Republicans go Full Authoritarian

Well that didn't take long.

President Donald Trump argued on Wednesday that his power to limit immigration shouldn’t be challenged in courts, reading aloud in a speech from a U.S. statute giving the president authority to stop the entry of "any class" of foreigner.
"You can suspend, you can put restrictions, you can do whatever you want," Trump told a conference of police chiefs and sheriffs in Washington, after reading the law.

If you like that, just wait until Trump decides to exercise his military powers.
Too late.

The Trump White House is nearing completion of an order that would direct the Pentagon to bring future Islamic State detainees to the Guantánamo Bay prison, despite warnings from national security officials and legal scholars that doing so risks undermining the effort to combat the group, according to administration officials and a draft executive order obtained by The New York Times.
White House officials have detailed their thinking about a new detainee policy in an evolving series of drafts of an executive order being circulated among national security officials for comment. While previous versions have shown that the draft has undergone many changes – including dropping language about reviving C.I.A. prisons – the plan to add Islamic State detainees to the Guantánamo population has remained constant.

Authoritarianism is so popular that Repubs in Congress are getting in on it.

The move by Senate Republicans to bar Democrat Elizabeth Warren from the debate over President Donald Trump’s attorney general nominee, Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions, backfired by generating an online sensation for the Massachusetts senator.
Warren was reading from a 1986 letter attacking Sessions by Coretta Scott King late Tuesday when Republicans invoked a little-used rule to prevent her from continuing. Warren quickly posted a Facebook video with her reading the letter outside the Senate chamber late Tuesday night that drew more than 6.5 million views by midmorning. Other Democrats joined in Wednesday morning, reading portions of the letter on the Senate floor without interruption...
"Can we really expect him to be an attorney general who is independent from President Trump? I do not think so," Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said during floor debate. "Now, more than ever, it is clear how important it is that the Department of Justice be independent from the president."

Feinstein should have worried about that when the Obama attorney general decided not to prosecute torturers.
Now it's too late for a possibly unstable president.

For Americans who based their impression of Trump on the competent and decisive tycoon he portrayed on his “Apprentice” TV reality shows, the portrait from these and many other tidbits emerging from his administration may seem a shock: an impulsive, sometimes petty chief executive more concerned with the adulation of the nation than the details of his own policies ― and quick to assign blame when things do not go his way.

Unsurprisingly, Trump’s volatile behavior has created an environment ripe for leaks from his executive agencies and even within his White House. And while leaks typically involve staffers sabotaging each other to improve their own standing or trying to scuttle policy ideas they find genuinely problematic, Trump’s 2-week-old administration has a third category: leaks from White House and agency officials alarmed by the president’s conduct.

“I’ve been in this town for 26 years. I have never seen anything like this,” said Eliot Cohen, a senior State Department official under President George W. Bush and a member of his National Security Council. “I genuinely do not think this is a mentally healthy president.

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Raggedy Ann's picture

“I genuinely do not think this is a mentally healthy president.

?

We all KNOW he is not a mentally healthy president. The problem is that Pence is equally unstable and Paul Ryan, next in the chain, is equally unhinged!

These folks are all idiots! Actually, they are nothing more than greedy bastards that have only looked out for their own pocketbooks and now suddenly, they are concerned about this freak because he is unhinged? YOU CREATED HIM, you dolt!

Rant over.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

@Raggedy Ann
of all people. The unfortunate fact is that Trump's most influential enemies are even crazier than he is.

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native

riverlover's picture

to start breaking the entire system to bits. I have a pitchfork, a rock hammer, several chisels, and a broken foot.

c99, what can we come up with fast? Not a boycott, too slow. Marches may not be the way, and I currently can't. Have we stitched ourselves into a net?

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

Roy Blakeley's picture

@riverlover I agree we need to develop new tactics. Marches, etc. worked in the '60s when there was a semblance, at least, of a functional press and the republic congresspersons were not robots manufactured somewhere in Oklahoma (i.e congress would actually evaluate issues and vote their consciences). Now, marches have no obvious effects on legislators and government officials. Marchers feel better, sure, but not much changes. Boycotts can work, but, as you say, they are slow. One of our primary tasks should be to figure out what tactics we can use to accomplish our goals, and this includes being open to completely new tactics.

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@Roy Blakeley
Let's give it some thought people.

The only thought I've been able to summon is that if you want to hurt them where it counts you have to do it financially.

By the same token, I expect that TPTB have anticipated with uncanny accuracy, the mood of the populace at this point.

So the best advice I have to offer is to be as unpredictable as possible.

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KyleGNally's picture

@gustogirl It is no longer possible to harm them financially. They're so diversified today that any one company you try to boycott is held by a conglomerate with so many brands under its wing that the actual harm done by even the most widespread of boycotts amounts to a blip on the overall balance sheet.

Boycotts cannot work as they used to. The system has been intentionally modified to prevent that exact thing from working by any group, for any cause, against any company.

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Big Al's picture

@gustogirl on one thing (democracy) and to get those voices heard. Fifty million is just a figure, it could be much less but it's going to have to be a lot, maybe 25 million at least. They don't listen to petitions with even a million, they being the government or the media. That could be combined with other actions, but it's going to take something extremely huge. We could also consider a global movement, combining resources with people in other countries and presenting a case to the United Nations. First of all, we need solidarity on a single goal. And I think that goal has to be democracy, not reform of this political system or whatever, a demand for real democracy.

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Pluto's Republic's picture

@riverlover

…applies here:

"We are making enemies faster than we can kill them."

They are destroying themselves faster than we can put a plan together.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

@riverlover

Money seems to be the only language that resonates with these soulless bastards. We need more divestments like Seattle's divestment from Well's Fargo. We need to facilitate buying from local business instead of global corporations and we need to focus millions of dollars of our money on the most important fights.

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Beware the bullshit factories.

@Timmethy2.0

Gotta agree with you there!

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Not Henry Kissinger's picture

Not happy at all about reopening Guantanamo, gagging of opposition Senators, or Presidential criticism of the role of an independent judiciary...

BUT...

Quoting war criminal Eliot Abrams, the guy who cofounded PNAC and who played a major role in fomenting some of the worst abuses of the W years (including Guantanamo), on ANYONE else's sanity is like quoting Jeffrey Dahmer on the joys of cooking.

The best thing that can be said about the Trump Administration right now is that it is actively trying to drive a stake through the heart of the whole neocon cabal. Why promote the propaganda of one of its founders? Don't we want these guys tossed in the dustbin of history?

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The current working assumption appears to be that our Shroedinger's Cat system is still alive. But what if we all suspect it's not, and the real problem is we just can't bring ourselves to open the box?

@Not Henry Kissinger
link

I hope against hope that the rumors are wrong and that President Donald Trump will not open the State Department door to the neocons. Crack the door to admit Elliott Abrams and the neocons will scurry in by the hundreds.

Neoconservative interventionists have had us at perpetual war for 25 years. While President Trump has repeatedly stated his belief that the Iraq War was a mistake, the neocons (all of them Never-Trumpers) continue to maintain that the Iraq and Libyan Wars were brilliant ideas. These are the same people who think we must blow up half the Middle East, then rebuild it and police it for decades.
...
I urge him to keep that in mind this week when he meets with Elliott Abrams, the rumored pick for second in command to the Secretary of State.

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Not Henry Kissinger's picture

@gjohnsit another rumor floated by the neocons themselves (via WaPo and NYT) to try to weasel someone in the cabal back into power.

No way Trump is hiring Abrams - he'll meet with him for appearances' sake (like he met with Bolton, Romney, etc.) but not gonna happen.

FYI: Up top I meant Cohen not Abrams - tough to keep track of the zealot Eliots.

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The current working assumption appears to be that our Shroedinger's Cat system is still alive. But what if we all suspect it's not, and the real problem is we just can't bring ourselves to open the box?

boriscleto's picture

Not to steal Iraq's oil...

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" In the beginning, the universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry, and is generally considered to have been a bad move. -- Douglas Adams, The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy "

exists for anyone paying attention to the new president and his staff, especially if we are focused on foreign policy.

The confession that I will make repeatedly is that my state of unease is combined with a state of hopeful happiness, based on the fact that once-oblivious liberals are now shocked and terrified by our foreign policy! Suddenly they get it that our wars have consequences! Suddenly, overnight, they are concerned that we might be on the verge of a war with Russia that could reach the United States, or even that we might have to accept refugees. AS IF, suddenly, we are no longer omnipotent, untouchable, and unquestionable, because the president is no longer a nice guy and is instead unstable, flakey, and unpredictable, WHEREAS BEFORE, we had a president who was a nice guy running a Defense Secretary planning to make nuclear weapons "more useable."

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Pluto's Republic's picture

@Linda Wood @Linda Wood

He is such an innocent with all those Tweets. That's when I savor the thought of the orange lab rats suddenly discovering the full implications of US foreign policy. What a wonderful way for them to learn about geopolitics. Although I suspect that broadened spectrum of awareness would snap shut once more with a preciousssss Dem at the helm.

They built this.

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____________________

The political system is what it is because the People are who they are. — Plato

@Linda Wood but Im not. Im still getting incredulous looks when people panicking over the Muslim ban hear the words Libya, Syria, drone, Obama did it first. What the heck has war got to do with anything? I don't see anyone connecting the dots, and apparently the media isn't supplying context. Its going to take a lot of educating, and having people willing to take a deep breath and start sorting out the facts. Also requires that Hillary supporters take an honest look at the woman and the incredible harm she's caused. Maybe its early days yet, but Im not seeing people interested in letting go of the mirage.

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@GusBecause I feel that there is a lot of fear, all of a sudden, of Trump doing something stupid in the Middle East. I completely agree with you that there's no acknowledgement that we were already doing something stupid in the Middle East the day before January 20, 2017, or that we installed a Nazi terrorist army into the government of Ukraine, where liberals are now afraid Vladimir Putin will do something stupid. I agree, there's no looking back. But at least the change in persona has gotten their attention.

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ever been independent of the President?

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native

Steven D's picture

@native during the Nixon Administration before Robert Bork righted the DOJ ship to do the President's bidding:

A.G. Elliot Richardson appointed Cox in May of that year, after having given assurances to the House Judiciary Committee that he would appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the events surrounding the Watergate break-in of June 17, 1972. The appointment was created as a Career Reserved position in the Justice department, which meant (a) it came under the authority of the Attorney General, and (b) the incumbent could not be removed for any reason other than "for cause" (e.g., gross improprieties or malfeasance in office). Richardson had, in his confirmation hearings before the U.S. Senate, given the explicit promise not to use his authority to dismiss the Watergate Special Prosecutor, unless for cause.

When Cox issued a subpoena to President Nixon, asking for copies of taped conversations recorded in the Oval Office and authorized by Nixon, the President initially refused to comply. On Friday, October 19, 1973, Nixon offered what was later known as the Stennis Compromise—asking the infamously hard-of-hearing Senator John C. Stennis of Mississippi to review and summarize the tapes for the special prosecutor's office. Cox refused the compromise that same evening and it was believed that there would be a short rest in the legal maneuvering while government offices were closed for the weekend.

However, on the following day (a Saturday) Nixon ordered Attorney General Richardson to fire Cox. Richardson refused, and resigned in protest. Nixon then ordered Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox. He also refused and resigned.[4][5]

Nixon then ordered the Solicitor General, Robert Bork (as acting head of the Justice Department), to fire Cox. Both Richardson and Ruckelshaus had given personal assurances to Congressional oversight committees that they would not interfere, but Bork had not. Although Bork later claimed that he believed Nixon's order to be valid and appropriate, he still considered resigning to avoid being "perceived as a man who did the President's bidding to save my job."[6] Nevertheless, having been brought to the White House by limousine and sworn in as Acting Attorney General, Bork wrote the letter firing Cox.[7] Initially, the White House claimed to have fired Ruckelshaus, but as The Washington Post article written the next day pointed out, "The letter from the President to Bork also said Ruckelshaus resigned."

On November 14, 1973, federal District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell ruled that the dismissal of Cox was illegal, in the absence of a finding of extraordinary impropriety as specified in the regulation establishing the special prosecutor's office.[8] Congress was infuriated by the act, which was seen as a gross abuse of presidential power. The public sent in an unusually large number of telegrams to both the White House and Congress.[9][10] Less than a week after the Saturday Night Massacre, an Oliver Quayle poll for NBC News showed that for the first time, a plurality of U.S. citizens now supported impeachment of Nixon, with 44% in favor, 43% opposed, and 13% undecided, with a sampling error of 2 to 3 percent.[11] In the days that followed, numerous resolutions of impeachment against the president were introduced in Congress.

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"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott

@Steven D

So pathetic that those were the good old days, when outright criminality was not acceptable in a President... and I'll bet it still wouldn't have been, if Nixon had not been pardoned in what was evidently taken to be a precedent-setting, 'we are above the law and the Constitution's only paper, while corporations are exceptional people, just like us' fashion.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Big Al's picture

keeping the country "safe" during war as Commander in Chief. All the more reason to end these wars. Ending the war OF terror is huge or he and all future presidents retain this authority. I'm not sure our "founding fathers" could envision what we're now faced with.

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@Big Al

Wasn't that what they worded the US Constitution to try to protect you from?

Had that oath to uphold the public rights and governmental limitations of encroachments been respected and upheld by full force of Constitutional law, you'd have a democracy, my friend.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

ZimInSeattle's picture

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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." - JFK | "The more I see of the moneyed peoples, the more I understand the guillotine." - G. B. Shaw Bernie/Tulsi 2020

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orlbucfan's picture

The FRightwingnutjobs know how to manipulate the language. Instead of authoritarian, why don't we just write/call it fascist. Campaign contributions/lobbyists--just another way of saying/writing bribery. Guess our side is just scared. Rec'd anyway.

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

@orlbucfan
fascist has a more specific definition

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solublefish's picture

@gjohnsit but 'authoritarianism' ∈ 'fascism'.

I think we can recognize other such elements in the current political culture of the US: an internationally lawless state that makes war at will; which regards substantial portions of its own population as 'the enemy', as undeserving of rights or care of any kind; a corrupt government casually indifferent to law, precedent, and the constitution, and resentful of criticism to the point of vengeance.... And all that was BEFORE Trump took office.

But I do agree, that we are not yet 'there', qualitatively, if we take the past as our model. No paramilitaries enforcing the edicts of the Leader, no organized and choreographed mass rallies.... But then: who said 21st century American fascism would look like what happened in Germany or Italy in the 1930s? I don't believe in 'premature anti-fascism'.

If the 'fascist' label helps people understand and react to what is going on, why not use it? Though personally, I think we are moving into something rather different (I think you share this view?), more like feudalism in some sense - where corporations are the powers and states their servants. (And hence, in my untutored estimate, the current bullish market.)

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@solublefish fascist forces use the same tactics of atrocity as did previous forces called Fascists, as for example the rounding up of men and boys aged 11 or 14 and older, forcing them to dig their own graves, killing all hundreds or thousands of them at once, and continuing such a reign of terror throughout a region, as happened in massacres of Armenians, victims of the Nazis, victims in the Balkan war, and in the current ISIS takeover in Syria and Iraq.

So from my perspective, people who call racists or bigots Fascists are missing the point. For me, people who arm terrorist armies, who then kill civilians by the thousands, and people who commit the atrocities themselves, are Fascists because they enable such crimes or because they carry out such crimes.

Because I see a connection in every case, from Armenian genocide to the carpet-bombing of Vietnam, I define Fascism simply as:

Big Oil Married to Psychopathic Killers.

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TheOtherMaven's picture

@solublefish
because historically feudalism was a complex web of mutually binding obligations. There's nothing "mutual" about what's coming at us - it's going to be straight-up exploitation and expropriation with absolutely no recompense.

FM Busby's Rissa Kerguelen series gives some idea of just how bad and how ruthless it might get.

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There is no justice. There can be no peace.

orlbucfan's picture

Example class, pay attention: centrist is not a moderate; it's a corporate RWinger.

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

edg's picture

Elections have consequences. Dems should have stuck with Bernie who had an actual chance at winning.

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ngant17's picture

I would say that if Trump lets Gitmo start up with the super-max prison and torture business again, there's a high probability now that any of the latest trade deals for US companies to sell goods and services into Cuba will be going south or dead-locked. Obama intentionally waited to the very end of his 2nd term to get normalization going, this was unpopular by the rightwing, not all the Rethugs but most of them. So it was working, Fidel was still alive, "Brother Obama" was very a complimentary honor from the Cuban commander. Trump is pushing Humpty Dumpty off his wall.

Last I read it was going off to a positive start. So much for American business to get a foot in the door over there again.

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solublefish's picture

Although Bork later claimed that he believed Nixon's order to be valid and appropriate, he still considered resigning to avoid being "perceived as a man who did the President's bidding to save my job."[

Right: he was concerned how it might look, not whether it was actually right for the AG to play that role.

Not sure how this reply landed here - was supposed to be to Stephen D's reference to the Saturday Night Massacre above.

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Sad that I usually haven't the stomach to read the Nation any more and certainly not right now, but just saw this rather revoltingly phrased headline:

House Republicans Just Voted to Eliminate the Only Federal Agency That Makes Sure Voting Machines Can’t Be Hacked

Republicans would make it easier to steal an election by killing the Election Assistance Commission.

HOW did ANY US agency 'make sure that voting machines couldn't be hacked - EVER? No wonder I feel dizzy, with all of the spin that just keeps coming...

US elections were just fine until the Rooshins came along and Trump out-cheated the Clintons, right? Even when the Supreme Court made like two-armed bandits to transplant the Shrub into office, right?

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

I'll repeat-post this here, which everyone really should view.

The corporate interests/billionaires are eliminating public financing for Presidential elections... Do not miss any of this informational video! I think it's all covered now, and easily 6 feet under. Democracy, I mean, and any chance of electoral change in America.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FN-cYCjAAXI

Bipartisan Destruction of Election System Continues; Now Removing Public Financing

Sane Progressive

Published on 8 Feb 2017

Sources and Links Below: (This is repost of last nights FB LIVE)
If voting worked....they'd make it illegal. From the Unconstitutional declaration of Election Systems as Critical Infrastructure to the latest act of undermining public financing to Presidential elections, the corporate state is working to ensure there NEVER is any real choice.

Edit to add forgotten block-quotes.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

@Ellen North

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@gustogirl

This has been in the planning and setting-up stage for a very long time...

What terrifies me is that so few seem to see what this is, how fatal the results will be to life itself and still talk about 'future fixes' as though convinced that there must be a future worth living possibly at some later date, no matter what happens... while avenues are closed off before our eyes and the corporate teeth sink further into our throats.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

@Ellen North

It's very important.

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@gustogirl

It is very important - and I think you'd do a much better job. Honestly, I'm chronically tired to the point where I keep missing obvious things and important points and you're so good at explaining things that you'd present the situation with the necessary impact and clarity to make other people more easily realize exactly what this means.

On the plus side, I've been saving up to start getting some helpful supplements, one of which I hope to get this weekend, and hope to be feeling and cogitating better in the near future. We need our wits about us and I only seem to have about half of mine much of the time, lol.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.