Vote Blue No Matter Who history: introduction

In light of the currently ongoing genocide in the Gaza Strip and on the heels of a Great Power confrontation in Ukraine which wiped out 493,000 Ukrainians thanks to the collective West's idiotic strategy of confronting Russia head-on, we have a rather prominent marketing attempt in our midst -- Vote Blue No Matter Who history.

Leading the present-day charge is Heather Cox Richardson, who has a book out titled Democracy Awakening: Notes on the State of America. This sort of stuff, one has to imagine, builds upon the histories of Rick Perlstein, whose discussion of the world from Nixon to Reagan suffices to tell the readers in so many words that Republicans are bad. We knew that already -- I'll get to him later. At any rate, the Big Event in Richardson's history was Russia's ostensive interference in the 2016 US election.

Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election began in the decades when Republican politicians who believed that fighting socialism meant spreading free-market capitalism found common cause with global authoritarians who leveraged their anti-communism to attract U.S. funding.

Uh-huh. (At any rate, the quote is from the first page of Chapter 13.)

The most obvious flaw of this sort of history is that it doesn't have anything to say Democratic Party organizing around wealthy "liberal" elites in, firstly, Massachusetts, culminating in the 1988 Presidential run of Michael Dukakis, thus in the same time period in which Richardson is laser-focused upon Republicans. Nor does it have anything to say about Democratic Party capitulation, the most notable event of which has to be the forfeiture of 900+ state legislative seats to Republicans during Obama's tenure as President while Obama proxies bankrupted the DNC. Its posture is ultimately one of blaming "authoritarians" for showing up to vote. (Let's skip, here, past the rigging of the 2016 primaries for Hillary Rodham Clinton, shall we?)

Today, while we are held captive by the wandering eye of the mass media, we are to believe that the real enemy of democracy is Donald Trump. As the extremes of wealth and poverty have grown over the past fifty years of neoliberalism, everything is kewl and bitchen for Vote Blue No Matter Who historians except, of course, for Donald Trump.

At any rate, for those who wish to read mere summaries, we have Heather Cox Richardson's piece in the most recent issue of the New Republic. Yes, I know, this piece is dated September 26th. Let's continue.

The first big appeal of the New Republic essay is this:

America is at a crossroads.

A country that once stood as the global symbol of democracy has been teetering on the brink of authoritarianism.

How did this happen? Is the fall of democracy in the United States inevitable? And if not, how can we reclaim our democratic principles?

One has to wonder, for starters, what Heather Cox Richardson's big concern is. Don't the Democrats control the White House and the Senate? Isn't it true that the Republicans have only a razor-thin majority in the House? Certainly these noble Democrats will protect us from "authoritarianism." But maybe the problem is really us, that we need to "reclaim our democratic principles." As with Ibram X. Kendi, the point of examining history is so that we, the audience members, can worry about our own identities instead of about the outcomes of history.

Richardson's history of authoritarianism begins with Hitler.

Hitler’s rise to absolute power began with his consolidation of political influence to win 36.8 percent of the vote in 1932, which he parlayed into a deal to become German chancellor.

Hitler was initially APPOINTED to power, on January 30 of 1933. And he was appointed by the same guy who was the "lesser evil" candidate in that same 1932 election (as referenced above) in which Hitler gained 36.77 percent of the vote. Hitler didn't "parlay" that defeat. The primary agent of history in that regard was Franz von Papen, a well-placed fool who persuaded Hindenburg to appoint Hitler. "Democracy" cannot ultimately be blamed for Hitler.

From there Richardson maneuvers through a glossy history of the Roosevelt administration to a mention of the heroes of that history:

People in the United States had never lost sight of the promise of democracy because marginalized people had kept it in the forefront of the national experience. From the very first days of the new nation, minorities and women had consistently, persistently, and bravely insisted on their right to equality before the law and to a say in their government.

And here we are, it's 2023, and we still don't have a say in our government. Oligarchy still seems pretty firmly cemented in place. Perhaps the history of democratic heroes would benefit from some rethinking? I'm not saying that small-d democrats are bad people. They aren't. But their gains appear to have been quite limited, no?

Richardson's history then maneuvers through a discussion of "religious extremists." The argument made in the New Republic article is basically true. Religious extremists are bad. Are they the main problem today? Richardson's hero Joe Biden thinks they're kewl and bitchen if they live in Israel, I suppose. Or maybe they're "moderate rebels" against the Asad regime in Syria. So they must be fine with the Vote Blue No Matter Who historians.

We then proceed in Richardson's historical accounting to that dark day in history, January 6th, 2021, when in fact not a whole lot happened except that some wingnut cops let a bunch of idiotic protesters into the Capitol building, where they did idiotic things. But for Richardson a glancing discussion of this ridiculous theater is a pretext for Biden hagiography. The "Inflation Reduction Act" is praised for being the historic legislation it wasn't. And then we get to this fun tidbit:

Biden knew that defending democracy at home meant strengthening it internationally. In his first speech to the State Department, on February 4, 2021, he emphasized that once again, “America’s most cherished democratic values” would be at the center of American diplomacy: “defending freedom, championing opportunity, upholding universal rights, respecting the rule of law, and treating every person with dignity.”

The power of that defense became clear in February 2022, when Vladimir Putin launched a new invasion of Ukraine. Putin was stymied by Ukraine’s soldiers, who had trained hard in the eight years since the first Russian invasion, and by an international community that refused to recognize Russia’s land grab, imposed strict and coordinated sanctions, and provided Ukraine with money, intelligence, and weapons. This community stood together in no small part thanks to Biden and Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, and the strength in that cooperation discredited the argument that autocracy was more efficient and powerful than democracy.

Ukraine has lost that war, largely because of the collective West's opposition to peace, its insistence upon Great Power confrontations in Ukraine, and its refusal to set up a no-fly zone in Ukraine. But, you see, this is where we complete the circle, and the Vote Blue No Matter Who historians endorse the very same people they pretend to denounce: neoconservatives of the same flavor as those found in the first Reagan administration.

And we might concede that Russia might not be a democracy, while recognizing that Ukraine is also not a democracy.



Ultimately Vote Blue No Matter Who history is problematic because of its inability to recognize democracy. Democracy means that the people rule, from the Greek roots of the word; Demos = the people, and kratein = rule. The people don't rule through Joe Biden.

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As an adjunct, democracy (demoncrazy) also embraces:

Demon = Biden
Crazy = media

Red or Blue, doesn't matter who.

Evil and corruption is the new kewl and bitchen.

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janis b's picture

His process of self-reflection on racism sounds well worth learning more about.

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Cassiodorus's picture

@janis b starts at 5:00

However, the content before 5:00 is also interesting.

As for Ibram X. Kendi, he was, a couple of years ago, grouped together with Robin D'Angelo, whose book I reviewed back in 2021. The point of obsessing about racism and about "racist identity" is to try really hard to keep the reader from thinking about capitalism. Or, in Kendi's case, the point is to keep the reader from thinking about the fact that Kendi can't handle money.

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

janis b's picture

@Cassiodorus

That was a very interesting discussion. I think they both have valid points, but I tend to relate more strongly to Finkelstein’s observations around the effect of ‘wokeness’. True, as Briahna suggests, the energy invested in criticising Kendi could be used to better purpose, but dismissing it as Finkelstein perseveres with is also not the answer.

I think being PC or Woke is basically the same phenomenon, which has the potential to educate and awaken, as well as become bankrupt. Issues today which are also perpetual issues are more commonly and widely expressed because of social media, which changes the way we perceive. It seems to me there is a current paucity of information that leads to more common ground where humanity can be found.

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It still seems to me that 95% of our "democracy" is baked in for both parties. Trade, taxation, defence and law policy are a given, and we get to foam at the mouth over what hole you pee out of or how hard you can wave the flag or what some god wants. If the democrats aren't moaning about how they just can't do something because *reason*, they're slow walking watered down legislation that's meaningful to us until the clock runs out.

Maybe next time we're summoned to vote for bad or worse things will be better. Not holding breath.

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@Snode these weasels have cornered the vote bluers with an incumbent so harmful and in opposition (despite the words from lying lips) to voter interests, that as the reality sinks in, they have cheated their suckers of a primary.
I suppose amid their usual bad deeds, this could be construed as an accidental oversight.
All I can say is Hell, no.

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With Israeli agent.
Which itself is usually synonymous with blackmailed pedophile.
The purpose of the neocons capturing the Dem party was so Israel could capture the US.
Evengelical Republicans and Zionists think they are pushing us to Armageddon to bring back Jayzus.

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Cassiodorus's picture

@lotlizard -- then it stands to reason that the anti-genocide forces need to be removed from society. This is the reigning social logic among such people.

Far-right minister: Nuking Gaza is an option, population should ‘go to Ireland or deserts’

And those who think there will be a "day after" for the current conflict should read this Carnegie Endowment paper:

There Might Be No Day After in Gaza

This is all going on while the "civilized" West loses ANOTHER war with genocide-like numbers. Here's Simplicius:

Western Officials Increasingly Pushing "Peace Talks" + War Updates

And here's the key passage from Simplicius' diary:

Now it’s accepted to say 100k dead for the AFU, but with the caveat that “Russian dead are 300k.” In reality, this is all cover for a much more unspeakable truth. There wouldn’t be such dire shortages of men, entire officer corps wiped out, if it wasn’t for the fact that Ukraine has in fact suffered hundreds of thousands of losses or more.

A "much more unspeakable truth"? The alibi is horrific enough by itself. Oooh we're going to "justify" 100k dead by saying they killed 300k of the other guys. Once again, we are talking about pro-genocide belief.

So here I must move back to the topic of my diary. How does the Ukraine reality sit with our Vote Blue No Matter Who historian? To find out for sure, one considers this individual's Substack entry for February 24th of this year, the first entry in the Google search. In this entry, the historian in question repeats the words of the State Department as if they were the solemn truth (during that general period in which the Russia-Ukraine conflict led to the deaths of entire Ukrainian officer corps). Here it the key passage:

Blinken said that if we do not defend the basic principles of the U.N. Charter, “we invite a world in which might makes right, the strong dominate the weak. That’s the world this body was created to end.”

While everyone—especially Ukraine—wants peace, he said, that peace must be durable, not simply an excuse to let Russia rest, rearm, and relaunch the war.

So, today, Team Biden has given up on its aim of weakening Russia and is in fact "pressuring" Ukraine to seek an actual peace, just as they are in fact "pressuring" Israel to seek a humanitarian ceasefire (which request Netanyahu has rejected recently). All of their nice words, though, are cover for a political position which is in fact pro-genocide.

And our Vote Blue No Matter Who historian? There was an article in Foreign Policy online excerpting Democracy Awakening: How the US creates its own reality. Sounds critical, right? We are to think, however, that the US only creates its own reality when there is a Republican in the White House. Otherwise we are to participate in the created reality as if it were the solemn truth.

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

TheOtherMaven's picture

@Cassiodorus

Blinken said that if we do not defend the basic principles of the U.N. Charter, “we invite a world in which might makes right, the strong dominate the weak. That’s the world this body was created to end.”

But what he isn't saying is that's the world we have now, due to the US totally subverting the purported purpose of the UN.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

Cassiodorus's picture

@TheOtherMaven Blinken is the sort of thing you'd dress up as, for Halloween.

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

Cassiodorus's picture

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

lotlizard's picture

@Cassiodorus  
Unfortunately, right now in Germany the status-quo, business-as-usual forces are leaning back munching popcorn as a bitter split over Israel / Palestine has German climate activists at each others’ throats.

https://taz.de/Fridays-for-Future-im-Ausnahmezustand/!5967952

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Cassiodorus's picture

@lotlizard who support the donation of armaments to Ukraine so that neo-Nazis can use them. Has any of this been pointed out to them?

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

lotlizard's picture

@Cassiodorus  
As a practical matter, you can’t publicly criticize Zionism or Zionists in Germany without becoming an object of ostracism (and even government surveillance as a Verfassungsfeind, an “enemy of the constitution”).

https://contendingmodernities.nd.edu/theorizing-modernities/germanys-spl...

This one-sidedness of discourse extends to Ukraine. “How can there be Nazis in Ukraine? Zelensky is Jewish! — Oh, I get it, you’re one of those, aren’t you? How much is Putin paying you?”

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Cassiodorus's picture

@lotlizard I read the piece you posted, thanks to Google Translate.

I wrote about climate change in a piece I published in 2016. The piece continues to languish in an obscure journal called "Knowledge Cultures," which otherwise to my knowledge publishes nothing of importance. I thought I was doing a favor for a friend by submitting this piece there.

CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION IN FANTASY AND REALITY

The password to open the PDF document is: AddletonAP2009

At any rate, what I said in that piece still stands. The world will have to do a serious rethinking of how it does things if climate change mitigation is to be achieved. The idea that we can mitigate climate change -- while everything else about society remains the same -- will amount to nothing.

The trend, however, is not toward a general rethinking of how we do things. The trend is toward a continual recycling of the same old paradigms: economic competition, war, nation-states, capitalism, imperialism. The Powers That Be have their fingers firmly up their noses and are waiting for the disasters they've created to disturb their minds, the deaths of at least 300,000 Ukrainians and the slow disintegration of the German economy not having budged them very much. Germany's old patron philosopher Jurgen Habermas, whose writing I've read whenever translations have been available, appears as a voice for the status quo. What's necessary is something contrary to the trend.

I have no idea if Fridays For Future have disturbed the trend at all.

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'French theory is a product of US cultural imperialism." -- Gabriel Rockhill

lotlizard's picture

@Cassiodorus

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