Open Thread - 05-16-25 - Stuck in the Middle

Politics in the 2020s are transitory. Not much seems permanent, other than taxes.

Congress
Have you ever noticed lately how worthless congress is? They're a bunch of ineffective do-nothings no matter which side is in power. They've abrogated much of their duties to the executive branch and they're the main reason that the office of the presidency is within a hair's breadth of being a king. Their primary duty is to make laws, do they even do that anymore?
Today, presidential executive orders make much of the new law. Congress drags their feet to codify laws, so with every change of an administration the previous executive orders are nullified by the new president. It's a miracle when a meaningful law is voted on and passed by congress. If the House happens to pass a bill it then goes to the graveyard of legislation, the Senate, where the filibuster, more times than not, guarantees that the bill dies in the 60 vote cradle.
There is no flow when laws change so often, which keeps the electorate in a constant state of change and uncertainty. The true believers love it because it appears they are winning, that is until the other side gains power again. The lack of consistency that would be attained by codifying laws ebbs and flows with the change of administrations, and the electorate gets bounced back and forth like that little square "ball" in that ancient Pong video game.

Attribution: Wikimedia Commons

The Executive
Ask a youngster about which branch of government makes the laws and they're liable to say, "the president". The youngster wouldn't be that far from wrong, with all the executive orders flying about. The use of executive orders goes all the way back to George Washington, but for brevity's sake, here's a truncated list of each president's executive order count that only goes back to FDR:
- Franklin D. Roosevelt 3,721
- Harry S. Truman 907
- Dwight D. Eisenhower 484
- John F. Kennedy 214
- Lyndon B. Johnson 325
- Richard Nixon 346
- Gerald R. Ford 169
- Jimmy Carter 320
- Ronald Reagan 381
- George H. W. Bush 166
- Bill Clinton 364
- George W. Bush 291
- Barack Obama 276
- Donald Trump (first term) 220
- Joe Biden 162
- Donald Trump (second term) 150...so far
You can find the rest of the list here.
Note: I find anything to do with politics put out by wikipedia unreliable, but in this case they had the easiest list to copy and paste.
So you can see that executive orders have been in wide use for a long time. But what seems unique to this modern flare of the practice, in the last few administrations anyway, is how executive orders are used much like the monarchical diktats of old, they last as long as the king is on the throne.
Recent election cycles are dominated by executive orders while congress twiddles its toes. The tripartite balance of power has shifted. The presidency has become too powerful.

The Judiciary
The latest dramatic phenomena is the judiciary blocking presidential executive orders with court orders. It's not really a new phenomena but it seems like it with the explosion of its use. So far, according to this handy dandy Trump Litigation Tracker, there are currently 239 cases against Donald Trump being tracked.
I didn't research that total in relation to litigation cases for past administrations, but I've got to think that's a pretty high count. Is this going to be the new normal?
Is the electorate going to be exposed to suits against the president with every change of an administration, again, like that ancient Pong ball?
I bet so. If this tactic ends up working for the Democrats, why wouldn't the Republicans do the same?

The Hoi Polloi
One side calls the opposition Nazis and fascists and act like it's 1930s Germany. The true believers believe they are doing what the Good Germans should have done in the run up to Hitler taking power, that is, stopping fascism before it takes root.
The other side calls the opposition Communists and Bolsheviks and act like it's 1917 Russia. The true believers believe that communism has already taken root and they need to stomp it out before it spreads even further.
Why is this way of thinking so prevalent? Oh, maybe it's because that's what the propagandist TV and echo-chamber web sites they frequent tell them to think. Oh, and don't let me forget; the politicians themselves also tell the true believers what to think, and in some instances, what actions to engage in.
I see calls almost daily, from both sides of the political spectrum, to do something, anything, to block the other side from holding or regaining power. Even if it means dictatorship.
And then those of us, like myself, that don't cotton to either of those modes of thought, well:
*Here I am stuck in the middle...with you.

*Editor's note: By "the middle", I don't mean as a centrist, I mean "stuck in the middle" of the two warring factions.


Comments
Good morning Free Rangers...
I insist on not capitalizing nouns that describe politicians, most of the time. I have my own list of adjectives for them as well, but it's too lengthy to post here.
Again, pretty much nails it, unfortunately
To quote...
Lewis Burwell "Chesty" Puller, the most decorated and venerated Marine in the history of the Corps:
I try to keep faith that we'll figure this out, even though we seem to be surrounded.
Hey, thanks for the Steelers Wheel
clowns to the left and jokers to the right
does that make centrists serious thinkers?
Ha!
Thanks for the OT.
Zionism is a social disease
Good morning Cap...
I dislike labels and don't consider myself a centrist, but, to answer your question; it makes them as serious as a noncommittal fence sitter could be.
As for myself, I try to eschew as much propaganda as possible, which complicates things since there's so little truth out there, and one really has to wade through the sewer to find it.
No kidding.
The only reason to run for Congress now is to get in on the feeding-frenzy on all the graft, and then to get that nice gummint pension once your "service" is complete. All that unclean stuff like writing or debating legislation just gets in the way of what would otherwise be a floating orgy of pocket-lining.
Not a fan.
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
It makes...
a congressperson's life so much easier having the president make all the tough decisions. With that out of the way, they need not have to explain their votes to the constituency back home, and they can concentrate on generating enough lobbyists monies so they can get re-elected to carry on with the grift.
Caligula was on to something when he proclaimed his horse, Incitatus, a Roman Senator. We all know what's under a horses' tail.
Good mornng, Johnny, thank for the OT. Executive orders
are, in a sense, precisely that, orders to the executive branch. Theoretically they cannot create new law or modify existing law, though this latter is a question of degree. They tell government employees and agencies how to operate and cannot tell citizens what to do or not do. However, by telling agencies where to focus enforcement or how to interpret existing statutes, they can indirectly criminalize or decriminalize stuff. As an example, a president could declare caffeine to be a dangerous drug subject to certain existing legal restrictions on possession and use. That would criminalize coffee. However, it would be subject to legal challenge on various grounds. The problem lies with the basis and purpose of such orders as they have come to be promulgated.
We have moved into a somewhat evidence free universe and somewhat anti-science as well. For a large swath of the public and the entirety of government from ageency heads upward opinions are actioable truths and everything is viewed through an ideological lens The argument isn't over whether or not it is legitimate for a government to protect the citizenry, but over what to protect it from and how to do so, and that is largely driven by fundamentally irrational frames of reference. This is true of all branches of government.
As to Congress, this is further complicated here by Article 1, Section 5 of the Constitution:
This gives us shit like the filibuster rule in the Senate and a ton of silly shenanigans like the "No Hats" rule in the House. All along the way, there are tons of rules empowering the minority, in many cases, a minority of one, to gum up the works in both houses. Couple that with the triumph of ideology over reality and it all devolves into an endless pie fight which, unfortunately, often has severe consequences for we the hoi polloi.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Thanks for...
the reminder of how the government should be run and what it's devolved into, and just how low on the totem pole We The People find ourselves.
Thanks, old buddy.
Plus the government is a effing hypocrite
.
but what else is new? The rules based orders just mean that you can change what the rules mean when it’s convenient for government. Take our 20 year, $5-10 trillion war against terrorism where numerous people are in prison for allegedly supporting terrorists. But now it’s okay to not only embrace a real live terrorist, but elevate him to run a country.
The UK is throwing people in jail because it says they are supporting Hamas when they condemn what Israel is doing and all the while they are supporting Jolani in Syria.
Greenwald absolutely nails this fcking hypocrisy.
The message echoes from Gaza back to the US. “Starving people is fine.”
General Xavier Brunson speaks about South Korea
USFK commander warns Lee Jae-myung
I think this video short allows a fair inference that the general is trying to influence the election or at least box in Lee Jae-myung in respect to South Korea's defense policy. I noticed the bots in the comments in Korean seemed to be all in support of the notion that Lee Jae-myung is geopolitically speaking incompetent and a danger to South Korea. In my opinion, he is one of the most gifted politicians I have seen.
At least General Brunson didn't make his speech in South Korea itself. Lee gave a campaign speech on the 13th in which he stated, "What matter is it to South Korea in a conflict between China and Taiwan." He also used the expression in Chinese for thankyou 謝謝 , "thankyou to Taiwan, thank you to China." The USFK commander, General Xavier Brunson on the 15th publicly stated that South Korea, Japan, and the Philippines were "the triangle of nations, inextricably linked by mutual defense treaties with the United States, are nations that will undoubtedly be impacted by any crisis or conflict in the Taiwan Straits."
Below are the kind of presumptuous statements an American official can make concerning their role in South Korea, especially when they haven't been there very long. I don't think I've seen anything like this in a while.
I listened to Brunson's entire speech and it was filled with revealing but mistaken concepts, the keystone of which is that Korea is a centerpiece of US military strategy against Russia and China. Also, that North Korea is a tool of Russia and China. I've heard the latter repeated quite a bit lately. This shows a lack of understanding of North Korean autonomy. Brunson said, "USFK's presence in the region is a small part of its Indo-Pacific strategy." He also stated that US airpower enabled other US forces to "act with impunity" although they were smaller than in the past, after having made introductory remarks about WWII. He did emphasize that with South Korean armed forces, the Combined Forces Command, (under his command) had 750,000 troops at its command. This issue referred to as wartime OPCON has been a sore point among South Koreans who regard it as an affront to their sovereignty. The guy with 28000 troops gets to tell the country with 700 thousand plus troops what to do. The South Korean Army is the land power he describes on the Asian mainland.
Korea "as a land power remains a decisive part of our capabilities." This is presumptuous and misguided beyond belief.
Brunson "would put a (US) maneuver force back on the peninsula, if I were king." This would be poorly received by Koreans. He is not king but often USFK commanders think they are. He concludes saying, "in the Indo-Pacific we can and will prevail through land power. Gatchi gapshida. (let's go together)" This USFK/CFC slogan is traditionally directed at North Korea. But the general in his speech announces a change to the mission of the Combined Forces Command.
The full speech is about twenty minutes:
他山之石,可以攻玉。 A stone from another mountain can polish a jade
變革之風興起 A wind of change arises
Thanks for the open thread JtC!
語必忠信 行必正直
The "fixed aircraft carrier" beeswax has also been used
to describe Israel. It shows that the Military Masterminds think ONLY of the strategic advantages to the USA, and not at all of the social, political or moral consequences.
There is no justice. There can be no peace.
Yes
They always use that aircraft carrier analogy with Taiwan as well.
語必忠信 行必正直
The worthless Congress thing
seems to play a prominent part in the analysis of Riley and Brenner:
In short, we now have a government which feels obliged to make rich people richer before anything at all is accomplished, and you can in part thank Congress for that.
As for the slurs, I'm beginning to think that the whole point is that nobody in the West younger than eighty years old can remember what a real Communist or Nazi or Fascist was like, and nobody reads or does research anymore, so let's use those terms! (We are of course not allowed to discuss the Ukrainian Banderite Fascist beneficiaries of Federal largesse.)
Footnote: George Orwell, an author of the Thirties and Forties, on Fascists:
"The Resistance will be patchwork at first, but we’ll find each other
quickly, a constellation flickering to life.." -- Malcolm Harris