's good friend and the guy who threw Anita Hill under the bus. Rising to the occasion as only he can.
Yeah, the court itself is the real problem. Having the future of the US, possibly the world, hinging on the timing of an old lady's death. What could be more undemocratic and arbitrary than that? Everything about the Supreme Court is ridiculous. They should send them all back to Hogwarts.
But everything about the structure of US government is the problem. It's all archaic and corrupted and dysfunctional and ridiculous. Americans aren't worse than other people, 30% of people everywhere are fucking monsters if given the chance, but it's only when certain conditions arise that they seize power. It will be an even bigger problem if the Republicans succeed in turning the US into a kleptocratic one-party gangster state like Russia. The fight is only going to get harder and when democracy dies the fight won't be at the ballot box but with car bombs.
Maybe the seriousness is starting to cut through now at last. Even Adam Kinzinger is calling GOP extremists what they are, Christian Taliban. But it's always too little, too late. You can tell people if they don't vote for Hillary then Roe is as good as dead, but they won't take it seriously until after it all happens and then they go "oh".
Some day in the future, I expect that people will agree that avoiding the worst effects of climate change would definitely have been a good idea. Remember back in the 90s, they said if we start the transition now, we can still save the climate. It was all too hard back then, but compared to now it all seems quite achievable, and so it was. Now they're saying ok that old climate we had for all of human history is gone now, we didn't save it, in fact our failure to act has destroyed that forever as predicted, whoops, but if we start the transition now, there's still a chance to avoid "the worst".
Still a chance? Well let's come back to it when there's no hope left at all, and we'll reassess whether it's time to get serious.
I guess I'm just ranting.