1819ing out there in front of folks

Mercy! Hoo boy! This podcast is a wild one. And that’s even by this bunch’s standard. Rumble embed to follow. Normally wouldn’t link to that platform but they were booted off YouTube, presumably for some of the bog-standard foolishness these characters routinely parroted out. Link here if that’s a site you won’t visit. Much here is silly. It’s dangerous even. My main thesis is that folks across Alabama need to pay attention to these types. I try to. Nobody pays me one thin dime for this. However, I’ve plenty to keep me busy. So this is a sacrifice.

Others are, I hope, paying attention. Some likely make a nice living doing so. They possibly get praised for putting together reports and such. Some notice, recognition, an invite … might be nice. I’m just saying. Either way, my hope is that discussions are happening about what the 1819ers are up to. I expect this group includes some of the Big Mules and others in the hegemony who are getting bashed, correctly at least up to a point or regarding some facets, in this 1819 podcast episode. I despise, loathe, resent … much about the hegemony in Alabama so they can basically pound sand. At the same time, I’m generally OK with doing some stuff that’d benefit them if it’d help the state as a whole. As I’ve offered before and will again, some of what 1819 does in punching up is a positive.

Any conundrums now placed aside, there’s enough kookery here that I wanted to fire off a quick post. It’s not polished. Rarely do I make much of an effort in that area. This one is rough as a cobb. Here’s the episode, with a ‘members-only’ section unavailable.

Anyone wanting to listen can start where they want. At the beginning (about 8ish minutes of blabbering before) might be best. Still, I wanted to note around 35:20 where the 1819’s leading man Bryan Dawson comes out of appropriately questioning, once again, at least up to a point, some of the cozy relationships and such with a certain media outlet and some hegemony members appearing at a function. He leads into the ‘shame and shield’ idea he’s discussed previously.

While Alabama Media Group will undeniably and appropriately do some stories or themes about where Alabama struggles, or our citizens might fall short in some areas. Dawson mentions listicle (not his word) type articles about Alabama being among the 5th unhappiest states. Might that be about cheap, quick content? Or about getting page hits or generating buzz? Seems to me he should consider capitalism as where to file his complaint. Something about how aldotcom is the Greta Thunberg of media outlets. Then how if we’d only accept Karl Marx into our heart and become a progressive like them then we’d be happy. Marxism ≠ progressivism hoss. The goose doesn’t even make marginal sense if you’re grading on a steep curve.

As to his shield theory, there’s something there. Quibbles here. Quibbles there. However, the saddest thing is how this idiot zealot, and that’s pretty much how I assess Dawson, breezes right past the extensive work people still at or previously associated with Alabama Media Group (or some of the other ‘leftist’ outlets) have done in getting after the Big Mules and other scoundrels in the hegemony. Dawson isn’t from here, so he might’ve missed For the Love of Alabama: Journalism by Ron Casey and Bailey Thomson or the solo pieces or books that many of us who’ve grown up here or been in the state for a while know.

However, there’s a ‘shield’ component too as to Alabama Media Group, Gannett, etc. Management, ownership, and multiple other filters or funnels help make this so. Read some old Herman and Chomsky on this. Lots of theory is out there if anyone needs me to point them there.

I’d also argue that as the news industry has been hollowed out and changed then things may have become even more perilous about punching up. I’ve surely been bitching for many, many moons about stuff that’s been left uncovered or less than adequately explored. Worst of all might be the glossed-over stuff where something gets spun. Explain away your many troubles. Name them one by one.

For the record, I’ve come to appreciate the difficulty in doing some of the legit work in running down sources and getting enough proof to move forward. I’m in awe of the work several of the serious journalists here in Alabama and beyond manage to get done. Just to write cogently is beyond me so …

Returning to this latest 1819 podcast, at 37:10ish he’s talking about how ‘the left’ has their outlet and then how the lobbyists have their outlet so that’s why 1819 has to exist. So ‘the people’ will have their outlet? So who funds 1819? Are the books open? If ‘the people’ are going to have an outlet, let folks see who is paying. Do something like what Alabama Reflector, which he didn’t mention and possibly never has, does in sharing funders over certain level. But again, if it’s Alabama Media Group, please recall that they are an Advance property. Yup, the Newhouse clan. Condé Nast, etc. Big shareholders in Charter, WBD, etc. Huge ‘leftists’ there.

Around 8:25ish Dawson talks of how they crashed some Yellowhammer Connection event. Credits someone else for idea of crashing. As an aside, he at some point cited Ann Coulter as a champion, even though he’s mad at her for referencing polling. Ann Coulter. Yuck. Then again, she’s about his speed. Bless his heart.

This belief that rigid abortion restrictions are a winner for the GOP is wrong. Bad wrong. That even if it’s not then that’s the right thing to do is fine to believe. Carry on. Seriously, carry on. I’m guessing these three are all true believers as to their abortion position. My guess, however, is that the vast majority of people/voters don’t want super tight restrictions early in a pregnancy and favor some flexibility under conditions where there’s a health problem, a rape, incest, etc. Those tough situations are best handled by the person who is pregnant and their doctor. In some instances, one or more family members, support staff, faith leaders, or … may get involved. What most people don’t seem to favor are a bunch of posturing politicians and true-believer ideologues creating where things currently stand.

I also think there’s polling or other research that’d support my belief. I won’t worry about rooting around for the same, however.

My prediction is that there’s going to be a continuing reckoning. I’m among those who long thought the Supremes and movement conservatism in general was strategic enough to know better than reversing Roe. The ‘pro-life’ movement was about keeping the groundlings geared up and laboring. It was among the most useful of motivators for a segment of the GOP base. Reversing Roe may be what allows a realignment of sorts. Hope springs eternal. Just sending the modern GOP out into the wilderness for a few cycles would be useful about getting that realignment going.

As to the DeSantis humping, and it got beyond creepy in some places, the guy won bigly this last time partly because the Florida Dem Party is jacked up. Not Alabama Dem Party jacked up. But still rather feckless. And ‘Old Pudding Fingers’ was running against tired old party-switching Charlie Crist. Long story. Gillum in 2018 made the race rather close, partly perhaps because he ran a somewhat leftish, bottom-up campaign. Again, long story. I hardly claim to know all that many details about Florida politics. Still, listening to these 1819ers do their ‘DeSantis does cosplay conservatism awesomely and wins more bigly thus …” level of analysis was rather painful.

Furthermore, listening to Dawson lament (12:15ish) how the GOP sucks at messaging and basically everything was equally wild. In my mind, it’s amazing they can so often win when the positions they generally embrace and defend are often unpopular. Part of that is due to some unique advantages in the US Senate and with aggressive gerrymandering adopted early on. A version of ‘brazening it out’ also applies when it comes to wielding power. He’d be risking an aneurysm if he aligned with the other team.

More humping was that ‘Raised on Rushdoony’ newbie carrying the PRICE Act. Yup, State Rep. Ernie Yarbrough got a shout out at 32:50ish. Also Ben Harrison (Former Crimestone County commissioner) and Susan DuBose (eastern fringe of Birmingham it seems, Leeds at top) praised. FWIW, Dubose is endorsed by the same Big Mules Dawson bashed. Seriously, scroll to the bottom of her campaign site. By the way, Dawson said at least once “We call them the Big Mules.” That’s been a label in use for decades. Maybe he’s just being general and I’m being persnickety?

Dawson made several mentions of ‘civil magistrates’ around 21:17ish and 21:50ish. Beats me if it’s some of that more orthodox Presbyterian theonomy stuff or Rushdoony reconstructionism hokum or … Needing Godly wives and forty years or something. Fusses about the Gospel Coalition and David French but brags on Mark Driscoll and Doug Wilson. For the record, I’m hardly a fan of the former. Don’t know enough really. As to Doug Wilson especially, he’s scary. Seems like Dawson had someone from New Saint Andrews College up there in Moscow, Idaho on previously. Might’ve been Wilson. Not going to waste time looking. Pretty sure he’s a big stan either way. Again, scary.

There’s a heap more I could point out. One enjoyable part was where they kept using ‘Banjo’ as to Speaker Ledbetter. Although they did credit Mike Cason for mentioning this in a piece he did, nobody else to my knowledge has followed up on that name or how he was there for the meeting at that swanky steakhouse mentioned in the Larry Householder trial. I’d been howling about that so …

I kept thinking about how several folks are spending decent money to have these three knuckleheads sit around and talk to each other about what basically other knuckleheads (mis)understand. The few places where they did get into stuff that’s worth mentioning might be worth suffering through the slop. I doubt it. And there’s a good likelihood more damage gets done by the garbage. Possibly not, however.

Even so, I absolutely LOVE these podcasts. That’s because regular folks can see some examples of how these type people ‘think’ and talk. Consider it a form of anthropological fieldwork. You get to observe them ‘in the wild’ where they’re letting their freak flags fly.

It’s sort of like when Brandon Moseley of then the Alabama Political Reporter would write about different ‘conservative’ meetings around Alabama he’d attend. He’d often just report out the crazy ass stuff being said. You’ll still get to see some of this type thing now I believe. Seems like Brandon is doing some stuff for the outlet the gal who worked for different Koch fronts owns. Lightened Lindy for a decent amount. Came out she’d supposedly taken some APCO money. Seems like she’s now doing NRA work. Figures.

I’d even consider donating to keep the 1819ers podcasting like this. They seem that valuable. To just donate so as to keep these knuckleheads talking like they just did so that at least some regular folks can hopefully grasp just how batshit crazy and stunningly stupid this bunch is about some stuff.

Those funding this foolishness seem even dumber. There’s most certainly a way to critique aspects of the selective shutdown or at least fix things going forward where it would seem more fair, more democratic, etc. You can pound away about plenty that the Big Mules and others in the hegemony get up to. There’s so much cronyism and corruption in this benighted state that you could keep a stable full of sharp young journalists busy. However, it sure does often look like 1819 is trying to ride too many horses.

The fundamentalism, reconstructionism, theonomy … or whatever the hell the religion stuff is about is especially going to turn some folks off. If anyone wants to do that ministry, go do that with a separate effort. Past alliances where some God Squad talk happened aren’t like the talk happening openly here. It’s gone past code words and such. Not even in Alabama is it going to fly. You can’t make alliances about the other stuff when you’re talking theonomy or dominionism or whatever this mess Dawson and others mixed up with 1819 get to going on about is.

I regularly advise nobody to get near anything that looks like a brown alliance. You don’t do business with the fash. You instead try to do them in. Destroy them. My general rule is that theonomy and dominionism or … is far too easily liable to morph into a form of fascism. For the record, faith is fine. Just don’t tell me/us we need to do stuff because your faith tradition says something. I’m increasingly returning to ideas generally associated with Christianity, stuff I was raised in up to a point. Coming to terms with the damage done by some fundamentalist, Dobsonite types in my youth has been a journey. Long, long story.

Dawson can get to going on about what he thinks his God wants. Same for that Mark Driscoll fellow what got run off from Mars or the Moscow, Idaho bunch. ABS or the LOCAL lady can talk all they want about what they think God demands or expects. Ernie Yarbrough’s daddy with his Rushdoony Reconstructionism project in Lawrence County is perfectly fine to follow if that’s your bag. Whatever gets you through the night. Find whatever gurus to read or listen to you want. Ideally, you’ll search broadly and go about the search with an open mind and heart.

Up to a point even, some talk about how we need to order society a certain way because of whatever faith tradition you follow is tolerable. The trouble is that you can real easily step over in what sure does come across like arrogance or imposition. There’s a balance maybe to executing such an effort. It’s like Dawson and most all of the 1819ers don’t even bother with any balance.

The 1819ers also seem to like bashing public schools in general. To get a lick in at the AEA might mean a bonus or something. Some of that might be habit for some of the older ones involved. It’d be interesting to see if there’s some money sloshing around as well here that’s motivating the same.

An emphasis on the woke woke is undoubtedly present. Part of that is presumably about generating page hits and delivering their ‘conservative’ audience the ‘conservative’ content they crave. Ginning up controversy and making mountains out of molehills is necessary for most any ‘conservative’ outlet now.

In case anyone is wondering and as an aside, I regularly put ‘conservative’ in quotes because most every ‘conservtive’ in Alabama isn’t much of a conservative. Many are Limbaughfied clowns. Some are nutters. I can write for pages on this. Talk on it too. Seriously, invite me to your Rotary Club or … to give the lunch program. I’ll honestly do my best to avoid having someone promising to whip my ass afterwards in the parking lot within 2ish minutes of starting the talk. Most of the time I can talk even the biggest hotheads down from wanting to rumble because I try to know my topic backwards and forwards.

Part of bashing the public schools and beating on the wokey woke intersects. Don’t doubt that there’s a concerted effort to emphasize every instance available when a teacher steps wrong or does something a motivated minion can twist into a manufactured outrage. To regularly rile up a segment of the population about trouble has been among the ‘conservative’ media’s main functions for decades. Coming out of the Covid period, the emphasis on education sure does seem to have been ratcheted up.

As always, far too much of the 1819 opinion content is ridiculous. It’s often poorly sourced and silly. But again, it’s content. And presumably some of their audience, funders possibly too, expect such slop.

That’s enough for this post. Far too much already. Wait, one more thing. What might regular folks decide to do as to 1819? I’ve told some folks who work for ghouls, just capitalists even, that you can take their shilling and grind away partly to survive. If you can do some good in the process, then that’s possibly the best you can do. You make the best out of a difficult situation. It’s usually fair or honorable. You keep the cause going as you can and try to accept that you have limits and can only do so much. Find peace in that, yet try to avoid settling or certainly selling out. If your organization or effort decides some of what some people involved with 1819 are up to has merit, some involvement might be workable in some narrow circumstances. ‘It depends.’

I might come back and rework some of this. Consider it a draft, I suppose. Drop comments in if so inclined. I’ll try to monitor and respond. Thanks for dropping by. john


Is ALGOP too much for some?

“In politics, nothing happens by accident. If it happens, you can bet it was planned that way.” Anyone with service at the Daily Caller, Breitbart, and now the partly dark money-funded Alabama Policy Institute’s 1819 effort presumably knows plenty about how some political stories are planned up. Jeff Poor’s speculation on an ALGOP “that functions more as a social club than a boisterous advocate or opponent of public policy” seems somewhat shaky, however. But there’s this sentence: “Is an ideologically far-right state party too much for some?” To be at least nibbling at something seems like a possibility. I’ll get back to this later. Poor’s piece is in Lagniappe down in Mobile. Please consider subscribing. They’ve covered some stuff no other outlet here will get near. First, however, here’s Sneaky Spanky.

For the record, I’m not assuming there might’ve been a tip or whatever handed to Kyle Whitmire on this story about the ALGOP’s Chairman’s special ID. Seems perfectly reasonable to have tried to shake out that story. It wasn’t up there with his work on Nancy, rest in peace, on that too-short toilet or the ‘Luv Guv’ doing ‘Luv Guv’ stuff. But it was a real one. Wow! What was Wahl thinking?

Returning to Poor’s piece, I’m also not so sure that the ALGOP has gotten any more ‘conservative’ under Wahl. Some of the usual suspects put forward some humdinger reactionary and ridiculous resolutions. By the way, what’s up with Junior Hooper? And the recent one about Trump being persecuted when that search warrant was executed has none other than Republican National Committeeman Paul Reynolds presenting it. But I don’t really recall much coverage indicating John Wahl was advocating anything one way or the other. At this point, the leadership of several state parties and such is effectively Donald Trump, Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, etc. More on that thesis to follow.

I also don’t know how those few county boards of registrars failing to update their precinct maps can be put on Wahl or the ALGOP. (Or Secretary of State John Merrill either from what I read.) Then again, possibly Jeff knows something we mere mortals don’t. If he or anyone else does, that’d be the kind of story I’d like to read.

Back to that one sentence now. “Is an ideologically far-right state party too much for some?” First, I don’t know if any ideological anything exists in today’s Republican Party. There’s not necessarily any ideology that seems especially clear to me. Then again, that’s been the case for much in ‘conservatism’ for decades now. Limbaughism and especially Trumpism have been difficult for me to get a handle on as to anything ideological. As to Jeff’s “boisterous advocate or opponent of public policy” role for his party, pay attention to the word ‘boisterous.’ Per the Google, I see clamorous, unrestrained, tumultuous … listed as synonyms. No, you probably don’t want a social club. But you don’t want boisterous either.

‘Far-right’ might work, however, in many instances as a descriptor for today’s GOP. There’s a reactionary, sort of at least fascist-adjacent, just ‘make the libs cry’ approach … in way, way, way too much of the modern Republican Party. And it was building well before Trump ever came down that escalator. It goes back at least into the years way back when of Limbaugh and Gingrich. Sarah Palin was sort of a John the Baptist figure. The situation now is where many Republican politicians seem to just make sure they’re able to parrot enough of whatever Hannity, Carlson, Ingraham, other media infotainers, and a smattering of preachers or performance artist types, a cadre of cosplay ‘conservatives,’ and of course Mango Mussolini have said so they can try to survive a primary challenge. Truly, things are jacked up inside and across the GOP.

And that jacked up status might be what mattered, IF ANYTHING, should any smart BIG MULE type(s) have decided to scheme up some sort of plan to try to ease Wahl out. And even if one or more might’ve, giving a news professional a mere tip is about all I could imagine. That’s routine right? Happens every day. I’ve surely done it. Have been told about others doing it. There are good, bad, and ugly reasons I suppose. Mine are, of course, always righteous.

Lord knows the heavy hitters desperately need to do something to get a handle on the abundant reactionary and ridiculous voices. There’s only so much they can count on by having friendly Dems like Daniels and Singleton around when the balance is so off. Sure, there’s campaign cash and savvy fixers, lobbyists, etc. Smart maneuvering can hinder or shape what happens up on Goat Hill and across the state. At the same time, it’s a pain to have to stay on high alert about what the whackadoodles, the Bircher types, the Trumpiest of the Trumpers … might get up to. Alabama keeps getting bad press because of the Bircher types, the reactionary and ridiculous Republicans, etc. This repeated pattern has to have plenty of powerful or just bourgeois interests aggravated.

And when both parties in this benighted state appear to be ate up from the ground up, with Joe Reed back in the saddle and the Libertarians on the march too, if I hear about the person in the top position in the dominant party printing up his own special inspector gadget ID with apparently the assistance of Jim Bleeping Zeigler then I might start thinking about a change. And it’s not necessarily that you want to get your guy or gal in place. You just don’t want a knucklehead. But sure, a generally friendly person able to tone down the Bircher bullshit and such might be nice. I know what this bumpkin might start thinking about doing. Or better yet, let Matrix or … handle it. Another chance to use Sneaky Spanky. It’s dated a decade or more ago. He’s probably working for Matrix now.

Next task on the list Big Mules, try to locate and then get some sensible, smart, sane old-school conservatives on the air and in the papers so as to start undoing the damage done by all the many ‘conservative’ voices currently effing things up even more. While these smart, sane, sensible old-school conservatives aren’t going to be easy to find, developing some younger talent might at least be an option. You all can easily cover the costs I expect just by redirecting what’s currently being spent on all the shit sites. Sure, there’s a good chance any sensible, smart, sane conservatives won’t carry your Big Mule water. Compared to the damage ‘an ideologically far-right state party’ can do, however, it’s an easy choice.

That’ll do. As always, serious comments or suggestions are appreciated. Thanks for reading. john

Edited some early on morning of 6 OCT 22. Threw together last night so …


Post by mere bag of protoplasm.

I’ll eventually explain the title. This podcast put out by partly dark money-funded Alabama Policy Institute 1819 effort was something else. If you just want to listen to it, it’s ‘They Want to Steal Your Children’ podcast dated 27 SEP 22.’ And if you want to watch it, Rumble is the only option. Not sure why it’s not up on YouTube as they have a channel there. The 1819 ‘News’ President, CEO and Founder Bryan Dawson brought on a regular reporter Craig Monger and LOCAL Alabama’s Allison Sinclair. She might as well be a regular. And I still wonder about funding, direction of … that outfit.

A piece titled State Education Superintendent Eric Mackey, ADPH’s Scott Harris connected to radical ‘sexual education’ organization is what they’re mostly talking about. They’re worked up about the Alabama Campaign for Adolescent Sexual Health and especially a resource, under Parents/Caregivers please understand, named Amaze. Now, I’m not sure how things were organized or labeled when the original hit piece was written over a week ago. Now, however, the URL is explicitly containing ‘parents.” Possibly that’s something added in or changed to reduce the ability of the reactionary types to carry on quite as easily. For what it’s worth, they’ll find something else. They always do. It’s a never-ending exercise with these types.

The post is mostly just clips from an online tool-generated transcript I edited as best I could and some brief commentary. Maybe it’ll do some good to have this out there. For the record, I don’t care what anyone believes as to faith or ideology until it appears such might matter as to public policy they’re pushing or how such shapes their public activity. I’m generally OK with people of pretty much any faith bringing that to the public square and want to try to be respectful of varying beliefs or perspectives.

With that said, I’m going to share stuff these three said. THEY put this stuff out. There’s been money behind what the Alabama Policy Institute has always done and that likely applies here too. Part of the problem about the Alabama Policy Institute, something media outlets here seem determined to ignore, is that there’s murky money in the mix. With these new donor-advised funds especially, this 501(c)(3) can be an effective tool (with a tax deduction to boot!) for messaging ‘on the down low’ to get done. I’ve no idea where these three might fall on any spectrum or continuum as to ‘true believers’ or ‘performers.’ My guess is that it’s more toward the former than the latter. I expect one and perhaps two would especially be among the ‘true believer’ types. No worries either way. And why would this mere bag of protoplasm think they have any understanding of what’s right and proper anyways?

Please do let me know if this post does you any good or if you have any suggestions on ‘what is to be done.’ My guess is that sunlight might help some. My main worry is that stuff like this slop gets out there and can influence susceptible minds. And sure, it might be those legit outlets and people with wider reaches getting after them would just drive traffic their way. It might be best to just hope any damage they might do is minimal. Damned if I know. Let’s get started.

1:00ish … Brian Dawson. CEO of 1819 news and host of this here podcast. Today I’m joined by an Alabama Unfiltered host. With a guest co-host, because I’m gonna need her help. She specializes more in the area that we’re going into with education, with work. She does it local. Miss Alison Sinclair is here to help me out. …

Specializes? Huh? She’s never taught that I’m aware of, no education classes, etc. And no, I’m not endorsing credentialism or acting like just because you learned stuff on your own that you’re an idgit. Believe me, with so much specialization now there are incredibly educated people who can seem like absolute morons. And yes, a parent or citizen or civilian or whatever undeniably has a role in how our schools are trying to get everything they’re tasked with handled. It’d just be better it seems to me if there was less carrying on and going way, way, way past ‘dabbling.’ Sinclair’s LOCAL Alabama effort is up to something it seems to me. It’d be really good to figure out if any funding is afoot, whether or not some scheming is happening, etc. And don’t even get me started with some of the mischief that various education ‘reform’ and similar outfits get up to.

1:28 Dawson – Craig is one of the best reporters we have here at 1819 News and he is coming in to join us to talk a little bit about this story, Craig. Thank you so much for coming in and your diligence to do hard work and have. People hate your guts for doing it. …

Hate his guts? I’m aware of criticism. This piece for instance. Part of the critique was how Monger didn’t call up the Alabama Campaign for Adolescent Sexual Health. And there’s more to follow about an apparent rush to get said story out and their celebration of the traffic or buzz it received.

2:40ish Dawson- All right, so uhm, you know, I think what’s interesting is we dropped this story on Saturday. It’s a football Saturday in Alabama, no less, right? Which is your, you usually don’t want to drop a story on a football Saturday in Alabama. However, this thing got legs. It started going around real quick shaking things up because it’s absolutely egregious and we’ll jump into the egregiousness of it. But it created quite a crap storm, and now …

Yup, “a crap storm” was created. As per that Alabama Political Reporter piece from Josh Moon, “Because nothing gets the clicks over at the right-wing propaganda websites like stories proclaiming public school administrators are discussing sex in some form with young children. And second on the outrage list are any stories that can attack people (i.e. doctors with functioning brains) who were in favor of COVID mitigation measures.”

4ish Dawson – And so, but the people that make up the state that they’re supposed to be serving as public servants with, would that be a better way of saying it? OK, so, so those people, we call them Alabamians. They’re not real big fans of this stuff. It’s being foisted upon us, probably through federal dollars and federal grants. I don’t know. That’s an assumption. Craig will fill us in on all that. …

4:45ish Monger – Yeah, well, they they’ve actually been around for a minute, but they started as the Alabama campaign to prevent teen pregnancy.

4:53ish Dawson – I have this weird thing I mean, I feel like I can solve. If they’re not having sex, they don’t get pregnant. Did you guys know that?

5ish Monger – That they actually according to the Alabama Campaign for Adolescent Sexual Health Abstinence only programs are rooted in white supremacy, homophobia, transphobia.

5:14ish Dawson – There it is again more proof of my, you know, allegations. …

Beats me what Dawson’s allegations are but I’m afraid it’s Bircher-level stuff. Proof? Dawson’s idea sounds swell in practice. But kids tend to be horny. And not always up to speed about sex stuff. That’s why organizations like Amaze are out there trying to do what they do. Or you can think they’re up to mischief. As to what people in Alabama are fans of, I’m not so sure they’d be against this approach if it were explained to them in an honest way. And Craig never did fill us in on the federal dollars or grants. At the end, they admitted they’d not planned performance out. Oh well.

6:45ish Monger – So I began by reaching out to Dr. Mackey’s people and to Dr. Harris’s people, just trying to get some information about their involvement. And it developed that I wouldn’t be able to talk to them within, you know, any reasonable amount of time. But you know, I have editors, I have all this good stuff. I have obligations and so. We dropped the story. I didn’t make the decision to drop it on the Redneck Sabbath, but that’s just…

7:16 Sinclair – I was shocked. I was surprised it did so well. I guess everybody said their tailgates. Maybe it worked in your favor. And they’re like, Oh my gosh, have you read? This this just dropped.

7:25ish Dawson – Dropping a 2 hour podcast on a Saturday probably doesn’t work, but an article that can be read in like 7 minutes does. And so I think Jeff knew that and we’ve seen we dropped some other stuff on the weekends before that’s performed really well. I feel like our biggest article to date was Andrea Tice, investigative journalist story into the blood clots connected with the vaccines that dropped on a Saturday. And it was, you know, it’s still the number one like to this day. Well, maybe not, I think. Earlier this week, it’s now not the number one trending story after like 7 weeks straight.

8:00ish Sinclair – I feel like this story would have taken off no matter what. You’ve got some prominent names and. A really controversial, difficult subject, and I’ll tell you when I watch the video, which will get to people should be outraged, think that this was going to take off. No matter what. …

9:16ish Monger – And so they they looked at it, and Wayne Reynolds himself has publicly called it a hit piece. My perspective on that is I gave them more time than I would have given anyone else on any other story to get in contact. Sure, there was plenty of question marks and a response and a response from. Doctor Mackey would have made a would have made the story that I did superfluous. It wouldn’t have been necessary, however it. It rolled out the way that it did. And there were. Some questions that needed to be answered. I didn’t know what responsibilities, privileges any of the ex officio board members had. Doing what they were doing and those are questions that they were very much free to answer. They’ve also said that I was sort of furtive, I didn’t. I wasn’t forthcoming about why I was getting in contact with them, that that’s simply not true. I do what I do with anyone, the first the first communique is always ambiguous. Hey, I’d like to talk to so and so about such. Or about something. And then as the deadline encroaches, further and further. Then you get. More specific. So when I talk to Doctor Sibley, specifically over the phone, I said I’d like to talk to Doctor Mackey about his involvement with the Alabama Campaign for Adolescent Sexual Help. I said those words explicitly and it is what it is.
Same thing when. I sent an e-mail to the media people for Doctor Harris now, I’ve since been informed that Doctor Harris is, I believe, out of the country and so that sort of. That is what it is, so I haven’t heard anything back from his people. And the main concern, obviously, and I said this to Wayne Reynolds and he agreed that it was a possibility. The concern with the campaign, this wasn’t a hit piece on Doctor Harris or Doctor Mackey. The concern with the campaign comes in because local school boards have a bare minimum. That they are. Required to teach as far as sex education is concerned. …

Part of the thing here was how indeed it would’ve been superfluous if it played out. And that’s probably why it was rushed. “I didn’t know what responsibilities, privileges any of the ex officio board members had.” And mercy, aren’t they into metrics and trends a heap considering how this 1819 effort is apparently a blank check with no need to generate a return. And yes, that ghoulish story using the freelance coroner talking about blood clots did stay up among the top trending for a long time. These three know their audience. Carry on.

Monger 11:15ish – You have to teach that abstinence is the most effective way to prevent pregnancy and STI’s and AIDs, etc. And that abstinence in school aged persons before marriage is considered a social norm. Those two things which is. Not much. And sexual education, everything else, a local school board is responsible for creating and implementing their own sexual education programs. And when you have local school boards that have this responsibility, they are, they have free rein as long as they maintain those two concepts which can be. You know, if they wanted to, they could throw it in as sort of an aside and then go into any number of other subjects. They are susceptible to influence from campaigns such as the one that we’re talking about and when you go and look at the resources that I put in the article. …

Local boards having broad room. I’d have thought that’s what many of these sorts wanted?

12:05ish Monger – And there’s overabundance I was very limited in what I could put in. There’s a lot, there’s a lot of stuff that you can look into, but the specifically the resources that I provided were to that amaze.com, which is age, which they touted as being for ages 10 through 14.
And they have very explicit cartoon depictions that are meant to educate and it covers everything, educate it, it covers everything from the size of breasts and genitals and masturbation and pornography and abortion pills and gender identity. How to be an LGBTQAI+ ally.

12:48 Dawson – I’ll read them. Amazed has several animated videos on dozens of topics such as condom negotiation. Having sex, intimacy and emotions. Does penis size really matter? How to be an LGTQP+ ally. How the boner grows. Being female, male, transgender, or fluid. Abortion with pills – what is it? What are pronouns? Porn is not Sex Ed. …

Again, it’s for folks to use as they see fit. I don’t think there was ever any indication of that stuff being used, even on a case-by-case basis, in our schools. It’d be OK if it was. Discretion. It depends. The whole piece is that certain resources exist on a site. Again, I don’t recall anything about them being used. They’re just there. If anyone wants to use them. Probably a parent or proper adult facing situation where they can use at their discretion. Most assuredly most kids can find plenty of other stuff about sex or whatever else out there on the interwebs if they want to look for it. I understand that pulling out the fainting couches gets traffic and buzz. It’ll get a certain segment stirred up. But this isn’t really anything to get so worked up about.

13:45 Monger – No and that’s true, I joke with Brian saying entire societies have come and gone, empires have come and fallen without having to answer the vast majority of those questions. And from the communications that I’ve received from parents. Which has been a lot. The general consensus is there may be some very unfortunate circumstances in which you may have to introduce concepts to children that you would otherwise not want to this this fallen world that we live in. There are times where you explain uncomfortable things to children, maybe before you would have liked to. Based on circumstances, however, there is from their perspective no reason why you should have a broad overreaching influenced where you need to start introducing these concepts immediately, at always and forever. To this specific group of children.

Again, nobody has said they’re immediately, at always and forever, introducing these concepts.

14:40ish Sinclair – It’s the power of suggestion. It’s why in the checkout line they have all the really good candy bars and all your favorite things.

14:50 Dawson – Would you like fries with that same thing? …

Huh? It’s like you just decide you want to go out and get naked with somebody from watching a cartoon? Or get an abortion? Or decide to be a pansexual? Who are these people?

15:23ish Sinclair – I just don’t. I don’t get it. And so what are they trying? They’re trying to normalize these behaviors in young kids, whether it’s the gender theory, whether it’s sexual activity. This is the last. Thing you know that they need to be thinking about.

They? They’re? More to follow on the conspiracy stuff. A whole lot to follow. Dawson and Monger get deep into this stuff. Sinclair seemed at times like she was wanting to run. And she can sit next to Amie Beth Shaver when she gets spooled up and not noticeably cringe. Sure, I might be imagining it. But that Monger fellow seemed like a few parts on him had been torqued down way too tight.

15:35ish Monger – Well, I mean and that is certainly the perspective that the general reaction. What’s going on here? It’s pretty ubiquitous, however. This is the mainstream perception of sexual education coming out of academia. This is the mainstream method of sexual education pushed by the American Academy of Pediatrics, for instance, and other institutions that I can name. …

16:04ish Monger – This is the this is the house that Kinsey built. This is the world that we live in. When you have a conception of children as being sexual from birth, which is the mainstream idea coming out of academia, then you need to introduce sexual concepts earlier than most people feel appropriate or normal. So it’s not some cuckoo, banana bird fringe nutjobs that are pushing this this is the mainstream academic conception of how sexual education should be done because it just seemed it’s seen as a natural. They treat sexuality and sex with such flippancy because it is just a simple thing that biological organisms do. When they bump into one another. That is just simply what happens. It’s not something that has. It has transcendental value, yeah, and that is an inherently secular and inherently materialistic perspective, which is why it runs into so much conflict in places where you have. Very much a religious foundation, such as in. Alabama and what used to be our country, yes, yes. …

What? Hang on for more Kinsey stuff. It’s going to matter. As to this, there’s another ‘they’ tossed around. As far as what some kids or young adult might do, there has been I suppose a good bit done as to the ‘getting it on’ idea. I could critique capitalism here but, whatever has pushed such, there’s seemingly some sexualization of younger and younger folks. I read Mary Pipher’s ‘Reviving Ophelia’ when I was still in the trenches teaching. I believe that late capitalism is tough on everybody. And that certainly includes our young folks.

I’m not sure what Monger means by materialistic but possibly he’s nibbling at something. I personally like to toss around the words ‘Mammonism’ or ‘Mammonites’ some lately.

Whatever he/they are up to, I’ve been reading some on how some of pretty much what I was hearing in this podcase was what was being said in the 1920s as to evolution and the changing ideas in that period. ‘Red Dynamite: Creationism, Culture Wars, and Anticommunism in America’ is a really good (free to read online or download) book by Carl R. Weinberg from Cornell Press. I’ve been reading portions in a hard copy.

17:12ish Dawson – I don’t even know where to go from there. I just recorded another podcast right before this one with Doctor Ben Merkel, who’s the President of New St. Andrews, and they’re in Idaho. Idaho is very similar to Alabama in that they’ve got tremendously conservative people in the legislature that just won’t do anything conservative to save their lives. And they’re dealing with one that that’s trying to normalize pornography is telling me about this before we started reporting or maybe we had already started reporting, I can’t remember, but very similar type of curriculum that we’re looking at here that we’re seeing in Alabama, they’ve got one that is basically. It’s like destigmatizing pornography. It’s not a bad thing, right? And they’re trying to do the same thing with pedophiles, right there. Minor attracted persons, their MAPs – minor attracted persons.

17:52ish Sinclair – They just love who they love. That’s the goal of all this is to the normalize all this behavior to normalize that. …

Here’s what seems to be the first thing Dawson (mis)described. Can’t figure our what they’re fussing about on the other. Guess I’ll need to wait until the episode comes out. My guess it’ll be the same old same old. These types can get in a lather is seems about almost anything. The persecution complex can appear to run deep. It often seems to be something they feed on.

18:45ish Dawson – And that that brings on, you know, kind of like in a murder case you have to have something called Mens Rea which which proves intent, right? So if you want capital murder, you need to prove that this person premeditated and desire to take the life of another and then acted on that premeditated and cognizant thought to do. And so it’s, you know, in in in other cases they show Mens Rea and like you know they would be like willful blindness. Well, I didn’t know that was going on. Well, you should have. There’s no there’s no blindness in what they’re doing. If you’re creating a cartoon that’s introducing sexual perversion to children, you were cognizantly doing that. Right. The stuff that Disney is now dipping into with creating. …

Yeah, or maybe they were just trying to possibly help them not get pregnant. Or avoid some scary STD. Or figure out something they were struggling with so maybe they’d not commit suicide, be able to do better in school, or just be happier and healthier. Clearly it’s appropriate to compare them to murderers.

26:10 Dawson – And so, so, like you’re saying, well, I’m not gonna tell them that they can’t, you know, have these conversations with their kids and and again, there’s a line there. You’re right like, in principle, yeah. This is Craig brings it out of me. In principle, there are certain things where it’s like, look, if you wanna teach your kids that stuff that’s different than what I’m teaching mine, that’s fine. But if you’re like, I think my 6-year-old should be having sex with his uncle at that point, no, you don’t get to do that, right? And so, but my point is my my point is, and so what’s happening is we is a. With a society that has roots in goodness, and that goodness comes from God and he gives us instructions in his word. But this proves my point that the myth of neutrality it’s either this one. Or it’s that one. There is no in between. And so what’s happening when you say, hey, no, you actually can’t let your 6 year old go do that or encourage him to do this thing or do this weird perverted thing, we’re gonna say no, you can’t do that. What that means is, in their world, we’re forcing our religion down onto them because we’re saying that there is a line that you can’t cross. And you crossed it. And So what they’re gonna do is they’re gonna flip it because they’re taking our institutions and they’re gonna say, are you teaching your kids about Jesus? And they’re gonna equate US teaching our kids about Jesus as what we would say is a line that you can’t cross. You cross it. Does that make sense?

NOBODY has said a 6-year-old should be having sex with anyone. I can’t even come up with a way that language works as hyperbole. As far as goodness coming from God, that’s fine for Dawson and these two characters or anyone else to believe. I get how traditionalism or universalism or whatever might work here. And at the same time, I’ve read a fair amount of history where some scoundrels were claiming they were saddled up with God and doing really shitty stuff.

27:30 Sinclair – I see what you’re saying, but like. I don’t know, Craig, say something. ….

27:39 Monger – On to what he said and back to what I said about what is your standard. You can’t just assume things. If your assumption is that, that children, adults, whomever that they are, merely highly evolved protoplasm in. What is the inherent wrongness of 6-year-old protoplasm having sex with 30-year-old protoplasm? You can’t just assume that wrongness anymore. Materialism is modus operandi within the Academy and that is resulted in this highly ambiguous and flippant discussion and treatment of sexual activity. The whole the whole thing that we’re seeing, like the video that went viral, know if you saw it at the drag show where there?

We’re back to that 6-year-old again. But Monger is, I believe, on his first mention of protoplasm. Or maybe he’d mentioned it earlier. It’s going to be a big theme for him. And I still don’t know what he means by materialism, within the academy or otherwise.

28:25ish Monger – Was the Ariel the mermaid? And the child was gently rubbing the genitals of this ambiguous. The ambiguous, gendered, gendered mermaid. If that is simply a materialistic act between two biological machines. What is the wrongness? ….

The above is a screen cap from something that infamous grifter guy Andy Ngo recently put out. Later the Monger fellow again said something like ‘rubbing the genitals’ when it surely just looks to me someone is just interested in the outfit’s sparklies. Do I think this sort of thing is a bit different and would I take a youngster to see it? Yes. Probably not. But it certainly doesn’t look like what was being described. I understand drag as some sort of art instead of anything that’s necessarily sexual. It’s no big deal one way or the other in my mind. Whatever. If everybody is having a good time and being kind to each other, that’s good. ‘Lighten up Francis.’

And I also can’t help but think of the ‘Bohannan Death March’ that summer of 2001. That’s when I had a couple of Early Modern European History classes with Dr. B. I still suspect she tricked me into signing up so as to make sure the classes would make. I needed the hours even though my focus was mostly US. I ended up loving the classes even though they nearly killed me. Recall something about charivari and similar type releases in the communities serving a purpose. Sort like Carnival or Mardi Gras maybe? Beats me? If the folks doing the performances are making kids happy, then that’s OK in my book. Getting wound up in the latest moral panic is hard for some sorts to avoid. They’re always going to do that sort of thing. Again, some people seem to live for it. And again, where I understand things are often most dangerous for our children is right there in their homes and sometimes even in their churches. I’m just saying.

28:50ish Sinclair – I’m assuming, uh Oh yeah, I’m assuming a certain level of decency and morality. …

29ish Dawson – But that’s because that that decency and morality that you’re assuming is one, is the is the history of our nation and where it was founded at. And two, it’s built into our DNA because we’re created by the creator. So we have both of those at one time. We have both of those things going in our favor in this country. We were a country that acknowledged God as the creator. And so we looked to his word for wisdom and how we should, you know, how we should instruct and participate in the affairs and direct the affairs of men. And when we did that, it was built into our DNA because God created this. And then he tells us how it should work. Well, they can take away our country honoring that. But they can’t take away the fact that God built things a certain way. Right. So they took away a piece of it, and so now they’re really just at war with reality. And reality is God’s reality. And what the word does is it tells us how to order god’s reality. And when you and when you’re and when you synchronize those two, the way that God made things, the way that we that he says we should do things. You actually have harmony between those two. You end up with human flourishing. You get Western civilization. Right, and it’s good and it’s it doesn’t mean that it’s perfect. There’s still holes. There are still elements in a fallen world, however, but when you put those two things together and you acknowledge that God created this world, and he gives us a word, tells us how we should order our affairs, and we do that and we submit ourselves to that there, there becomes human flourishing.

We’re back to how ‘the creator’ has to be involved. God this and God that. Unless there’s God for these types, things crumble apparently. And if that’s how they want to live their life, go for it. Carry on. And they’re welcome to bring pretty much all of that where they want. It’s just when they’re so certain and hardcore about things that they’re getting too much up in my/our business. Such as how Dawson said “how we should, you know, how we should instruct and participate in the affairs and direct the affairs of men.” Under government in a state, sure, there’s going to be others at least somewhat directing our affairs. I’m not all that excited about folks ‘thinking’ like these three doing the directing.

30:20ish Sinclair – So the what we’re talking about, like, it’s really such a big issue, then that means that all these superfluous … Like all these extraneous things that we’re doing, really, we just need to be going and preaching the gospel. And because what you’re talking about is a deep rooted only God can change a heart, Holy Spirit, heart change. …

31ish Dawson – No, no, no. No, no, no. I’m telling you, we’re like, this is like, not planned. We didn’t know what we were gonna say. We just knew that there was this egregious article that was, you know, this egregious topic that we wrote an article on drop on Saturday and it has developments that are coming Monday. But I think this is leading us to a deeper discussion that needs to be had and Craig is one of the few people I know in Alabama that knows how to have it well

31:20ish Monger – I think it’s good that we’re focusing on what the intent. The article was which really was this campaign and their desire to have influence in education. Despite this, the people deciding to think it was a hit that he said it really was more about this particular concept within academia and education. Anyway proceed.

Possibly a bit too honest here. It’s like they’re on some sort of quest or something. Again, they’re talking about ‘within academia and education’ when none of them has worked in either area that I’m aware of. Truly, it’s not nearly as exciting or sinister. Enough straw men to sink a barge sometimes with these types.

31:30ish Sinclair – I don’t even know what I. Was saying except that that I I know it. Doesn’t have to. Be in either or. Like where we drop everything and go, you know, door knocking and visiting to share the gospel. Because media matters. Content matters. You know, like. What we do in the in the, in our day-to-day life, lives matter. But. How do you? How do you? You still have your still in. A fallen world. Yes, this is this is a (crosstalk)

32:05ish Dawson – Jump in and then … so. So the gospel in America has been reduced to how do you get? Your soul into heaven. Right. It’s it’s that’s all it’s about. We’ve reduced it and I actually had a conversation with Ben. About this today. Missions has gotten so big and church budgets have gotten so big and it started pushing. And anytime you have a lot of money flowing into something, you start looking for indicators of success or return on investment, OK? And so in modern missions. People spend, you know, hundreds of millions of dollars sending people over to Africa. Well, how do we know if there’s people being discipled over there? Are we wasting our money? Well, how many professions do you have? How many baptisms? You know? Not an actual observation of the families and seeing if these families are usually so. So the gospel is full or it’s way bigger than just soteriology. Soteriology is, you know, the study of sotare means blood, right? And I forget, I think Latin soteriology is literally the saving of a Sinner. And changing his heart and turning, you know, his heart of stone in the heart of flesh, and then, rather than hating God law. He loves his law. And so that’s the beginning of it and it’s absolutely part of the conversation. But the gospel is full worked and it gets into everything, all of Christ for all of life. And it and it and it touches everything. And so if you have a society, you’re never going to get conversion and not. Until that time comes of an entire society, but. When you base a society and its laws on God’s word and he can go into this, more which you end up having is a society that’s built for human flourishing, and there’s going to be people who rebel against it. You have different ways that, yeah, I’d love to share the gospel with this person, but they’re not listening and they’re just gonna continue to be obstinate and live the way that they’re going to live, OK? Well, you’re not going to participate in this society this way. You know, you could put him in a rehab, you could put him in and whatever. But overarching the society is rooted in God’s word, in the way that things should work.

34ish Dawson – And everyone the Muslims can live in that society and say, hey, you know what? This is pretty good. They won’t let me throw gay people off buildings like they do back home. But things are pretty good here for us Muslims. The gay guys like, hey, I’m not getting thrown off buildings here. This is pretty good, right? That doesn’t exist in these other societies. The Christian Society is the only one in which other people can participate in the flourishing.
When it flips, the Christians are the first people that need to be gotten rid of.

I don’t think it’s all that common for anyone to get thrown off buildings. In some fundamentalist (ahem!) places it may happen. ISIS was, I believe, doing some of that for propaganda, attention-getting purposes. Dawson sure does seem to like to get out the broad brush on some things doesn’t he? As to the need for metrics, yup. Performativity is also a problem ain’t it. It’s gotten darn difficult to decide about the deeper and more meaningful stuff decades into ‘the neoliberal turn.’

34:30ish Monger – Well, I mean, I would take it in a different thing. Specifically in this in this discussion, whenever I said the assumptions, the assumptions that you cannot make anymore. The radical subjectivity of the world that we live in, where everything is malleable, everything is ambiguous, up and up to and including gender. And any other number of things. That you can name. Where the people who have that initial gut reaction when you see a child groping a transgender mermaid, you immediately have, which is a phrase that no human being should ever have. Right. I’m sorry. To say otherwise. …

35:20ish Monger – However, that initial gut reaction you have what I would challenge anyone to do. What is that? OK, so even for take it out of the controversial social conversations that we’re having now, take something as egregious as rape. As murder looks like, you can’t do that. Right. Let’s remove it. Let’s take it down to its most basal level. You can’t murder. If you believe, as I said before, that we are merely the result of highly random processes of macro and micro evolution, that we are merely highly evolved bags of protoplasm, what is wrong with this bag of protoplasm raping or murdering this other bag of protoplasm? Why are.

36:09ish Dawson – Specifically, when you go ’cause if we’re if our ancestors are animals, go into the animal Kingdom and see how it works, because in the animal Kingdom, giant silverback goes rapes. … You know, other one lion goes rapes, you know, Wolf goes rapes kills. What you see what I’m saying? That is the law in that world and if that’s what you see. Him saying so. And that is the law of the land.

36:30 Monger – There’s a great Instagram page, actually. It’s called Nature is Metal. I don’t know if you know, I follow it. It’s great. It’s horrible things happening in nature, like a like a like a tiger. … Yeah, disclaimer, watch it only if you like cool stuff. The but you see these people follow this page and it’s great. And you see. These animals, just molly wopping one another and eating one another. And that’s just what happens in nature. But we assume some inherent value within us without actually questioning those presuppositions. So going back to the whole gender concept. The reason why? That the Christian concept of the imago day. The image of God. Being implanted or placed on gods, creation is what gives us that unique, that unique position in nature. That’s why we are the dominant life form. That’s why we have more inherent value than the things that we chew with our teeth in order to gain sustenance.

I’m no anthropologist but aspects are adjacent often to some stuff I do know a little about. There’s a good bit in anthropology that’d knock the above apart as to humans. Some of the stuff in biology, an area where I’m perfectly pitiful, also gets mentioned as to cooperation and such. These two guys possibly have a manosphere-level education, watching an Instagram page too, and I’m in no position to argue with that.

37:30ish Monger – And because of that, there also comes a certain John Calvin called it the sensus divinitatis. The sense of the divine, those things within you that you assume are indicative of the Imago Dei from the Christian perspective, and because of that you cannot escape certain realities. The reality of male and female is a created reality. You cannot escape it. It is, it is true. It is ultimately true, which is life. Seems so silly. Whenever it gets challenged. You can apply that to everything else. It’s God’s world, God’s rules. When you start playing chess by monopoly rules, it falls off somewhere. It’s gonna it’s gonna turn chaotic at some point. And that’s what we see when you have radical humanism, radical materialism, radical secularism. What we are seeing are those concepts of complete moral and ontological subjectivity. We are seeing them brought to their reasonable conclusion, which is anything goes. So my statement to anyone who sees the stuff and has a visceral, gut reaction, it’s like, this is horrible. This is evil if you cannot explain. If you do not have a standard by which you can point out that XY and Z is ultimately and truly evil, then you need to just give up. You have no place in this discussion because if you are not placing your presuppositions in their proper sphere then you’re just gonna run across someone who’s like, well, hey, man, that’s just, you know, that’s my choice. Can a chicken cry? It’s what is that the Matt. What’s his name? Matt Walsh is documentary I. Only saw a clip from it. But where the woman was, like, you know, it’s a constellation, but what’s gender? So if you can just assume and say all sorts of silliness, if you don’t have a standard to apply your feelings, your emotions, and your worldview on, then you have really no way to combat any of the silliness that we’re seeing.

It seems to me like Monger is sort of arguing against himself here. Pick a lane? At least at the start of that when he mentions ‘sense of the divine’ and then the visceral reaction stuff. I’m unsure why humans, at least most of us, have heightened morality. My guess and understanding, as best as my state school education and additional efforts have carried me, is that we’re more evolved and ‘wired that way.’ I don’t know that there’s a God or Gods involved. Maybe? Maybe not? I sometimes think that there’s something which does endure or is greater, higher. But I don’t know. And I don’t think I have to know. Or pick a side or saddle up. I may continue to dabble, read, ponder, etc. But I can likely assure you of this one thing – I doubt I’d want to get anywhere near whatever it is the likes of what Dawson, Monger, or Sinclair are mixed up in. I’d probably take a hard pass on their approach. Others can do what they think is best. However, I encourage you to give these characters a wide pass.

39:30 Sinclair – So how do we as Christians or people that do have that? Compass in that internal Oh my gosh, this is terrible. Continue to fight against. What is increasingly becoming this is the standard this is. I don’t know. I mean, to be honest, this is the collapse of civilization if you look back to the Roman Empire and like, this is it. And as far as the West, I feel like the US is the last stronghold and.

Monger – Italy is looking pretty hot right now.

40ish Sinclair – Actually, Italy. And this is where I. Just go back to you. But God, like, honestly, but God. Civilization as we know it is over.

Whether Giorgia Meloni’s ‘Brothers of Italy’ party is or isn’t fascist isn’t anything I know. What does seem clear is some of their history and that there are several reasons to worry. Whatever Meloni is saying that might be salvageable, or even somewhat solid seeming, becomes tainted it seems to me by the history of how fascism always operates. Early appeals to the working class or the critique of capitalism so many fascists will at least sort of make always gets flipped around into dialed-up state capitalism with an authoritarian, nationalistic, and exclusionary flavor. But yes, I’d been waiting on something like that from Monger or perhaps Dawson.

40:15 Dawson – So, so that needs to be understood. And you need to understand, so we’re the only people who go into a battle like we’re facing in apologizing for our king. Why do we do that? Right, we want a seat at the table with the secularists and humanists and the Communists and the Marxist and the Leninists. We want to seat at that table to talk about how things are gonna be governed. They don’t want to seat at our table. They’ve flipped our table over, spit on our face and told us were stupid and that they’re taking over and we’re begging to have a seat at their table. I don’t think that that’s the way we have our table and it’s the only table and if we. Anyway, we use going to get into it. Bigger, yes, bigger conversation. But the point being is we have to stop apologizing for what we know to be true. The point that I’m trying to drive home. We know that it’s true. We need to stop apologizing. If someone doesn’t want to believe what I believe, that is fine, and they have the ability to do that and they can reject it and they’ll suffer the consequences for it. That’s fine, but I’m not gonna apologize for knowing I know that I’m right. I’m not gonna apologize for being right, and I’m certainly not going to start setting up society or voting for people who are going to set up society for the people at that table, because that table is crazy. Crazyland. This table actually makes a ton of sense, and it’s what it’s what all civilization was built off of was this table

Beyond how Dawson labels everybody else, notice how he’s so certain he’s right and why he’s right. This is where trying to be patient and tolerant with these characters can get tough for me. And spit on their face? Told them they’re stupid? I’m not sure how to address that. I do sometimes think they are stupid. Very stupid. Or at least can get mighty frustrated with their foolishness when it interferes with the larger society trying to get generally agreed upon courses of action carried out. As for flipping anyone else’s table over, I don’t see it. Or at least minimally so. There’s some tension I suppose in some areas where the public intersects the private. At the same time, inside your churches, homes, families, and minds you’re pretty much good to go as to state interference. And for the most part, in this nation most people aren’t going to get up in your business about something as personal as your religious beliefs. Once you cross well over into the political or public sphere, however, your beliefs are available for examination. I don’t see how such can easily be avoided or even agree that it should be.

41:36 Monger – Well, this table has three very fine people sitting around this table, yeah. … You have to give no quarter and no credence to people who cannot give a justification for their perception of truth. Everything apart from an objective sense of a created reality is nonsense you have. You have no basis for truth for right. Outside of a of a world and a universe that was created with those restrictions on it. So going back to my sort of hyperbolic bag of protoplasm example. If 2 bags of Protoplasm who are just simply fizzing with chemical randomness. Are having a discussion in the way that we are, why is your chemical randomness right and my chemical randomness wrong? If you had, if the functions of our minds are something not by a created God in his image, then what is the rightness or the wrong …

42:45ish Monger – … If I have a can of Dr. Pepper and a can of Mountain Dew and I shake them up and crack them open, which one won the argument? That is just as nonsensical as expecting someone who cannot give an accounting for their place in the cosmos. It is that is just as insane as trying … as two people who can’t give an accounting for their place in the cosmos trying to determine the rightness or wrongness in a dispute. …

43:30ish Sinclair – OK, so if my cells see the people that are part of this campaign would say. Uhm, well, your truth is your truth, and my cell truth is my cell truth. But what you’re saying is if somewhere in those separate truths there’s any internal voice of right or wrong then that can’t really be true because like I would say that probably both those cells, clumps, bags of protoplasm would say that killing people is wrong.

44ish Monger – Based on what? By what? By what standard?

44:02ish Sinclair – Well, I don’t think they could say, but I think. They know it. … Because it’s an internal God. We were created. There’s just some. …

44:10 Monger – I if I say I defecate foie gras, I can’t expect you to eat it without giving it a rational explanation. …

44:28ish Monger – Goose liver, fattened goose liver. My, my point is saying, just because I if you assume something I can, you can assume that gender is fluid. You can assume that gender is a concept that doesn’t really apply to human beings. As I do, sex is a far more accurate description. However, you assuming something does not give it value. You have to have some extraneous, some external standard by which you base your assumptions on. And if you don’t have a created cosmos, you have nothing to base those assumptions on….

What in the wide world of sports? Monger is back to those bags of protoplasm. And something about shaking up soda cans. And explaining why you should eat the fattened goose liver he’s able to defecate. I must be getting too old or something. Monger’s apparent position that absent belief in a created cosmos then you’re just assuming stuff and making it up as you go, isn’t new. There’s been a bunch said or written over the ages about why that’s shaky, silly, suspect, etc. If you need to operate out of empiricism, there’s a fair amount of anthropology, sociology, etc. History too has something to say. But I suppose everybody gets to decide the question for themselves.

45:10 Dawson – You know what NAMBLA is. So this is the first time I was ever introduced to anything going in this direction. I read a book by Pat Buchanan called The Death of the West that launched me kind of down my road that that got me here. And I was reading this book and this is 2011, so we’re talking 11 years ago. …

Seems like Dawson has cited Buchanan before as being a big influence. I’m not at all into the nativism but there are facets of Buchanan’s critique I find somewhat solid. It’s really frustrating to me how the stuff that’s worth worrying over and could potentially be addressed with some sensible solidarity gets reliably derailed by the reactionary, religious, ridiculous … types. And sure, Buchanan’s BS doesn’t help here. There’s just too much Nixon and more in the guy I suppose.

45:45ish Dawson – You didn’t know about NAMBLA? So, so it’s literally a lobbying arm and association, right? It’s these fixed, yes, North American Man Boy Love Association. You go back in ancient times, it’s the idea of pedagogy. It’s basically people advocating for the right to have pedagogy in the United States and for it to be federally blessed and legalized. And this has been going on since. I mean, you could probably go up. But I’m not. I’m not Googling that. Yeah, whatever. Do not Google it.

Bless his heart, he kept misusing the word ‘pedagogy.

46:19 Monger – So, yeah, that’s I didn’t know if NAMBLA was a thing, but again, that’s their assumption. There’s a reason why NAMBLA was as successful as they were is because they made the case that, you know, love is love. I wonder where we where we’ve heard that that slogan before. Love is love. If you can make, you can make a decision. Two, if, uh, if a man and A and an underage boy love one another, why can’t they express that love through physical intimacy? And again, I would ask anyone who ponders these things, why not? Why not? Why is that not OK? And they were pretty successful NAMBLA was? Because when you have the outworking of the sexual revolution and sexual liberation, what you get is this radical subjectivity. There is no standard to pin any sort of sexual ethic, or any ethic for that matter, on. You have nothing to apply it to, yeah?

Seems like Monger had mention ‘radical subjectivity’ somewhere else. Beyond how he can know the TRUTH because of an understanding around a creator, the inclusion of ‘radical’ is notable. We’re back to that slippery slope stuff again I suppose. As to how a standard is agreed upon, a society or community works it out. Sociology, etc. We’ve probably made decent advances in these areas even if plenty of abuses and problems continue. And unfortunately, some of the more dangerous places for children have been some Catholic and other churches, family settings, etc. There’s also the issue of human trafficking as it’s a money maker. These characters kept getting all worked up about NAMBLA yet I don’t believe I heard a SINGLE word about the actual existing problems out there.

47:16 Dawson – Obergefell was the floodgates, OK? And so there was so much resting on Obergefell. So it’s like a dam in that’s holding back all this wickedness and like waters over here and for the people listening on audio only. You don’t get to see my wonderful hand acting I’m doing here, I think. Yes, and so. So pre-Obergefell we did have these, you know, marriage laws that the country had definitely by that time it abandoned its, you know, kind of previous historical Christian ways. However, there is still remnants that allowed our society to stand and structure, and this was the one that the left knew if they could get Obergefell to pass. And again, there’s no doubt that there is gay people who really did want to get married. And they were advocating because they really wanted to be able to get married and if they die or if they were in the hospital, someone to come be able to see them and to get, you know, there’s no doubt that there was a couple of those people, but the majority of it was a radical communist movement, knowing that this was the like the last stronghold before getting this ridiculous perversions that have been foisted upon us in the last decade. If we can get Obergefell, if we can punch through and federally protect something that was not guaranteed in the Constitution as it pertains to sexual relations. If we can federally protect that, everything else is going to come on its heels with the with the same presupposition or argument. Well, if those two can get married, then how come a guy can’t get married to two women? Or a guy get married to two guys? How come a guy can’t marry his cat or his cow or his donkey. How come the North American Man Boy Love Association isn’t allowed to have their thing right? And so once you break that whole, and now the floodgates have. Have, have, have broken, and we’re seeing all kinds of vile, wicked evil. I remember when Obergefell past I was like, Oh no, I knew what this means. I never thought I’d be watching, uh, Matt Walsh documentary and all that stuff was going to be going on.

This is classic Bircher bullshit. It’s essentially the same thing that’s been around from even before the Birchers came along. See that Weinberg ‘Red Dynamite’ book for examples. “… there’s no doubt that there was a couple of those people, but the majority of it was a radical communist movement, knowing that this was the like the last stronghold before getting this ridiculous perversions that have been foisted upon us in the last decade.”

49:25ish Dawson – But one thing before we go that I want to talk about is, is to give Craig more credit. It was all coming and it’s all been something that’s been brewing that these people have been working on for decades and they’re seeing the fruits of their labor. They’ve been they’ve been sowing and now they’re reaping, OK? Money and Kinsey. Talk to us about that. So I’ll say if you’ve ever heard the name Money or Kinsey, it’s probably because you watched Matt Walsh’s documentary ‘What is a woman?’ And if you have not watched that documentary, stop what you’re doing. Go and do whatever it takes to go watch that documentary ’cause you need to watch it. But Craig has been on this, this, this path and has been telling me about Kinsey and Money long before Matt Walsh ever brought it up and I was blown away. Talk a little bit about that preparing yourselves and full disclaimer that what’s about to be talked about is awful and egregious and if children are listening, plug their ears. …

The above and what’s to follow sounds like Judith Reisman-level analysis on Kinsey and Money. Beats me. No telling where this comes from. That Dawson loved Matt Walsh’s ‘documentary’ surprises me not.

50:20 Monger – Yes, well, uh, I I’m intimately more familiar with Alfred Kinsey’s work, just because I own two books that he wrote the sexual behavior in in human male human female. Money is sort of a more fringe, but he has had influence, he’s less. Prolific, yeah. So what Alfred Kinsey was he was a scientist who specialized in the study of wasps. You heard me right. Wasps. And he at some point, he shifted his focus of study to sexual activity. Within human beings. And he did so in the beginnings by conducting experiments which simply involved a very prurient Voyeuristic activity of observing humans copulating through various stages. Some of some of these copulations occurred in addicts. It was very scientific, very controlled as you can tell, so so it’s too much to get into over the next few minutes, but needless to say, he. And he also involved, by the way, the Research of a of. I I can’t remember. And he relied very much on his experimentation and his observations for developing his And anyway, what Kinsey. Formulated in his in his research was that that children were sexual from birth. From birth. They expressed their sexuality through multiple, multiple avenues and and I believe it’s table 32. If I’m misquoting that, I’m sure I’ll be informed, but in table 32 he listed the number of orgasms that a person experiences from six months, one year up, up, up, up, and goes up in age. And I can’t remember the. Number of orgasms that a 6 month old experiences but he also defines. He also defines A6 month old that they orgasm as crying, thrashing, sneezing, screaming. He gives a number of like definitions of an orgasm, most of which could be used to describe a child while they’re being ravaged, while they’re being. Touched or penetrated in ways that are best left not to the imagination. So he also. Did a tremendous amount of research on prisoners so his his conception of sexuality came from. Parent and voyeuristic. Observations of sex studies, of prisoners, a lot of whom were were were were there for sexual reasons and through Nazi scientists and that has really formulated through the Kinsey Institute, which is still around and still very prolific he has. He has volumes of diaries and journals, a lot of which we can’t have access to for reasons I’m sure I don’t have to explain. But his conception of human sexuality has developed and has become as I. Said the mainstream. That children are sexual. From from birth. And doctor Money was very, very. Much similar in that regard he actually. There’s evidence that he actually did sexually assault some of his patients, whereas there’s none. None conclusively with with Kinsey. But he also is the one who really started pushing the idea of gender as applying to human beings, where whereas gender beforehand was applied to language, we use gender to describe language. There’s every language, really before you have Greek, Latin, the romance languages. All of them have gender. You have feminine, masculine neuter. Anyone who’s ever taken agreed class will tell you how absolutely frustrating that is. We don’t exactly have that in in the English language. We have like actives to clinch it any. I digress. …

57:15 Monger – Yeah, yeah. I mean, and people, there’s people who foresaw this when they when they saw what? They consider to. Sort of be the outworking of the Enlightenment. I don’t have such a grim view of the Enlightenment, I think. I think. You can look at. It from an inherently religious perspective. But people that saw the development of materialism, Chesterton, Shafer, Rushdoony were all people who really you know, Christians who wrote about the future of human civilization. CS Lewis would be another one they saw. Where we are. Not they. They didn’t have the grand detail. They couldn’t have imagined the details of it, but they saw radical subjectivity and radical, and radical selfism as being as being a serious problem for the future. And that’s what we’re living in now. It’s what Carl Trueman points out in his book, I don’t know if you’ve read it The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self. Check it out, it’s very good. …

That Trueman book might not be all bad since he supposedly does use a fair amount of Alasdair MacIntyre. Still, I see where Rod Dreher likes it so I’m immediately worried. I used to regularly try to read Rod. But that guy went around the bend three or four times it seems. Something broke. Bad.

Hourish Dawson – But, let’s just ease up another podcast for typologies. here we go. Anywho, I think this will wrap us up. Hopefully this was. The goal is always to be informative, educational, entertaining and engaging. And I hope. We struck all four. Of those chords here on this podcast. Here for yeah, yeah, me too. We got about halfway through it and I’m like, well, we did not have a plan. And that probably came out so in that. Well, no, but seriously, thank you so much, Craig, for coming in. Thank you for the courage. And doing the real reporting and having people hate your guts and, you know, talk about how bad you are and sending internal emails that disparage you in the company you work for and everything else, but thank you for doing that and know that Craig is an absolute representation of who we are at 1819. We’re going to pursue the truth no matter where it leads, no matter how uncomfortable it makes people. We are going to do that, and we’re doing that because. You know, for the purpose of serving the people of Alabama. Allison, thank you so much for coming in and cohosting on the drop of the hat. A moment’s notice to come in with Craig and I. You had no idea what you were in for. Craig didn’t know what he was in for. By bringing you in here and here we are. So until next time, put your trust in God and keep your powder dry.

That “internal emails that disparage you in the company you work for” caught my eye. As did “know that Craig is an absolute representation of who we are at 1819.” Monger’s mention of Rushdoony too. I actually like some Chesterton. Distributionism certainly has some appeal.

For the few that ever got to this post and the even fewer who might’ve made it to this point, thanks. To read what these characters said is revealing isn’t it? I often think how it’d be great to get transcripts of the many ‘conservative’ radio talkers around Alabama to be able to quickly look through the slop they say. Most are Limbaugh-level ‘conservatives.’ They’re performers doing what Limbaugh and others of that ilk do. Straw men layered onto straw men is their basic move. Get fellow travelers on and keep show safe. It’s a performance. I expect few have read all that much, certainly not apostate types pushing back on Limbaugh-level ‘conservative’ crap. It’s probably parroting what they’ve found out there on the standard ‘conservative’ sites and outlets. They’re doing their part to keep a small segment riled up and distracted. And most everybody has to make a living. One thesis I hold for some of the professional ‘conservative’ characters is that they can be such jackasses because they know exactly what they’re doing. But whatever is happening, every little propaganda effort matters at least some in the bigger picture. That maintenance is critical to the larger project. There’s an effect by having things repeated over and over and over and …

And many people across Alabama and beyond are getting a dose at their churches. Or from their buddies playing golf or fishing or whatever. And that’s possibly at least some of what the partly dark money-funded Alabama Policy Institute is up to with their 1819 News effort. It’s possibly just an updated approach for what this arm of the larger State Policy Network has done for decades. It might be a pilot of some type.

And I still suspect there’s something going on with one or more education ‘reform’ outfits using this outlet to help soften up a segment of the Alabama Legislature and citizenry for a future ‘reform’ initiative.

I’ll eventually get around to writing something on zombie or mutating forms of neoliberalism, looping in the populist forms I’d not sufficiently appreciated or understood until recently, if I’m able. I see at least some of such in what’s afoot here.

That’ll do. Geez! Over 10,000 words. Most were generated with the online tool used to pull the transcript together but still this was a slog. My apologies. If you’re unhappy enough, feel free to dock my pay.

And as always, comments or suggestion are appreciated. Forward. john


Filters are needed

A recent ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ episode from the wholly owned subsidiary of the Alabama Policy Institute had three regular 1819ers talking with Rebekah Blocher. She’s an Alabama Eagle Forum ‘Research Fellow.’ She’s done several ‘Great Reset’ and “What is Metaverse?’ talks but also recently directed their Cullman group’s program on ‘foraging’ so as “to prepare for the upcoming food shortages that will begin to hit this fall.” Try to remember that worry for later.

The Alabama Policy Institute 1819 hosts were Scott Beason, Amie Beth Shaver (ABS), and a ‘Local Alabama‘ member named Allison Sinclair. Advance’s Alabama Media Group (aldotcom) just had some coverage of LOCAL’s ‘dime out your teacher for fevered swamp stuff’ form which described her as a mere member of LOCAL Alabama. That coverage was, in my mind, not especially awful but it seemed a bit gentle. Sinclair sure looks to be among LOCAL Alabama’s leadership. And for what it’s worth, she’s the Zone 9 Director for the Shelby County Republic Party.

Although they have NO IDEA, at least as best as I can tell, they’re lamenting late capitalism, features in neoliberalism, the commodification of personal data through consumer products and other technology, facets of globalization, etc. At the very end of this post I’ll try to send anyone who makes it that far to some resources on what I think is the stuff to study on. It’s deep. I’ve been rooting around in this stuff for years now and I’m still getting a handle on the complexities. So many layers and angles. Serious scholars wrestle with these themes. In fact, if you want to just go ahead and roll on toward the end there’s a good piece and a trailer to a documentary shared. That’s a decent strategy if you’re interested and don’t want to suffer through my scribbling. TL,DR is understood. No worries.

These four from the Alabama Policy Institute’s 1819 effort and the Alabama Eagle Forum are carrying on about communism, how ‘the gubmint’ and the World Economic Forum (WEF) and … are plotting and scheming, etc. I kid you not! Referencing what I’m sharing at the end of this post, that’s not helping. It’s in fact making it all the more likely ‘the gubmint’ and the WEF might pull off what is being talked up. What is actually being batted around and proposed is undeniably something to get stressed over. It’s just not what these knuckleheads are caterwauling about.

There’s A LOT those four folks seem to be struggling with. An industrial strength filtering system would be needed to clean out the sewage from this nearly hour long discussion. That’s the title of the post. Filters are needed. I’m late. After the fact. But it might do some good. Might as well give it a go.

I am only touching on some of the slop this bunch blathered on about. It would take me just too long to address every place where one or more of these four said something that was shaky, silly, or …

There’ve only been 146 views on YouTube at the time I’m first posting this but … And consider enabling the transcript feature on YouTube if so inclined. Yup, you’ll need to open in that platform. As many people know, their algorithm might then start serving you up all sorts of silliness. Still, there’s A LOT going on this episode and seeing the text might help you ‘appreciate’ what you’re seeing.

Having spent far too much time over the last couple of decades watching or listening to stuff like this, even as a younger fellow witnessing some of the local Birchers do their thing, I feel like I can almost predict where they’re going or how they’re ‘thinking’ before they start talking. And seriously, this is nothing new. It’s been a BIG part of the religious right and ‘conservatism’ for many, many years.

They almost always have a few legitimate concerns. They might even start forming a critique in some places. But it almost always quickly crumbles because certain types can’t seem to help but focus in on ‘the gubmint’ and ‘the left.’ They can’t get to what’s real because of the ridiculous. They rarely dig deeper because they’re constantly served up shallow slop that confirms what they’re already ‘thinking’ and especially feeling.

These four on this Alabama Policy Institute 1819 ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ episode are all worked up (or at least pretend to be – more on that later) about ESG (environmental, social, and governance) ratings and the ‘Great Reset Initiative’ that the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos is pushing.

They’re fretting over multiple school systems here in Alabama spending money on sustainability and energy efficiency initiatives. The Gulf Shores City System was mentioned. Schneider Electric, from France no less, is mixed up in this. School Superintendents of Alabama hands out a Superintendent of the Year award every year. It appears that Schneider Electric is sponsoring the award. Such looks to me like capitalism, routine sponsoring, government relations, etc. Sure, it could be that some sketchy stuff is happening as to nailing down these deals. It’d be worth rooting around on that I suppose.

However, our ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ panel sees something much more sinister. School indoctrination! Seriously, social and emotional learning (SEL) and social justice stuff, even hiring up more mental health supports in our schools, is part of what has them worked up.

They’re off into something about how kids are going to be programmed up from all these energy efficiency efforts. Gracious, there might even be pizza parties for a class who saves the most energy. Then those kids are soon grown up and heading off to live in SMART homes with facial recognition and microphones and …

And that tech can do all sorts of secret scary stuff. Toward the end of the hour they’re talking about our toilet seats knowing too much. And surveillance if you say this or that. How some of the new technology knows who you’re around and where you are traveling to. And sure, that’s a concern. It’s just not like these four see (or pretend to see – I’ll get there) the situation. Reeducation camps. Yup, one said it! I believe it was the LOCAL Alabama lady. ABS is moving to a farm.

Blocher, the Eagle Forum Research Fellow, is exceedingly anxious about IoT (Internet of Things) semiconductors. She kept talking about the Biden bill this and the Biden bill that. She said how cars will have to have breathalyzers. Something is in one bill about figuring out how to figure this out but it’s a bit open-ended at this point about exactly how that could happen. My guess is industry and advocacy groups will wrestle it out in the next decade or so.

As a brief aside, Sinclair and Blocher both seem to misunderstand facets of the Friedman Doctrine about maximizing shareholder value. There’s not really a ‘law’ nor is it ‘illegal’ if a board or CEO doesn’t do this. And it’s not just financial, the short-term stuff, etc.

The thought of me just talking or writing about stuff, especially where people can see or read it to pick it apart, when I don’t know anything about said stuff terrifies me. Now, nobody should necessarily feel bad about not knowing stuff. In fact, there’s a lot to be said for understanding just how complicated things are and how we’re mostly only going to be able to be dabblers about a broad body of knowledge. At the same time, you really want to try to avoid having too much conviction that you’ve got stuff nailed down and genuinely understand most things. That’s especially true, I’d suggest, about really complicated societal trends and conditions.

This panel appears to view stakeholder capitalism as somehow another part of the plan of Klaus Schwab and the WEF, plus the BlackRock crowd, to eventually get us with our own ESG scores. Again, it could be that one or more of the Alabama Policy Institute 1819 crew or even the Eagle Forum Research Fellow are ‘doing a bit.’ Playing a part. Putting on a show. But if so, they’re good.

Mentions were made of infrastructure being put into place, how it’s gonna be like Red China before long, we only have one or two elections left before …

Blocher said that ‘on the right’ everyone is against this ESG stuff. But on the left, yup – that’s what she said, there are two camps. There are some like BlackRock’s Larry Fink who say ESG is already good. And others who say the trouble is that it’s too loose and needs more monitoring. But again, she’s putting BlackRock’s Larry Fink on ‘the left.’ BlackRock’s Larry Fink gets mentioned over and over. He’s a big focus. It reminds me of how Soros is commonly cited. Go figure.

Blocher said how she now would Google a company or individual and then add ‘World Economic Forum’ to her query. Not just anyone floating around has what it takes to become an Eagle Forum Research Fellow!

At another point, much is made over BlackRock doing some sort of maneuver where they gained some board seats with Exxon. BlackRock was just part of the effort. It was Engine No. 1. Here’s their update. Clearly a bunch of commie reds.

I was familiar with Samuel Huntington’s ‘Davos Man’ construct and subsequent concerns about the WEF, globalism, etc. And sure, most of that was probably from people using a mostly leftish lens. Still, watching the WEF get what looks like a juiced-up John Birch Society treatment was wild. As to Huntington in general, some of his stuff seems rather shaky. Silly or even scary.

There are multiple places in this hour or so where they’re somewhat dismissive of climate change concerns. And remember that Eagle Forum class in Cullman Blocher led about ‘foraging’ so as “to help you prepare for the upcoming food shortages that will begin to hit this fall.” Yup, some of the shortages are apparently related to climate change. For the record, it’s awesome that people are helping other people prepare, get by, provision, etc. I just worry some about the kookery which might get passed along as that assistance is offered.

Blocher sometimes seems relatively sensible and authentic. She’s seldom coming across to me as callous or a jerk. (The host of the other end of the group repeatedly does, however.) At least Blocher doesn’t seem dismissive of some of the environmental concerns. My impression is that she just went down some trails. Possibly plenty of trails. Early in this ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ episode she says how she started watching Trump’s daily briefings and started seeing all the lies in the media and so she started looking into things and before long she’s at ‘The Great Reset’ and …

Again, not just anybody has what it takes to become an Eagle Forum Research Fellow.

Blocher also appears to have been rather ‘churched up’ from what I could gather on publicly available sources, mostly her own blog and some social media. That’s cool. No worries. At the same time, it’s OK I believe to wonder what folks are hearing or watching, reading and talking about in churches all around us. Another topic for another day perhaps.

A heap of people were and are looking for answers. Citizens are anxious and feeling like they’re not getting straight answers often. They’re correct on both counts. And at the same time, at 40:20ish Blocher got this big smile and said she has started just calling ‘them’ (presumably the WEF, BlackRock’s Larry Fink, …) communists. You want to be sympathetic and try to understand how they get to this point but darned if this isn’t incredible. Communists. Larry Fink. Over Blackrock. And the World Economic Forum. Economic. Mercy!

At another point, Blocher started talking of how what happened in Germany, Rwanda, etc. She’s reading something with or like Schindler’s List (possibly the book?)in her homeschooling efforts. And she mentions propaganda.

However, she immediately talked of how overnight people can be labeled domestic terrorists for just doing … Presumably that’s the twisting various ‘conservative’ and ‘Christian’ outlets did when the DOJ, among a few other mild steps, agreed to liaise on efforts to look into violence or threats of violence at some school settings. There was a letter from the National School Boards Association to the DOJ which did contain “could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.” It’s worth clicking through that last link to see what got and has kept so many ‘conservatives’ stirred up.

Yes, propaganda is a problem. And unfortunately, it comes in many, many forms. I’m just saying.

Blocher also talked of how history was so important and how ‘doing the research’ was vital. She mentioned Glenn Beck, Rod Dreher’s book, etc. Most folks know Beck. Yuck! I once read and liked Dreher. That was ages ago. He’s gone plumb pitiful in recent years. And at one point even said she’s read a book on the left titled … Wait for it. ‘Talking to Strangers.’ Yup, Malcolm Gladwell. The guy M. Stanton Evans got started. Gladwell’s pop science slop makes a ton but he’s regularly ridiculed by most people who actually work in those fields and have some training that he simply doesn’t. He’s absolutely raking the money in from books and speaking and … However, he’s not ‘on the left.’

Here’s someone who went looking for answers and soon they’re a ‘Research Fellow’ for Eagle Forum going around giving these talks. They’re going up on an ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ show that at least a few folks will be listening to or watching. And again, she seems relatively decent and possibly is. Beats me? As for Beason and ABS, they’ve been around for ages. To my knowledge, both may generally believe what they say. And at the same time, there’s possibly some benefit from the role inside ‘conservatism’ each has occupied here in Alabama. There’s attention, maybe at least a little money, etc. Sinclair is a new arrival to the stage. Who knows anymore about really any of these ‘grassroots’ efforts? I’ve been watching money sloshing around for decades in education ‘reform’ and ‘conservative’ causes.

There’s clearly money being spent to get this slop out. Even though Alabama Policy Institute is a 501(c)(3) with tax benefits to donors, they’ve never opened their books that I’m aware of. Furthermore, with all the donor-advised funds around now, like the National Christian Foundation, washing mystery money in is now super easy. Anyone can slip them money – and probably pocket a donation in the process.

And this episode was just garbage. A constant stream of bullshit, kookery, etc. It’s sort of like a non-commercially viable and comparatively tiny form of ‘The Rick and Bubba Show’ miseducating a decent chunk of citizens all across the region. And there’s more on that seemingly undeniable pattern of miseducation at the very end of the post. It’s like misinformation, riling up the rubes … is a core mission.

As to what was possibly good on this episode, Blocher bragged on switching to a credit union rather early on. Yup! That’s socialized, cooperatively-owned banking. And even at the end they all seemed to agree on local banking. No use of ‘credit union’ but Blocher clearly said that at 18:55ish.

Sinclair and perhaps others too got to fretting over broadband expansion. A little conspiracy kookery sprinkled in somehow another. My recollection is that Blocher allowed how broadband access out into the sticks is important yet somewhat echoed at least some concerns. Sinclair mentioning how building out broadband was supposed to be something the ‘free market’ should handle was, however, something I sort of did appreciate. I’m OK with subsidizing this sort of thing if it’s done the right way. Then again, I’d much prefer we hit rewind so that ARPANet hadn’t gotten loose from ‘the gubmint’ like it did. The interwebs getting privatized so much so that profiteers could make so much just hasn’t been ideal. Doling out money so that often quite profitable firms can run service out bothers me. However, internet access for regular folks is critical. So it goes.

As to what these four folks sometimes nibbled at yet went off into Limbaughland and John Birch Society territory on, I can sort of get there from the Peter Viereck, Christopher Lasch, Robert Nisbet, Michael Oakeshott, Wendell Berry … form of conservatism. Yup, I expect I know exponentially more actual conservatism than really any of the crowd at the Alabama Policy Institute. Or Yellowstain. Or …

They’re mostly Limbaugh-level ‘conservatives.’ Movement conservatism soldiers. And I still don’t understand why nobody with a platform and resources will dig into Caleb Crosby’s ties to Mitch McConnell and more. I once emailed a youngster with Advance’s Alabama Media Group a polite note on Crosby’s connections and activities, including tons of information, links, and such, only to not even get the courtesy of a reply. I’m still steamed about that one.

The best way, however, to get to what these four Dunning-Krueger Effect poster children discussed is to just give you a list of possible resources to read or listen to. Some are ones I just stumbled across recently or found as the sites or podcasts or whatever are in my regular rotation. Nothing I’m sharing is really new to me. I’m not dropping that in to suggest I’m anything special. But I do work at trying to be relatively informed and also at having skills and traits related to rooting out some understanding. I’ve read extensively on neoliberalism, for instance, and have tried to keep up in several other areas.

One of the ways I was howling the most in listening to these four was how there was no discussion of how our data are sold, used, etc. The commodification of so much that’s personal is one of the bigger stories of the last decade or so. This piece on ‘surveillance capitalism’ is a decent starter it seems.

There was also nothing about workers being surveilled by their bosses. ‘The Rise of the Worker Productivity Score’ was timely to read. Yes, it’s in the New York Times. Probably they’re a bunch of red commies too in the ‘thinking’ of the ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ crew and the Eagle Forum Research Fellow.

Amy Goodman had Peter Goodman (no relation) on early this year to discuss his new book on ‘Davos Man.’ I’d not listened in and need to go back and get that in. ‘Democracy Now’ is almost always solid.

A big gaping hole seems to be that these modern-day Birchers just don’t understand, perhaps have no inkling about, neoliberalism. Capitalism has always been crafty and adaptable. But decades into the neoliberal turn, a period when globalization and financialization runs deep, the misunderstanding of how the state is part of propping up capital seems beyond stupid. Hegemonic forces, power, capital, or whatever ‘just finds a way.’ And I’m not linking to anything about ‘governmentality’ from Foucault, Gramsci’s theory of power, Althusser’s ideological state apparatuses. You really should ease into that stuff.

I think a damned decent argument can be made that at least some of this talk about stakeholder capitalism and other parts of this ‘Great Reset’ is about propping up, legitimizing, repackaging … a teetering system where more and more citizens around the planet are fed up with the ‘free market’ bullshit. It’s possibly just an effort to buy some time as neoliberalism’s ‘logic’ keeps crumbling. Or just causing more and more people to feel fried, frustrated, fractious, etc. To keep the peasants from picking up the pitchforks. To hang on in there long enough to get things situated enough where the uber elite and their spawn, plus just enough lackeys to do the unpleasant yet necessary labor, can go live on secure islands or in gated off compounds.

Yet another possibility is how some scrappy, creative capitalists are transforming the impending climate crisis, the malaise over neoliberalism or late capitalism, the way neoliberal rationalities individualized our responses to problems … into financial opportunities. Hell, everything has a financialization possibility now. Closely related is looking at some of this ESG or climate crisis stuff as a mitigation or adaptation to risk effort.

Neither will I tear into wokewashing, greenwashing, rainbow capitalism … They’re all terms worth Googling about on. For what it’s worth, I hold to some of the thinking that too much focus on that sort of thing is to keep regular folks from getting down to class, economic theory, and such.

‘Futilitarianism: Neoliberalism and the Production of Uselessness’ by Neil Vallelly is a book worth mentioning. I’m not sure where to situate it, however. I just read it and it’s really been on my mind. Here’s a review. I regularly listen to a podcast the reviewer is involved with. In that review, the late Mark Fisher’s ‘Capitalist Realism’ is referenced. That’s a must read in my opinion if any of this interests you. Here’s a free version on LibCom.

Similarly, Bungacast recently did an interview with Fritz Bartel on his new book, The Triumph of Broken Promises: The End of the Cold War and the Rise of Neoliberalism, that was a gem. I expect anybody can learn from this podcast in general. So much that I liked. Stretched my mind. Top rec!

And there’s ‘The New Corporation: The Unfortunately Necessary Sequel’ to possibly watch. I recall watching Joel Bakan’s original film ages back. It was very influential in getting me started on some stuff, filling in a few gaps, etc. If reading about the new documentary is more your speed, here’s a write up. A trailer follows:

Naomi Klein’s ‘The Great Reset Conspiracy Smoothie’ is out there. But it might be behind a paywall. Just in case, try here. Her close is awesome.

… The irony, though, is that the fact-Vitamix currently whirring around the Great Reset actually makes it harder to hold the Davos set accountable for any of this, since legitimate critiques have now been blended together with truly dangerous anti-vaccination fantasies and outright coronavirus denialism.

It also makes it harder to talk about the profound realignment our economies and societies desperately need, a vision a group of us laid out in the short film we released way back in October called “The Years of Repair” — because now all talk about how we change for the better in response to the cruelties that Covid-19 has unveiled is immediately smeared as part of the Great Reset. As the historian Quinn Slobodian recently wrote, years after “The Shock Doctrine” was published, “the right was now appropriating this narrative for its own ends.” Meanwhile, the less fantastical but extremely real shock doctrine maneuvers currently waging war on public schools, hospitals, small farmers, environmental protections, civil liberties, and workers’ rights receive a fraction of the attention they deserve.

Is it all a plan, another kind of elaborate conspiracy? Nothing so elegant. As Steve Bannon kindly told us, the informational strategy of the Trump era has always been to “flood the zone with shit.” Four years later, we can see what this looks like in practice. It looks like far-left and far-right conspiracists sitting down over a tray of information-shit sandwiches to talk about how the Great Reset is Gates’s plan to use the DNA from our Covid-19 tests to turn the United States into Venezuela.

It makes no sense, and that’s just fine by the likes of Bannon, and Kenney as well. Because if you want to keep waging war on the Earth’s life-supporting ecology, a great way to do it is to deliberately pollute its democracy-supporting information ecology. In fact, the pollution is the point.

You get that, at least anyone that’s actually worried about this stuff and isn’t some sort of cosplay ‘conservative’ in on a grift or gathering meaning from all the caterwauling, this conspiracy bullshit is making it harder to get a handle on the mothertruckers. It’s going to be way more difficult to reel them in if they can convince regular folks it’s just reactionary knuckleheads that are hooting and hollering a bunch of blathering nonsense.

That’s enough. As to reactionary knuckleheads that are hooting and hollering a bunch of blathering nonsense, however, there’s truly an abundance of such coming out of the Alabama Policy Institute’s 1819 effort. Here are some tweet threads on just a few from fairly recently.

And some images from ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ showing the relationship:

Please don’t hesitate to let me know if you see an error. Same for just if I’m missing something or might’ve read something wrong. Helping me hone my understanding is always appreciated. If I’m wrong, then I want to absolutely try to get right. What I’m rarely interested in, however, is trying to engage with people who aren’t doing anything more that this:

I’m actually OK with some religious stuff and hearing what people read or saw on ‘conservative’ sites or outlets. Moments like those can occasionally offer a view into where some misunderstandings get started. And they might also provide a chance to talk language or lenses or …

Comments are moderated and I’ll try to monitor when they come in. Absent something really inappropriate, it gets through. I will make a note if I do any significant edits. I will probably just fix typos, grammar goofs, and the like. Should it matter, I am not on anyone’s payroll. I’ve never made one thin dime here in Alabama doing politics or messaging or advocacy or whatever. Around 4000 words or so. What was I thinking?

While I’m here, I might as well do one of my periodic requests that someone or several someones with some money put together a halfway professional outlet to do some professional work that a jackleg like me dabbles at. I do my rabble-rousing, too much tweeting, and this kind of rambling post because it sure seems to me that something like this is needed. But I’d much rather someone with some proper training and talent do it. Plus, I have other stuff that needs doing. I sometime really enjoy what all I do but there’s admittedly a feeling of being a bit burdened every so often.

Now I sort of hate to do this. I don’t try to tag in hardly anyone I’m critiquing. I can try to explain why if anyone ever pushes me on that general approach. But I’m relatively confident I could hold my own in any discussion about anything I’ve written, tweeted, etc. I know plenty of ‘conservatives’ who make a living, probably a decent one, talking and writing ‘conservative’ slop. There are multiple people and interests involved in putting this Alabama Policy Institute 1819 effort together and pushing it out. They even have some sort of ancap Mises supposedly libertarian fellow on their team. Yellowstain is Yellowstain. Multiple ‘conservative’ talk radio shows are all around the state. I’m just a dude with a keyboard who has been blessed with some solid teachers and a little capacity for learning. An ideological irregular without any affiliation. One guy. I’m not agreeing that I’d legitimate just any ‘conservatives’ or ‘libertarians’ if they ever wanted to lock horns. But I increasingly believe part of putting an end to so much garbage getting hosed out is for regular folks to try to slow the damage. Filters are needed. I’m probably willing to step up where I’m able.

And either way, as time allows I will continue attempts to delegitimize, ridicule … these fake ass ‘conservative’ disinformation outlets and the cosplay ‘conservative’ types here in Alabama.

However, I expect some people may just need to make a living. They may be stuck. Bills need paying, etc. Possibly they need to try to ‘break in’ as to industry or burnish a résumé. If that’s the case, discreetly let me know and I’ll see if I can cut you some slack. Or don’t let me know. I’ll just try to give you the benefit of the doubt if it makes sense. I might even try to see if I can help you find a way out or forward. However, I probably can’t. I have very little individual capital (economic, symbolic, social, or cultural) to offer anyone. Still, I don’t mind trying to help. Seriously, there’s no point it seems to me to find capitalism somewhat problematic if you’re not willing to try to help folks trapped in capitalism. And we’re basically all trapped in capitalism. Neoliberalism has made it where things are even more jacked up. Don’t forget to try to understand that in the current societal arrangement a good bit is out of balance. People are in rare states. Compassion. It’s a good grounding to at least aim for.

Thanks for reading! Respectfully, john gunn

Update 1635 on 18 AUG 22 – ‘Family Capitalism and the Small Business Insurrection’ from Melinda Cooper from earlier in the year came to my mind. It’s likely relevant to at least some of what the four on the Alabama Policy Institute 1819 ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ episode were carrying on about.

Update 1445 on 19 AUG 22 – The Business Roundtable’s climate plan was killed by its arch-rival, the Business Roundtable by Cory Doctorow was a timely read in relation to a good bit of the bullshit the four knuckleheads on that Alabama Policy Institute 1819 ‘Alabama Unfiltered’ episode were shoveling out. BlackRock’s Larry Fink was mentioned as one of the Roundtable’s more powerful members. He’s linking to some work Adam Lowenstein did in The Guardian.


What they’re for? Seems to me they don’t know.

A rare post. I got in here and found one from back in 2019 that I forgot to finish. Might try to circle back to it one of these days. The same old same old. Another know it all non-educator who claims to be a ‘conservative’ who was writing out of their ass. A day that ends with y around these here parts.

I’m posting today because one of Alabama Media Group’s ‘conservative’ and Christian columnist did another dog of a column. Dana Hall McCain’s ‘They know what we’re against. What are we for?’ on 9 April 2022 is the kind of thing I’d normally tweet a thread on but decided I’d go this route.

And it’s going to be a relatively stream of consciousness approach. Not trying to be polished or drop in scholarship. Might not do a single link. Always reserve option to amend, edit, etc. Here goes …

Anyone here can and should read what DHM wrote in her column. It’s a column that she’s presumably paid to write. It’s in the vein of a whole lot of other stuff she’s done. I don’t believe she’s all that sharp or deep. At least it doesn’t come out in her writing or in the interview or two I’ve heard her do. But she does seem confident and routinely self-righteous. I don’t know her. Just a guess or perception.

While that might seem somewhat harsh, I mean it as ‘an out.’ It’s OK. A basic thesis on her latest and much more I’ll routinely read from here in Alabama and beyond is that the professional ‘conservative’ types and such provided column space in most every outlet don’t need to be all that sharp.

Nuance or depth can hurt their ‘brand’ or ‘marketability.’ If they don’t neatly fit into certain pegs, they’re of limited utility. They’re mostly filling a role, a market need, etc. It’s effectively a talk radio gig. Possibly also some kayfabe component. It’s mostly about attending to audience needs or niches. There’s probably something to some advertisers wanting that type of content. I’ve read enough media criticism to think there’s something to my guess.

Plus, writing with any depth in a limited amount of space is tough. I can ramble on here. In most places one can’t. With that out of the way, here’s where I’ll really get going.

What’s mostly seeming to be conveyed in DHM’s latest column is another instance of a lightweight ‘conservative’ brought up in the Limbaughfied era writing about her ideology. She’s also apparently been raised in the evangelical or fundamentalist church, Southern Baptist I believe, and loops in that with her understanding of ‘conservative’ politics. Start there. And know that she’s hardly off the reservation. She’s probably well within the bounds of what has counted as ‘conservative’ for several decades.

That’s the problem! Seriously, the stunted and sick ‘thinking’ that’s full of contradictions and slop is the problem. It’s Limbaughism. Or is at least tainted by that cancerous crap. It’s something that smarmy Buckley guy and a few others cobbled together a few decades back that’s festered into an absolute fetid mess. A couple of periods it could’ve turned back from the place it was headed. But it didn’t. It just got worse. A generation or two, maybe even three, have been especially bent up because of this tradition.

Same probably with her faith stuff although I’m less confident about making that call. The title of this post is ‘What they’re for? Seems to me they don’t know.’ I don’t believe the average ‘conservative’ exactly know what they’re for. However, one thing they do know is that they distrust and even hate liberals, progressive, leftists, secularists, etc. I’ll get back to that later. And it’s important. Always remember that. It’s foundational.

Three main deficits seem present in her column. First, I read this

Many of the cultural positions of conservative politics are rooted in the Christian faith. A theologically conservative interpretation of the Bible (the interpretation most evangelicals adhere to) says “no” to what modern culture demands: personal autonomy with few limits. Our understanding of the scriptures dictates some behavioral guardrails that Christians believe beneficial to the individual and the collective whole.

Why?

The logic goes like this: We are created by a wise and loving God. As our creator, he knows what we need to flourish. Likewise, he knows what will ultimately hurt us. God gives us certain boundaries for living in the Bible out of love for us.

Gluttony? Feels good at the moment, but it has terrible consequences. Libertine sexual relations? Fun today, but it causes all sorts of heartache for you and others down the line. These are just two of a million examples.

I know it’s a short column, but ‘gluttony’ is what I’d like to see unpacked. That’s where much of the damage is done. And I’m talking about greed. Unfettered capitalism. Neoliberalism gone wild. Late capitalism. Whatever you want to call the condition where so much wealth is being accumulated up at the apex and regular folks are struggling. The condition where the planet is heating up and things may already be so bad that even mitigation options are becoming limited.

I understand why most Christians aren’t questioning capitalism. They can’t. Or is too difficult for most people – not just people wrapped up in evangelical-fundy faith traditions. A good place to drop a link to the late Mark Fisher’s ‘Capitalist Realism’ book. It’s a beauty. PDF is right there and it won’t cost you one thin dime.

There’s nothing more about ‘personal autonomy with few limits’ than how so much gets commodified and caught up in market ‘logic.’ The stories I can tell where I witnessed alleged Christians chasing money and engaging in sharp, selfish dealings. And I guarantee you that plenty of other people here in Alabama and beyond have their own. But that’s not the trouble. It’s the system. The structure. Again, nobody much can remotely escape capitalism’s imperative. We’re almost all trapped in the arrangement.

DHM can work herself up about what she thinks God wants us to do so as to flourish. She wrote something about how ‘conservatives’ will “take biblical wisdom about gender and sexuality and attempt to foster cultural norms that affirm those.” And then something about a hot stove. And then how not gossiping and staying sober has benefits. But nothing about money and accumulating or … makes the cut. It’s about our naughty parts. All of that’s safe. And such arguably allows some of the self-righteous to posture and preen.

Back to DHM’s column

You can also apply this principle to our most hotly contested, emotionally-charged issues. We need to spend more time casting a vision of God’s good design for human life and the peace found within it.

Progressives assert that accepting all choices as equal is the only compassionate response; they say the conflict experienced when desiring that which is not allowed brings too much psychological pain. They tell us that normalizing all inclinations, orientations, and self-identifications is the road to better mental health. But in the decades since the sexual revolution, America’s mental health has taken a nosedive, despite increased personal freedom and more people than ever before having access to mental health treatment.

Our permissiveness has not made us happier. We are not healthier. We just keep moving the guardrails of the human experience further and further from the centerline, assuming that more liberty will do the trick. All evidence is to the contrary.

Does living within traditional/conservative norms ensure lives free from pain and inner conflict? Absolutely not. But our anything-goes ethos is rife with bad outcomes, which bring their own brands of despair.

We can’t pass enough laws to heal our culture. That’s what conservatives must get our heads around. The bills we pass today to prevent Americans from indulging themselves to death stop the bleeding for a moment but will be undone in a few years if we can’t convince the younger generation that God’s way works better. Our children–even those raised in Christian households–are inundated daily with a narrative that celebrates all choices as equal and condemns limitations as hateful oppression. They need to hear from us what living according to traditional Judeo-Christian values offers them, not just the progressive hysteria about what these values ask them to give up.

Let’s immediately pull one sentence out of the above. “But in the decades since the sexual revolution, America’s mental health has taken a nosedive, despite increased personal freedom and more people than ever before having access to mental health treatment.” Huh? It seems to me putting mental health troubles on the sexual revolution is a big reach. I first think stress related to the end of Fordism, neoliberalism really getting wound up, etc. And Saint Ronnie did some stuff too which walloped this nation’s mental health structures. It’s complicated history. It’s too easy to just rip into Reagan. He’s no hero. But he’s also not the best target.

I’d also wonder if we have all that much ‘increased personal freedom’ in any society where survival and provisioning is basically dependent on our selling our labor to capitalists. Hell, we’re alienated and fragmented to pieces. There’s even been some stuff written on how under late capitalism if you’re not at least somewhat of a mental health mess then you’re the really crazy one.

Her “more people than ever before having access to mental health treatment” was what looks to me like her second trip into shaky territory. I know that under Covid there was a good bit written about backlogs and lack of access. And remember, if you’re poor or even a middle class make-do type then you’ll often have limited access to quality care.

And if you want to know what children are inundated daily with, I’d probably start with a neoliberalism narrative around markets, branding, competition, credentialism, etc. Freedom is consumerism, right? Individuals hustling to survive or even get ahead. DHM lamenting how “assuming that more liberty will do the trick” is especially notable to me since liberty is foundational to the ‘free market’ hoodoo so many folks here and beyond boost.

“The bills we pass today to prevent Americans from indulging themselves to death stop the bleeding for a moment …” sentence ought to be in The Lame Hall of Fame. Indulging? What? I’m of the understanding that choosing to try on another gender or such is rather risky and takes a fair amount of courage. Indulging? GTFOH DHM. And again, we have several other situations where ‘indulging ourselves to death’ might actually apply. I’d probably start with climate change and how some coastal areas are likely to be flooded causing mass migration. There’s crop failure and pretty much a bunch of other stuff dystopian movies are made of to think about. We’re seeing serious troubles around housing stock. Sprawl and other harms from how we drive. Hyper-consumption and pollution might merit a mention. Indulging?

The third distinct problem is how she equated being gay or bi or whatever and/or some sort of gender fluidity or feeling like you don’t really fit into the gender binary with touching a hot stove. Huh? That whole big portion of her writing shared early on is basically about how you ought not be gay isn’t it? Stay in your gender lane? Something, something God’s way right? I’ve never thought a whole lot about it beyond that some folks are gay or bi or whatever. That’s just the way they are. That some people don’t feel like they fit easily in the gender binary or spectrum or whatever it is has never troubled me much. Or really any.

And while I’ve been somewhat of a heathen for most of my life, I have held to a general belief that if there’s any omnipotent creator then he or she or it presumably made people the way they are. I’d always guessed that any God or Gods wanted people mostly to do right by each other and not be greedy assholes. Don’t be a jerk. Try to act like you have some decency and manners. I’ve been exploring some more around various faith traditions and generally think there’s a fair amount of theology to support most of this.

One’s sexuality, at least as I understand it, is just how they’re wired. You don’t really decide anything or pick a team. And it sort of works this way too, as I understand it, for those who may not feel like they comfortably fit into a gender role. Remember, gender gets, at least in part, socially constructed and maintained. Neither thing seems remotely equivalent to a child lacking understanding that they shouldn’t touch a hot stove.

Neither do I necessarily understand how ‘libertine sexual relations’ might relate to any of this. Some straight folks firmly in the cis set I’ve known or certainly read about have lived rather ‘libertine’ lives.

Furthermore, I understand at least some parents of students struggling with gender dysphoria or whatever is going on with them are doing right by their kids. There’s medical care and support, etc. And yes, I expect plenty of younger people aren’t getting that sort of love and care at home. I’m not all that comfortable with the approach to children where parents get to treat their kids as effectively a form of property. Some parents are relatively awesome, and some are awful. It depends. While surely some kids get influenced by culture and go through phases, I also think there’s something to the idea of supporting younger people as they find their way and especially if they’re starting to struggle. Again, it depends. I mostly just believe you should leave it to the adults around them to try to figure it out instead of relying on a bunch of politicians to limit their options.

As to how faith and tradition, ideology even, enters the mix, my understanding is that there’s some sociological and anthropological stuff about gender fluidity in other cultures and periods/places. We’ve had gays folks and such for all of human history. We’re finally getting to the point to where more and more people can generally be out and not have to build beards or otherwise pretend. This is a very good thing. You don’t get much more ‘dignity of human life’ than that development.

What exactly DHM feels about this development isn’t known. My guess is that she’s spent at least some time on the fainting couch because gay folks can get married and are supposed to be treated equally under the law. Something, something sanctity of marriage presumably. Or ‘family values’ in the James Dobson tradition.

However, one thing they do know is that they distrust and even hate liberals, progressive, leftists, secularists, etc. I’ll get back to that later. And it’s important.

I’d written that early in my post. DHM regularly wants to put a target on her perceived enemy, something plenty of these half-baked Christian evangelical, fundy types in Limbaughfied ‘conservatism’ are really bad to do, probably or at least possibly because they’ve been brought up in such waters or breathing that air. Why she’s telling a tale about “progressive hysteria” has to be motivated by something. Her reference to “progressive hysteria” reminds me of Alabama Media Group’s other professional ‘conservative’ columnist, a Christian too, tweeting ‘Give the progressive Democrats what they want’ in the wake of the Lia Thomas NCAA swimming situation. Want what?


Absent examples of actual ‘hysteria’ being supplied, I’m lost.

Again, I don’t know DHM. Don’t necessarily want to. There’s almost nothing to gain from trying to talk with a professional ‘conservative’ or a true-believer type. And it’s not about gaining by ‘winning them over.’ They can believe or think whatever they want. Whatever gets them through the night. I just wish they’d practice that approach as to others. If they’re going to change their minds it’ll be because they studied stuff on their own and kept an open mind.

In a very few instances, some might see things differently and crack open their minds when they’d previously been kept closed. I’ll occasionally see that sort of thing. People who’ve not been exposed to much alternative or broader or radical or … thought will sometimes have doors pried open that they didn’t even know were there. But still, they’re almost always going to have to do this on their own. You’ll often just get someone’s back up and force them to dig in if you tell them they’re wrong. So you mostly are just left to hope for people to figure things out on their own. To hope some might consider different options or thought or whatever is about all that anyone can do. You can write a little or tweet or talk some. But that’s not going to do anything for the true believers. They’re locked down.

Dial that ‘locked down’ status way up for many of these ‘conservative’ types, perhaps especially the evangelical fundy types, as many would probably then be facing a big existential crisis to even consider setting aside what many of them have believed and conveyed for years. And very few will even crack open the door to consider such much less fully explore their beliefs. Many were literally taught to be suspicious about Satan slipping something in on them which might get them off their Christian path.

If they’ve consumed really any ‘conservative’ media in recent decades, they’re primed to reject much that bumps up against their reality. It’s a doomsday machine without a cutoff switch. Grifters, market incentives, and much more maintains this machine.

To not dare go there is safe. In many parts of smallish town or social circle Alabama, they might not necessarily be at risk for being ostracized but there would almost certainly be some negative consequences. Economic penalties could follow for people in some circumstances. This stirring up a stink and questioning the dominant narrative can even echo harms across families and firms.

There’s possibly some Freud too to consider here. What looks like irrationality can, at least according to some stuff I’ve just started exploring, possibly point directly to the vulnerabilities a person doesn’t want to deal with. Pain or trauma gets bound up in a way where all sorts of silliness or coping or whatever it is gets projected out. Again, I’m just dipping into this. Can root out of links and possibly even write something halfway cogent on this if pressed.

What’s wild in my own life that even as many of these types do in fact “distrust and even hate liberals, progressive, leftists, secularists, …” and will actively try to do them in, how I’m increasingly locating and listening to conservatives and Christians is among my more positive or exciting developments. I’ve long liked some of the old-school types like Peter Viereck or Christopher Lasch. Alasdair MacIntyre is a new name I’m exploring. Very hard to label.

The Institute for Christian Socialism most definitely needs to be mentioned. I’ve always been a mutt and hard to label. It’s just that the more I decide facets of conservatism and Christianity probably need to be embraced in my own approach, the more I get aggravated by the likes of DHM claiming to represent either. As conveyed earlier, I know she’s absolutely within the much more dominant strands. And that’s a damn shame. She’s no Jimmy Concepts or outright goose but the way the weakest, most ridiculous, get going while some of the deeper and more substantive can’t get really any traction is bothersome.

For the record, I selected ‘Unitarian Universalism’ for my ID tags when I enlisted. I remain rather the heathen. And I’m probably still much more of a leftist. I consider myself still mostly riding with Marx, Gramsci, Freire, etc.
It’s just that I’m increasingly convinced you can get to essentially the same place through different traditions.

And since I mentioned traditions, the idea of building off of the old wisdom and understanding is increasingly important to me. I believe family and community can still be a big part of a healthy society. It’s just that I don’t think it matters all that much to see whatever DHM believes about “biblical wisdom about gender and sexuality” being maintained. And that’s especially true when she and fellow travelers are trying to do this through the power of the state. There’s nothing ‘conservative’ about that in my book. It’s more fash or fundamentalist.

Again, anyone selling what “living according to traditional Judeo-Christian values offers” really ought to start with socialism it seems to me. Until capitalism is crushed, you’re just nibbling around the edges. And by crushed, I view that term as transitioning into something better. More bottom-up and fragmented. Some role for the state. Possibly even markets. But nothing like where we currently are and the conditions we face. Collapse is around the corner unless there’s a transition. Furthermore, I think families and humans in general would do better under something different than capitalism – especially this late or neoliberal form.

If the likes of DHM are really worried about the children and something like traditional or conservative norms, then they’ll quit fulminating over fringe issues and focus on the important stuff. Either way, leave those kids alone. FWIW, here’s one of the politicians who passed these lousy laws saying DHM’s column was “Food for thought for evangelicals like me.” Food? That’s generous. For thought? That’s funny! Or sad. It’s justification for a really lousy set of laws. And especially that one making it a felony for physicians to treat patients. The others aren’t anything great but they’re less lousy.

Lastly, DHM and pretty much all like her will often seem to paint with a broad brush about ‘the left,’ progressives, liberals, etc. They often seem to make assumptions, build straw men, create logical leaps, etc. I have surely tried to not do that here. I know there are some legit conservatives and Christians out there still. They’re muddling along in their regular lives generally. They’re not looped in with columns and making a living, even a modest ones, off the content they file for a media outlet. Either way, I don’t mean to offend even DHM or any of her type. I’m not selling anything or aligned with really any group or cause. Just a guy with a keyboard. Comments are moderated, not always immediately, but they’ll almost always make the cut. And I try to respond to anyone who seems authentic. My basic rule is to not be disrespectful to others. You can generally unload whatever you want on me. I’ll handle it, or at least try to.

I’m even thinking about trying to do some public talks or make myself available to the ‘professional conservative’ performers as time allows. That main house I’m rehabbing and my dissertation still have a little ways to go but there’s definitely light at the end of both tunnels.

That’ll do. A rambling, disjointed mess. So it goes. Have too much else to get done to worry about it being better. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.


Termite’s new team and ‘extreme views’

That ‘Termite’ is deciding he’s more at home in the ALGOP, welcomed in with the usual fanfare, seems about right to me. A Washington County, Alabama County Commissioner deciding he wants to run for office on one team instead of the other isn’t all that notable. What a party official working her way through the cadre to her current position had to say neither means much. How Brandon Moseley closed his Alabama Political Reporter piece covering this at the end of last week is what caught my eye.

The national Democratic Party’s extreme views in favor of gay marriage, transgenders in public schools, opposing school prayer, opposing Second Amendment rights, in support of socialism, and pro-abortion views, etc. have made done much to damage the viability of Democrats across Alabama.

Extreme views? Slipping that opinion or analysis into what is supposedly meant to be a straight news piece aside, I’m questioning the premise. I’ll try to take what Brandon put down in order but will drop in my additional commentary. I’d want the chance to clean it up should anyone wish to use it. Link away, of course, but know that I generally approach blogging as a ‘first draft’ form.

Please feel free to drop a comment in – especially if you think I’m wrong about some assertion. That offered, I’m not all that interested in ‘because God said at verse ___’ stuff. I’m mostly a heathen and yet do value most religious or spiritual perspectives. However, I almost always find fundamentalism, from any tradition, frustrating. I might post such a comment, but I may ignore it.

For the record and just in case anyone cares, I don’t identify necessarily as a ‘Democrat.’ I’m post-partisan or nearly so. A good portion of my shift relates to the frustration I feel with Alabama’s ‘leadership’ but also the DNC. As a radical with a mix of traditions influencing my political thought, my focus is less on elections and more about movements. Among those traditions is some old-school conservatism. Most of today’s ‘conservatives’ seem to be often operating opposite from Russell Kirk’s ‘Ten Conservative Principles.’

And I’m just a guy with a keyboard who tries his best to read and think a little. It’s been years since I was involved with any group, even really an informal effort, and I’ve never been paid one thin dime to do any politics or advocacy work in or near Alabama. So I’m doing this post for no purpose other than just trying to advance an alternative, hopefully correct or close enough, perspective. Here we go —

Brandon’s sentence started “The national Democratic Party’s extreme views in favor of …” and I’ll generally apply it to every ‘issue’ or group he raised.

While Alabama might still be behind the rest of the nation as to support for same-sex marriage, I expect our younger folks fall in line, or nearly so, with the rest of the nation. The ‘Roy Moore’ faction is aging with young people identifying with either party being nearly on the same page.

For me, I’ve always looked at the above as just how people get treated under the law. I also don’t see how anyone’s ‘traditional marriage’ is threatened by a same-sex couple getting hitched – especially when there are so many other problems families face.

Why these ‘family values’ types so rarely, if ever, rant about the grind of late capitalism or talk up any old-school populism suggests to me they’re selective in their concern. Mom or Dad having to work like two Trojans, survive swing shifts, deal with precarity, worry about getting bills covered, seem far more damaging than whether ‘Steve and Maurice’ now have the same situation under our laws as other couples do.

And I’d also like to see it where neither Steve or Maurice or anyone else can be fired or discriminated against because of their sexuality. I’m not sure that I’d be the ‘extremist’ in holding such a view.

Regarding “transgenders in schools” in Brandon’s close, I felt somewhat like I needed to read between his/their lines. I used ‘their’ because Brandon is a long-time presence at APR who churns out this sort of copy routinely.

First, I noticed how he/they used ‘transgenders’ in writing. ‘Transgender’ is, I believe, always an adjective. To use it as a noun, especially plural and as to children or teens, seems off. Every style book I checked advises against writing and running that sort of thing.

People who may feel like they don’t fit the gender binary may now feel like they can be more open about this tension or social construct. Still, they’ve always been around. While growing up in rural Alabama in the mid-1970s through the early 1980s, I knew people somewhat pushing up against gender or sexuality expectations. It’s just now that people are sometimes given at least a little more room to be who they are. I think that’s something to welcome.

And yes, I get it that most folks have one of two types of ‘parts.’ That’s sex. Variances occur, however. Gender is something else. What that else is, as I understand it, requires too many keystrokes than I want to use right now. For the short answer, gender is a social construction. And there’s some more visible ‘reconstruction’ or ‘expansion’ of what gender means that’s occurring among more and more members of our society.

The question it seems to me, whether you identify with or try to ignore our two dominant political tribes, is how to navigate current and emerging conditions or tensions. It’s going to be a bit bumpy at times – for at least some people. But ought we now focus on trying to smooth it over for those most affected? Be kind and decent! Love these kids and protect them when possible.

I’ve been ‘in the trenches’ at several schools and understand that all of this might be just one more challenge to handle. I believe that whatever may arise, it’ll be way less burdensome than what’s been pushed down by know-it-all ‘reformer’ politicians and other dabblers. Most schools (or other public places) can probably be left alone to figure things out. Then again, there may indeed be a need for policy to be handed down and for the courts to provide some guidance.

The problem with getting any guidance handed down is that so much of politics now is about posturing. I’d submit that the vast majority of nearly every problem in the body politic is with the devolution of the GOP over recent decades. The modern GOP and ‘movement conservatism’ seems so bent up that I’m not sure there’s much to salvage. In the meantime, however, where things are inside that party and its aligned efforts matter to us all. Their rot is paralyzing policy and worse.

Since sorting out ‘transgender’ questions undeniably provides new ‘culture war’ ammunition, there will be little incentive for Congress to reason out a path forward. Not only does the ‘culture war’ play a role in delivering and dividing voters, but some powerful interests may prefer those issues be the focus instead of economic considerations.

Some statehouses will act, to the good or ghoulish, so a need for federal policy could arise. GOP politics has become so nationalized around what various ‘Mighty Wurlitzer’ outlets focus on that I’m not that hopeful for any good-faith policy-making. I’ll have more to offer on the courts later.

This issue about moving past a gender binary that everybody must follow is a way to shift off some of the opposition to same-sex marriage yet retain some of those themes. Since more and more people aren’t all that worried about same-sex couples being able to marry, there’s perhaps a need to now refocus some of the modern GOP’s ‘foot soldiers’ onto other threats. That offered, I do think there’s authentic angst among some citizens about what these changes mean.

For instance, some people I read will write of concerns about how traditional gender roles or familial patterns flow out of deep or old traditions that are essentially natural. While there may be something to that, at least as to the majority of people, I also understand there’s been variance across time and in nature. And again, I think there’s far more danger to families and humanity in general from other conditions.

On prayer in schools, the establishment clause controls as to anything official or directed down. The free exercise clause protects students and employees from unreasonable restrictions.

Brandon’s ‘opposing’ probably would benefit from some additional research, but I’ll pass. I don’t think he’s on solid ground. Teachers, students, custodians … can pray in school. Where the constitutional quandary starts is when there’s an official, directed down, encouraged … prayer. I suppose there’s something there to Brandon’s use of ‘oppose’ since the modern GOP certainly has used the school prayer decisions starting back in 1962. However, it’s perhaps more about perspective than policy. In a pluralistic society, it’s always seemed to me that the best answer is to maintain a separation of church and state. If it’s ‘extreme’ to believe that, count me in.

And while using ‘religious right’ or ‘values voters’ has been good to the GOP for some time, I’m not so sure that’ll hold. Even here in Alabama, demographics and some realignment may soon be driving at least a modest shift.

Regarding any ‘extreme views” on “Second Amendment rights” that Mr. Moseley is referencing, those hanging out there on the absolute and unrestricted might be the outliers. Much of the polling depends on the questions, but the qualitative research I’ve read and just talking with people suggests there’s wide agreement on some basics. I’ve read numerous news pieces and other articles which seem to point toward at least a fair amount of consensus. I could write a long explanation of where I currently stand on this issue. Like perhaps many people’s positions, there’s a fair amount of ‘It depends.’

Brandon’s “support of socialism” is the silliest thing he wrote. Inside the Democratic Party, there’s been next to none of this until just recently among any bloc or the rank-and-file. Even now, it’s limited. Among leadership, there’s still no ‘support for socialism.’ Bernie, who I back in the past and current primary -I’ve been a fan of for many years, is an independent. I’ve been doing a critique of capitalism, to at least some degree, for a decade or more. And I’ve been sympathetic to socialism, at least aspects of what Marx and similar voices wrote since I first read some of that stuff ages ago. “Support of socialism” isn’t there.

The only ‘support for socialism’ I can think of are things like highways or ‘defense’ spending or Social Security or Medicare or stuff like that. They’re all rather popular across both parties. Politicians routinely brag over bringing home money for these things or shoring up these programs. And don’t get me started about agriculture policy! Even as to something like ‘Medicare for All’ in the health care policy realm, the US is the outlier compared to other similar nations.

Regarding abortion, I’m not so sure where the ‘extreme’ party fits. Every time it seems that I read something from some ‘pro-life’ source about how ‘extreme’ something is, once I dig into the claims I’ll see there’s more to the story or at least alternative interpretations. Even here in Alabama, I’m not so sure polling or especially qualitative research would be all that kind to what ‘our’ more vocal politicians say and do. Alabama’s new ‘Human Life Protection Act’ seems rather extreme, for instance.

Like the specific questions around gun control, many people hold an ‘it depends’ position on abortion. There’s a difference between the two dominant parties, and yet the question of where ‘extreme’ applies ought not to be assumed.

The courts are, unfortunately, now another site for wielding power and motivating the electorate. You’re naïve or worse to deny that there’s a powerful element in the ‘conservative’ world that doesn’t see value in keep judicial branch picks focused on issues like abortion or ‘religious freedom.’

Regarding what’s “done much to damage the viability of Democrats across Alabama” in that APR piece, I do not doubt that politics around those questions have hurt the prospects for Democrats running. I’d argue there are more factors involved, however. On some of the above, especially abortion and the old questions, past ‘leadership’ here in Alabama seemed to often adopt a ‘ConservaDem’ or ‘Republican Lite’ approach. And on the national level, there’s still seemingly way more room under the tent for variety in one tribe than the other.

What’s also seemed common is to leave unchallenged the pictures being painted for Alabama’s citizens by members of the opposition party. Among the ALGOP and in Alabama’s business, tourism … community, I expect there is a sizable population who would like to see the opposition party step up in hopes such could reel in some of the more ‘enthusiastic’ culture warriors.

That’s it. Or enough. Perhaps too much. Again, I view this as a ‘first draft’ and could certainly tighten it up given the need. Please do let me know where I might’ve missed the mark.


Alabama’s business community won’t corral ‘the crazies’ Bill, they need ’em too much

Bill Britt’s opinion piece from 2 July 2019 in the Alabama Political Reporter isn’t totally off base, excepting perhaps “hands down the best governor in decades” applied to Kay Ivey.

A ‘hands downer’ wouldn’t need handlers like Jo Bonner or similar types on their team. I recall her needing Richard Allen as her ‘parliamentarian’ when she was Loot Guv but talk persists that she’s mostly just a figurehead. A ‘hands downer’ would also be considered as likely able to survive debating an opponent with numbers and a party affiliation ratio so clearly in their favor.

As to the piece, I’d submit “commercial enterprises exist to make money” is a big part of why his solution isn’t complete or is perhaps outright cracked. Protecting profits relates to the power of the business community throughout nearly all of Alabama’s political history.

While some demagoguery no doubt has troubled some suits in swanky offices throughout Alabama for much of our history, I expect far more in the business community worry about losing power. ‘The crazies’ are almost always more useful than harmful.

I’m also guessing that power, at least for some of the politically involved types in the business community, goes beyond monetary motivations. To have ‘juice’ apparently appeals to some people.

Instead of a long thread off this on Twitter, I decided a rare post might be the best way to cobble some thoughts together. I’ll still try to stay in the spirit of those threads as they do seem somewhat useful. I’d like to think the post would stand without the links I’ll drop in here, but I do think a few might help some readers.

Then again, there’s always the Google. Or ask me via a comment or another form of communication what they heck I’m referencing or rambling on about.

Bill started his piece with this:

Over the last several months, Alabama has received an abundance of national attention; unfortunately, it has made the state look backwards, punitive and even cruel.

Republican state lawmakers don’t seem to mind being the butt of the joke, but business leaders do care and are frustrated with the state always being a national punchline.

Almost weekly, APR hears from business leaders who all are asking, “What do we do to stop the crazies?”

The short answer is the business community must reinsert itself in the political process to curtail the worst instincts of the legislature and the governor.

Must reinsert? It seems like they’re balls deep now. The ‘business community’ might not get everything they want. Inevitably some stuff happens that they don’t like.

The business community also isn’t one uniform bloc. Those among that crowd are not always on the same page. That offered, the whole of the business community, at least in the political realm, does OK here in Alabama.

The business community here in Alabama also seems to have plenty of ‘public servants’ (elected and otherwise) in their corner. Lance LeFleur at ADEM is possibly the top unelected example as of late, but there’s a long line of lackeys.

Bill closed his piece with:

It’s now up to the business community to restore balance and sanity, or our state will be forever known as Alabackwards — a place that is open for business if you don’t mind the crazies who are in control.

Instead of ‘the crazies’ Bill, Alabama’s ‘Big Mules’ are, and almost always have been, in control. They might not be able to stop every stupid pandering bill, yet Goat Hill has mainly been locked down.

That some in the business community wanted to drag the state forward in our past or now on various issues isn’t disputed. That they were among those who had to contend with resistant citizens and politicians seeing votes for telling them what they wanted to hear is understood.

I expect most of the time it was more of a situation where the business community resented the bad press these situations created. Boosterism is made more difficult by self-inflicted black eyes.

Where I’m struggling with Bill’s piece is that I don’t think the business community, at least big cheeses inside it, can claim they’ve not had a role in making it where ‘the crazies’ keep mucking things up.

For instance, I’m not so sure if all that many in Alabama’s business community ever really ‘went out on a limb’ against ‘the crazies’ throughout Alabama’s history. I don’t recall all that many, any really, doing it now.

That’s because I expect many are worried about backlash from customers or just want to avoid ‘controversy.’ To accept Alabama as it is rather than try to affect change is arguably the safe bet.

Moreover, some may also see the value of issues like race, religion, guns … being what is elevated in importance rather than economic or environmental concerns.

However, the main thing might be that the business community as a whole is mostly worried about maintaining control or at least not risking much. That’s perhaps especially true as to the old extractive and monopoly energy enterprises.

A vital component of that control was keeping the commoners distracted and divided over the sort of stuff Bill laments. When such blows back on the Big Mules and even small business types, it’s hard for me to feel sorry for them.

In that vein, Bill breezes past the last few decades of his Republican Party, what movement (as opposed to authentic) conservatism has wrought, the poisoning effect of ‘conservative’ media, how consultants use this pandering for campaigns, etc.

Furthermore, Bill’s “indulging the far right-wing of the Republican Party” doesn’t fly when virtually the only people in opposition are from the other team or unaffiliated. Any instances of any Alabama Republicans actually speaking out against ‘the crazies’ seem rare.

The closest instance I can think of is when some in the business community didn’t back Roy Moore in the US Senate race. Moore’s occasional pro-plaintiff decisions had him somewhat targeted even in his last Chief Justice race.

Senator Shelby’s stand carried little risk given his age and power. And even he caught some flak then and ever since. Tribalism runs mighty deep it seems.

The prime directive of ‘do what I need to do to stay in office or advance’ which most politicians hold to applies. Many ‘party animals’ or operative-consultant types are similarly risk-averse about getting crossways with the electorate.

Sure, ‘the electorate’ isn’t uniform among the GOP primary voter world but being remotely ‘squishy’ on abortion, ‘family values’ stuff, immigration, guns, ‘Lost Cause’ CSA slop … generates risk. Expose your’ right flank,’ and you’ll likely take fire or even face a primary challenge.

To stick your neck out is scary. While I too have heard worries about ‘the crazies’ as the GOP has devolved over the decades, it’s almost always been essentially ‘off the record’ from anyone in or seeking office in that tribe.

Even many of the party animal types who grew up on Reagan or might’ve also actually read even a little of what Kirk conveyed fears getting caught talking too harsh about ‘the crazies’ among their ranks.

Part of this might also be that self-reflection about what the modern GOP clearly is and how one’s identity as a ‘conservative’ is likely painful for anyone who has remained entirely in that tribe.

Even considering criticism, from traditional media or other states or …, has become a sign of weakness in many quarters of the modern GOP. This long predates’ Trumpism’ I’d argue.

Wallace, in fact, paved that path. Wallace’s ways came to mind several times in reading this piece. Same for Big Jim Folsom. Both of those men could confound Alabama’s business community. One used demagoguery and the other used class-oriented populist.

Back to Bill’s opinion piece, I’d submit you must engage with how the modern GOP became Limbaughfied over recent decades to even think about how to move forward. That offered, I doubt there’s a cure. That party seems bent beyond repair.

The modern GOP had been a boil on the butt of the body politic. I’ve used, likely a line I stole fair and square, that language or something similar before. While the other team isn’t impressive, there’s no comparison to how harmful the GOP has been in the last couple of decades. Start with how what Gingrich represented finished off what at least lingered in part with Daddy Bush.

Hell, Alfa invited Newt Gingrich down to talk to their members recently (he got a standing ovation, and Parnell gushed about him) and has Beth Chapman of her ‘Stand Up’ speech infamy on their payroll. Bill’s whole column crumbles just thinking about those two realities.

For what it’s worth, Alfa also backed the recent Amendment 1 Ten Commandments display and Amendment 2 Alabama is a ‘sanctity of life’ state. At least this heavy hitter among the business community seems to need to pick a lane.

Part of the problem in Alabama is also the ineffectiveness of Brand D, under not just the Worley-Reed regime I’d suggest, in recent years. Darth Mabry was either a ringer at AEA or the poster child for fecklessness.

Groups like our teachers, labor, churches, … don’t seem to be slowing down all that much the mischief. To punish the politicians when they pander and otherwise run wild becomes more effective with numbers and organization.

Even some scolding from a few journalists is a double-edged sword. Often it seems like the scolding provides just another opportunity for some of the ‘professional conservative’ types and opportunistic politicians to score points with their fans.

Then again, maybe all is well enough if page hits happen and the spectacle is sustained. Revolutionary thought will upset many an apple cart.

And the ultimate apple cart is capitalism. Thus, Bill’s “commercial enterprises exist to make money” remains where I keep getting hung up. I expect the real heavy hitters who run the state, the hegemony, would rather live with ‘the crazies’ than risk losing their hold on power. They also use ‘the crazies’ to win.

Bill wrote, “The Republican supermajority came to power in 2010 on the promise of a pro-business agenda with Jobs, Jobs, Jobs as its mantra …” The originator of “Jobs, …” panders with the worst of them. Mike Hubbard and his minions pandered.

You can quickly look through Twinkle’s tweets or Mike Hubbard’s old mailers to find where they’d pushed various buttons. Business leaders getting frustrated when those very buttons get pushed on Goat Hill and make it into national news doesn’t generate much sympathy. In fact, they’re reaping what they’ve sown or at least tolerated or used when seen as necessary.

Similar themes as what Twinkle and Mike Hubbard message have appeared from very pro-business politicians in their communications. They presumably know that ‘the crazies’ are a segment of the electorate which much be catered to. Big Mule money and pandering to the lowest common denominator is hard to beat.

For that matter, I’ve seen some instances where the business community seemed to have its share of ‘the crazies.’ Anyone around what ‘conservatism’ has become in recent decades might’ve been at risk of being poisoned.

‘Fox News ate my Dad’ stories aren’t rare. Some of these older folks who’ve been mainlining Limbaugh and Hannity year after year are as involved in the business community as can be.

And don’t even get me started about some of the preachers. Reckon how much influence folks like Harry Reeder up at Briarwood Presbyterian in Birmingham have in the business community. I expect it’s hardly insignificant.

In general, demonizing liberals or progressives or leftists or environmentalists or … has become a fundamental facet of what now passes for ‘conservatism.’ There’s little more that gets some sorts thrilled than to have someone ‘own the libs.’

Instead of Kirkean caution and an effort to reach understanding, it often seems like the exact opposite is what today’s ‘conservatives’ embrace.

Bill wrote, “Businesses are almost always apolitical.” Huh? That doesn’t seem right to me. The state as “a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie” is a way Marx presented the view I now hold.

Businesses are very political, perhaps especially in Alabama. From BCA to Alfa/Forestry to Retail to Realtors to …, it’s often just a question of which association(s) will get their way. Often as not, groups which might be in opposition like AEA, the trial lawyers, labor … are on the fringes or worse.

APCO, Drummond, Protective Life … are very political. Hell, “the best governor in decades” was flying around in Yella Fella’s plane during her campaign. Lobbyists abound.

I also hear tell there are some ‘news’ sites with businesses keeping their lights on. With newspapers and other media increasingly hollowed out, the business community appears to be filling the void.

We now have at least some indication, via out-of-state reporting, that some business community-aligned lobbyists were at least somewhat involved with Yellowstain early on. And we never have gotten to the bottom of what was done to Terry Dunn.

If the hegemony has been able to add additional arrows to their quiver by directly funding, in whole or in part, some news sites without those arrangements being known by readers, that’s presumably another way they can have ‘the crazies’ ready for when they are needed.

If nothing else, the utility of a ‘news’ site like Yellowstain and various personalities associated with it in bashing any critics seems obvious. Just keeping an element of the population stirred up and distracted from other concerns has utility.

The care and feeding of ‘talent’ among the ‘professional conservative’ ranks is surely something they get right. To have some loyal ‘talent’ available here in Alabama for when they’re really needed seems cheap enough.

Then again, all for-profit media keeps their lights on via capital. Chomsky and Herman’s ‘propaganda model’ and other critiques cover this. Media as an ‘ideological state apparatus’ where hegemony’s views get reified is part of this.

While Bill’s opinion piece isn’t half bad, it just seems somewhat Pollyannaish and partial. The horse is out of the barn as to the modern GOP. It’s been a decades-long devolution. Go back at least to Gingrich. Falwell and Weyrich’s ‘Moral Majority’ also needs notice.

To dig deeper and consider how big players in the business community learned long ago that ‘the crazies’ could be harnessed is highly recommended. It’s been a critical component of their strategy for decades. I can write that post or paper. However, others have capably covered it.

Let me know if you should want some jumping off sources. I’ve learned to rarely, if ever, loan out books but I can point you toward some good ‘uns.

As to where we are now and going forward, we’re seeing the rise of ‘woke capitalism’ even here in Alabama. To me, this appears to be somewhat the other side of the ‘use the crazies’ coin. That’s because it’s still essentially the same effort to stave off an examination of the economic/social arrangement and maintain power.

The former didn’t have that much of a profit-making component, at least outside of the gun industry or the professional conservative machinery, while the latter can generate some profits from clueless liberal types.

My guess is that part of what’s driving what Bill is writing about is something that’s far from ‘woke capitalism’ but it’s at least in that neighborhood. Some of the more global or urban businesses in Alabama are likely catching grief or worry about blow-back from what ‘the crazies’ are doing.

Thus, there’s likely a question of which factions in the business community will prevail if they’re serious about this concern and for how long dialing things down might last.

As for what might work, if in fact ‘the business community’ could come together to accomplish what Bill suggests it wants, it’s something that would take time. Their risks, however, likely outweigh the rewards.
Coalition building outside the business community is perhaps possible. The non-profit complex already is out there. Most understandable tread lightly about punching up and calling out the donor class.

Some ‘edgier’ outfits might, however, react poorly if the business community gets them on board with some sort of Kumbaya effort and later pulls the rug out from under them. The business community better get out the checkbooks and co-opt the hell out of key people if that’s going to happen.

As to how to handle the politicians, it’s always carrots or sticks. Most in the business community can telegraph what’s expected and discreetly get the word out. This approach is possibly why Bill’s column appeared. Reward those who fall in line.

Bringing troublemakers on the business community train is also possible. ‘Jobs, jobs, jobs’ is quite a tool. Retainers from Reddy Kilowatt or … can possibly reel in a few others.

To punish any who then ‘go rogue’ will have risks, but finding and funding a few primary challengers seems easy enough. There are also redistricting possibilities coming up. Committee assignments matter. Hit pieces and threats to dump oppo might work.

Or just let time march on. Even here in Alabama, demographic change might make it where the more odious stuff gets stopped at the State House.

It might be a form of ‘backlash to the backlash’ if this happens. That offered, I’ve much more faith in ‘bottom up’ change being what’s meaningful and more immediate. Even if upstart candidates can’t easily get going, movement building around campaigns seems possible.

Some business community money would greatly help those individuals and groups get going and sustain their efforts. However, I guess that any of that would be swamped by what other business community money would pour into crushing those threats.

That’s because that even with the bad press the pandering and other foolishness brings, things are and have been rather excellent for a small segment of Alabama’s citizens. They primarily run this benighted state.

Again, the hegemony might not always have the exact man or woman in ‘public service’ they’d want. They might not get everything they want from Goat Hill or DC. But they do OK. Multiple agencies from ADEM up understand for whom they really work.

Often as not, the competition about who will get elected or who gets appointed is among the heavy hitters. Some want this ‘un, and others want theirs. And the consultants paid to put these men or women into place know that pandering is often the path.

So don’t count on much, if anything, changing via the business community. At most, some sectors might try to dial down some of the silliness. This foolishness will stop, or at least lessen, when the electorate changes.

And the best way to change the electorate remains expansion. There are reachable voters who show up at least every so often. Economic populism is the foundation for not just increase but also to those voters who get taken in by the silliness.

That’s hardly going to be an easy effort. It’s something that’ll require organized efforts and some resources to be all that effective. There may be multiple routes toward this but some universals likely apply. Some ideas follow.

Movement conservatism’s ‘Mighty Wurlitzer’ will keep pounding out variants of the same tunes they always play when threats arise. While capital keeps both parties in the duopoly mostly locked down, the GOP’s Limbaughfication has many of their voters relatively ‘programmable.’

With at least a generation in the business community aware of this ‘safety feature’ whenever capital is threatened, it’s going to be hard for some to not use the tools at their disposal. Here in Alabama, race and religion remain especially relevant.

Churches, generational change, schools, and just ‘civil society’ might offer some hope of a dialing down of the foolishness. That there’s a ‘fever will break’ horizon that’s been reached might be too optimistic.

Within or without these groups, women may be what it takes to fix this mess. That said, I understand some of the more vocal and active folks pushing the foolishness the business community is bent up about are women.

If younger folks as a group would do better about voting, with them often not being given a reason to show up admittedly a big part of the problem, things would immediately improve.

Similarly, younger voices trying to dial down the GOP might be able to either fix whatever is salvageable among that party or remains once the apparent realignment shakes out.

A caveat to all of what I’m offering is a belief that ‘the crazies’ might not be all that many people. They’re undoubtedly vocal and assertive. They have more influence than their numbers alone would justify.

Marginalizing them won’t be easy as many understand aspects of Leninism, Alinsky … when it comes to politics. Still, they can be somewhat corralled through a robust ‘firewall.’

It’s just that the business community will have to understand that if they can ever get them ‘quarantined’ and behind that firewall, then they’ll need to keep them there. They can’t loosen ‘the crazies’ for emergencies and later try to put them back. See ‘Little Red State Fundy’ for a still relevant take.

Movement conservatism outlets, including some religious right types, have been telling them for decades what they want to hear and keep them stirred up. Capital probably can’t find such useful and pliable foot soldiers, but it has always managed to adapt.

Returning to how to really change the electorate, something I’ll again submit the business community fears more than it wants, there’s a path to build up ‘organic intellectuals’ who can informally educate others in their circles of influence about how to think about and act on politics. It’s Gramscian in the sense of his ‘war of position’ where you prepare for the ‘war of maneuver’ once the timing is right.

For me, a big part of that preparation is to think about how the hegemony hinders pretty much every effort to effect change, which might threaten their dominance. The tools and processes by which they can dominate the discourse are many.

Trying to find workarounds, while possible, often seems Sisyphean. For at least the last two or three years, I start with thoughts about informal education and if small, somewhat fluid, groups offer some hope. And I don’t necessarily need a label beyond ‘political economy’ for now. I’m an ideological mess.

Any organizing can come later or through alternative groups. While I’m not all that optimistic about Brand D at the national and especially state level as a vehicle, some sort of ‘seize the reins and hope those seizing aren’t co-opted’ effort might be worth considering.

While Bill’s opinion piece seemed far too generous to and optimistic about Alabama’s business community, I also think there’s a place for people in business in questioning neoliberalism and the power of the few.

For instance, Elizabeth Warren’s Brandesian approach in her ‘Accountable Capitalism Act’ would appeal it seems to plenty of small businesses. Folks in agriculture would especially benefit from some anti-trust emphasis that’s been lacking in recent decades.

For what it’s worth, I believe folks should consider Gabriel Kolko’s thesis when considering what Warren and some of the pretenders are offering. While I actually don’t see Bernie’s policy ideas as all that much more than some updated stuff than Muskie or Humphrey could’ve backed, his critique of capitalism and the structural conditions seems so much stronger than anyone else.

He likely won’t win, partly because the hegemony will do whatever it can to derail him, but what he’s talking about is what’s important. We’ll be looking at ‘a smart Trump’ I fear in a few years unless what Bernie, and Warren as well, are emphasizing sees some relief.

Getting back to Bill’s piece and starting to wind up, in that I think capitalism will crumble or at least change into something significantly different, I don’t easily see the business community as part of the path forward. And the idea that Alabama’s Big Mules won’t first focus on their own interests is always foolish.

Politics is a place of struggle. In Alabama, the hegemony is probably just a few thousand people. They have many minions, of course, with other citizens tied in through the economy and other connections.

While the real heavy hitters likely number far fewer than ‘the crazies’ can muster, they have multiple levers of power. ‘The crazies’ are just one that they can’t always control.

Our Big Mules didn’t create ‘the crazies,’ but they’ve been using them as needed. They’ll have a hard time putting them back in the box as even the ‘public servants’ they want in place know they value of pandering.

Until things change on the national stage, I’d submit Alabama’s business community is somewhat reaping the ‘Southernization’ of American politics. Joe and Jill Sixpack are listening to Limbaugh and watching Hannity.

The Judicial Crisis Network and Federalist Society know the value of keeping ‘the base’ stirred up over abortion and other hot button issues. The ability to activate voters through Fox News down to microtargeting is well known.

Not all that many voters will get fired up over “a pro-business agenda.” Many likely don’t care all that much for their boss or resent what they have to pay for essentials. Many are getting squeezed and sense that something isn’t right.

With that angst built up, to not try to refocus it anywhere but up the food chain would be political suicide. I believe the ‘distract and divide’ approach capital takes is ages old. It’s an old reliable.

OK, I’m done. That’s enough. I’ve beaten this horse to death. I’ve likely repeated myself more than I should’ve and it would need tightening up if submitted for anything more than a post.

Don’t hesitate to straighten me out where I’m wrong or ask questions. I may, of course, amend or add to the post as time allows or if I rethink what I’ve written.

I doubt all that many will read this or suffer through my tweets. If such helps anyone, that’s good. I’m mighty busy now, and I find brief tweets a relatively rapid way to stay somewhat in the mix. In a year or so I hope to have a little less on my plate and might be interested in trying to put some of the Gramscian and Freierian ideas I have about adult education into more concrete form.

I’m likely now enough of an outlier and anarchist to where I don’t want to be especially formal about anything but do understand collective action is necessary praxis to generate change. If nothing else, I’ll plan on trying to do better about taking time to act instead of just grouse.


About Alabama teachers finding their voice

In reporting on the latest system asking for the ‘Accountability’ Act’s repeal, APR’s Josh Moon asks, “(W)hat the hell is taking so long on Alabama teachers finding their voice on … everything?” I’m on the outside, but think it’s starting and has even existed.

Instead of doing a bunch of tweets to thread together, I decided to just toss them over here into my rarely used web pages. I keep saying that one of these days I’ll start back to blogging. These are short and initial thoughts. I’d refine them surely if I took the time to do so. I might eventually drop a link or three in. Here goes the drafts of some tweets I’d dropped into a Word doc for editing into an anticipated thread.

1 – I’ve not taught in Alabama since 1987-88 and have never made one thin dime doing organizing or politics in this state. (I’ve never made all that much elsewhere considering the hours I put in. But I never did it for the dollars.) But I’ve traveled some and tried to learn. So maybe I’ve some few thoughts worth sharing.

2 – First, many teachers in the trenches are worked like rented mules. They’re often harried, have limited bandwidth, etc. Threeish decades into the ‘accountability’ era, starting with that assumption seems proper.

3 – The other assumption is that counting on anything ‘top-down’ is likely a waste of time. In fact, those who you’d think might be your allies are arguably doing as much harm as good. The Alabama Democratic Party (ADP) and the Alabama Education Association (AEA) often seem a bit bent.

4 – Troubles at the ADP, even before the Joe and Nancy show, are well known. Joe Turnham was ‘praying from his knees’ while Mike Hubbard was kicking him in the face. And I still cringe over that mid-2000s ‘Covenant for the Future’ Republican Lite slop some others tried.

5 – The AEA under Mabry decided spending bigly in the 2014 GOP Primary was the answer. One consultant involved is even repping the ‘Proud Boys’ founder in a lawsuit. I don’t know if the AEA board ever figured out where all the money went.

6 – John Rice from over here in my neck of the woods was mixed up in whatever they’d cooked up. If any of the AEA board members or muckety mucks paid a price for that ‘genius’ plan going forward, I missed the news.

7 – And even in this past 2018 election, AEA gave money to the likes of Tom Whatley – who was there to help pass the ‘Accountability’ Act in 90ish minutes after it’d been revealed. I guess they’re deciding to play nice – perhaps especially with pliable types.

8 – ‘Leadership’ at the NEA, like many ‘Big Labor’ types often do, thought getting behind Brand Obama early would give them more influence even though that administration liked the neoliberal education ‘reform’ hooey that’s mucked things up.

9 – With allies like that, Alabama teachers have had to weather what sometimes looked like a sort of revanchist payback fantasy come to life under the Hubbard-Marsh crowd. Adding on to that the nationalizing of the party structures and they’re in an even bigger mess.

10 – However, all is not lost. In fact, what’s happening in other states shows Alabama teachers a possible path. As I understand some cases, teachers are often working around their hidebound state-level organization structures.

11 – ‘Bottom-up’ organizing, perhaps even directly against the existing group or groups who aren’t being as assertive, is where the potential is. Going ‘wildcat’ in withholding labor might even be necessary. That’s the ultimate power.

12 – Old-school organizing takes time and social media alone won’t cut it. Various social media platforms are also vulnerable for infiltration and mischief. And I greatly value the informal and organic. Existing networks and relationships already exist. Build on them.

13 – What’s happened in other states offers models. Assertive exercises of organized power get the attention of politicians and media. Parents and other community members are likely allies in much of this.

14 – Use the ‘Accountability’ Act as a cudgel and example. Many of the politicians involved in the sordid way it was hidden away and passed are still around. Make them try to explain/defend that process on the record. They can’t so they’ll try to dodge. Don’t let them

15 – A prime place to apply pressure and demonstrate power is right there with Del Marsh as he apparently told his caucus the ‘Flex Bill’ switcheroo he and his had cooked up was something they could weather. It’s way past time to finish that up since he has US Senate aspirations.

16 – As to messaging and strategy, figure out your goal (keep it simple) and focus on that exclusively. Have some fun but lean in. It’s nice to get a win out of the gate but you might not get everything. Get something to build on.

17 – Sure, there’s plenty of money with paid operatives and lobbyists behind much of this education ‘reform’ hooey. Some of the ‘journalists’ assigned to the education beat are in ‘bless their heart’ territory or worse. But organized people can still do much.

18 – To summarize, think ‘bottom up’ and be assertive. Bypass the tired and timid organizations if they won’t do right. Try to have fun. Develop next generation. Teach and care about each other. Solidarity is our superpower.

That’s all I put in the Word doc before I realized that thread was getting far too long and merited even a rushed post. I’d welcome comments as to how to improve, where I’m wrong, etc. And yes, I’m willing to lend a hand as able to anyone who might wish to get something like this going. However, I’ll either be upfront about when I don’t see much promise in something or just try to politely demur and wish you good luck.


Alabama Farmers Federation’s ‘Earth Day’ Tweet & Scott Pruitt, Big Luther …

The above tweet caught my eye. That’s because I remembered some similar language about how much Alfa cared about the environment and who all was doing the talking. Yup, none other than Scott Pruitt.

Beyond all the news about Scott Pruitt’s grifting back in Oklahoma and how that pattern continues as he and his boss are draining the swamp in DC, not to mention how Pruitt and Alabama’s very own ‘Big Luther’ Strange had the Republican Attorneys General Association and the Rule of Law Defense Fund acting as corporate counsel for certain interests, I can’t help but think of the gall Alfa has to saddle up with the likes of Pruitt and Strange and then drop an Earth Day tweet.

Thus a rare post. I might add a few links in as able. Or modify/expand. But here are the basics.

Instead of working toward consensus on nonpoint pollution problems with the issue left up in the air after some upper-level federal cases and Congress locked down by one party’s default opposition mode, it was apparently easier/better for the organization and their politicians to file lawsuits, scare their members to death, and stonewall. Given the above, this ‘protect the environment’ PR from Alfa seems as tawdry as one of Donald Trump’s trysts.

I’m all for farmers, especially the little man or woman and an actual family rather than a messaging version of the same, making a living. I am in their corner on much. The same goes for the forestry folks – even though I do worry about that industry’s financialization where production is sometimes an afterthought. In the category of farmers, I include cattlemen and pork/poultry growers. I’m no fan of CAFOs and can complain about vertical integration, but that’s another post for another day. How in the world young folks can hope to start and stay in farming today absent a leg up through family connections or other unique circumstances and probably a little luck is a mystery to me.

And I am hardly a ‘statist’ type. Code-compliance is something I’ll go beyond on when I play slumlord yet the contrarian in me can’t help but slightly resent pulling a permit even when everybody involved is almost always pleasant and reasonable. However, this country boy still knows water runs downhill and can’t figure out a solution to environmental issues without the state involved. Hell, there’s arguably even an international role. Wind and water don’t care about arbitrary borders and humanity’s hubris.

Again, some recent federal cases had questions out there about just how far upstream the Clean Water Act applied on certain concerns and Congress (especially you-know-who up there) was being Congress. Posting up against the black guy’s administration was just too good an opportunity I guess to let pass. And keeping those rural voters, even those not pocketing the overwhelming majority of farm subsidies and just sorta kinda farming or maybe loosely involved or just historically aligned with agriculture, stirred up is a team effort. To push out Pravdaesque claims about how WOTUS is going to put folks out of business and otherwise “hamstring our economy” might make all the difference in some tight elections.

It’s Pollyannaish perhaps but the agricultural community should be a good faith participant (as opposed to profit/power-preserving special interest group tied in with opportunistic politicians!) in getting a solution worked out. If this ‘Big Mule’ outfit and their lackeys won’t step up, then some of the youngsters who aren’t careerists and/or climbers might build a ‘wildcat’ organization or at least start pushing back. Admittedly, it’d be scary to change and giving an inch might mean you’d lose the ‘lid bills’ and other advantages.

On those advantages, I don’t necessarily get fired up about the part in Alfa’s tweet today about “so they can pass on their land to the next generation.” I’m of two (perhaps more) minds about the issue of ‘the landed aristocracy.’ When a family has worked hard and struggled, certainly over generations, I certainly think there’s a policy choice that’s defensible about allowing that estate to pass down to the heirs. And I also know the ‘death tax’ is more PR with the estate tax only applicable to a very few families with minimal planning usually enough to avoid much, if any, loss to what’s left.

Then again, there’s I think an idea going back to Locke and others about the idea of not holding more than you can personally work/use. Those winning the ‘birth lottery’ who can be somewhat idle or have advantages don’t always bother me – unless they get involved in politics telling poor folks how they ought to pull themselves up by the bootstraps they often don’t have. And even among people claiming to be conservationists, hustlers exist.

Count me among the fans of Rawl’s ‘original position’ thesis, but there may indeed be some Jeffersonian or Agrarian ideas about land which still matter. While ‘rootedness’ doesn’t always have to relate to dirt, for me, it sometimes does. (See Simone Weil for what all it might involve.) Given the hills and hollers from where I came, I ought to use rocks with some dirt surrounding. I truly think the reason I can be ‘a bit stubborn’ is that I rarely dug a posthole without having to crack through or pry out rock. That I now often landscape with rock and find rock veneer so attractive is ironic.

Admittedly, it’s easy for me to offer up advice when I don’t have a fancy spread, or even rough land, to pass on to the next generation. I still submit that we’re only passing through and that being a conservationist ought to come ahead of commodity concerns, crop insurance, etc. Sure, those real world concerns get the fuel bill paid and keep the damn bankers at bay. I get it. Again, I want to be in your corner. But it’ll be way more manageable for me and others like me, perhaps even people with at least some slight influence, to be allies when scoundrels like Scott Pruitt and … aren’t among your cronies. (See footnote # 1)

I’m winding down now. Beyond the issues of our environment, I’m also a rural sociologist, even with a paper saying such, and care about how much of rural America/Alabama is being hollowed out. Issues to worry about include farmer suicides, the opioid epidemic, ‘aging in place’ and the ‘brain drain’ of young folks, lack of broadband access, rural hospitals struggling, etc.

Feel free to let me know where I’m wrong, what could be improved, and what I might’ve missed. That said, I like to write in an informal, somewhat ‘stream of consciousness’ manner and such works for me. It’s my blog, and Mr. Hemingway and his disciples can write as they prefer.

Footnote # 1 – My old daddy told a story about when he was the High Sheriff of Randolph County. This was before I was born. His daddy Quaron Gunn was supposedly asked by a neighbor named Guy Sudduth to arrange some help, apparently some type of trustee for hire or maybe a form of convict lease by the day, for their farm. Guy kept going on about how he needed somebody that wouldn’t steal or cuss or look lustily at his wife or … until Quaron exploded, he had the Gunn temper, with, “Dammit Guy, Ralph don’t get many Christians!” So as to Alfa’s cronies, I get it that their politicians will be politicians. Still, Scott Pruitt is an especially sketchy character – even by Alabama standards. That he and Big Luther were so tight is a story that still needs exploring. With the shenanigans around that Superfund site at least somewhat known, with more many folks suspect, we’ve a rare glimpse of how raw power and brazen bigfooting gets done in this state. I’m again being naïve I suppose but this corruption seems like a cancer that’s going to have to be cut out.


Deliberating on the Hubbard jury deliberations

As ready as I am for this damned trial to be done, especially after all the delays, I’m starting to think about how I’ll feel once it’s over. Writing helps me think and I figured it can’t hurt to share. I might as well try to get some use from my webhosting spending. So here goes. I’m hardly a pro on writing but do hope it’s not absolutely awful. I can always say it’s a first draft. I usually do links and/or footnotes but I’m just not taking the time right now.

Whether Mike Hubbard is acquitted or found guilty, I’m going to be doing pretty much the same thing I’ve been doing in recent years. I can perhaps even make big strides on some academic work that often gets pushed down. Even if he’s convicted, he and his will be working the press as they carry out various appeals and related efforts so I’ll not have to quit cold turkey. I’ll stay tuned to watch the man work. He’s as brazen as they come.

I’ll also be watching the opposition party and other groups which Mike Hubbard has savaged over the last decade or so waste opportunities and flounder. The ineptness and flawed strategy/organization is a sight to behold. It’s like a wreck that you can’t look away from.

I’m also wondering if he’s convicted how Auburn University (AU) and that research park foundation will handle the $28 million “Mike Hubbard Center for Advanced Science, Innovation and Commerce” or if the road into the airport can be renamed. Should they wait for the appeals to run out or just go ahead and make the changes?

And I sure hope some reporters put microphones in front of and cameras on the High Sheriff of Lee County and the City of Auburn Mayor after they appeared in ads about how honest Mike Hubbard was. The same goes for locals and politicians appearing at Mike’s post-indictment presser. Paging Rep. Mike Rogers.

If Mike is convicted, surely whomever the usual suspects have lined up to take his place will be slightly less odious, smarmy, dissembling, opportunistic …

If the Graftmaster walks, however, I can stomach it. If nothing else, being an Alabama history/politics junkie prepares a person for pain and disappointment. I’m sure there are still some true believers in Mike but I expect merely those who might usually consider him a useful ally will be watching him quite carefully from here on out. Folks who might have given him the benefit of the doubt previously are going to have a hard time trusting anything he says or does. I don’t even think Mike could play the Christian card and rehabilitate himself.

I’ve also heard talk that the Feds are watching. If Mike walks, that might be very bad news for the “friends” of Mike Hubbard.

This trial has been a chance to look back. I’ve been bashing this fellow for at least a decade or so. It’s been pleasurable to watch reporters who’ve covered him file their stories. Bill and Susan Britt are due a special salute as they were taking on Mike and his minions well before others started digging. I’ve also enjoyed watching some personalities who parroted Mike’s message and piled on his critics step away. They’ll still tote water for whomever else has/gets power but at least the Hubbard hagiography has probably become too heavy.

I first laid eyes on Mike way back in 1985 or thereabouts. The only time I spoke with the man was when I bought his book and that was just to get a picture taken with him. Three decades ago, I got the slippery, sycophantic vibe off him when he and Coach Dye walked over to the baseball diamond one afternoon to talk with Bo or Coach Baird or maybe just to try to see if PD was safe to drive home.

I’d also heard chatter through the years about Mike maneuvering to buy Craftmaster just as AU closed its in-house print shop. There was always talk about how he scored media deals with AU in processes that might have been at least a little sketchy. There was the “Learning Through Sports” secret millions Joe Morton was spending at ALSDE starting just after Mike swears he’d sold out. I watched Mike and his posse operate in the 2010 “storming” and then pull 2013’s 90-minute switcheroo yielding the so-called “Accountability” Act. Everybody pretty much knew how he and his were washing PCI money through the RSLC but that memo coming out in early 2014 showed just how much faith his co-conspirators had in Mike being able to say and do the right things if any questions later came up.

Mike is a piece of work. His chickens may have finally come home to roost. Bob Riley’s still haven’t it seems but that can be another post for another day.

However, and here’s where I might be breaking some new ground, I could see how stretching this mess out a little more should the jury hang up might be just what the doctor ordered. And I don’t just mean that in the sense that the “Luv Guv” might like the Graftmaster’s saga to continue so as to distract the electorate and journalists from his own troubles. A hung jury in the Hubbard case might give citizens, at least those who’ve not already given up on representative government in Montgomery, an opportunity to ponder on and discuss what’s expected from our “public servants” and those surrounding them.

Fixing the ethics laws so such as this can be perhaps avoided in the future is the main thing the Goat Hill Gang needs to do – at least assuming they’ll not tackle Medicaid and other hard stuff. They’ll, of course, have to be forced to clean up their own nests. I’m guessing an acquittal might fire up citizens and columnists. However, if Mike remains in office – especially as Speaker, he and his will probably be forced to continue brazen things out. He’s supposedly a vindictive and ruthless rascal who’ll unleash hell on anyone he thinks has wronged him. That reality will make any reforms oriented toward what Mike and his “friends” got away with a heavy lift.

A conviction, even just on one count, will let the politicians and principals say things are working just fine and tamp down efforts to tighten up the super-awesome ethics laws Riley, Hubbard … crowed over until Mike got caught. There are few politicians as crafty and bold as Mike Hubbard but if he felt he might get away with his various schemes then others of the politician species will surely try their own luck. That’s perhaps especially true in our state.

Politics in Alabama, whether it’s around widely praised “economic development” down to gambling, seems to be criminogenic. Whether corruption or just cronyism, something almost always stinks. Hell, there was testimony of Bob Riley lobbying a year or so before he even registered. Minda Riley Campbell’s law firm was paid $72,000 to essentially Google the median income so the “reform” to the pay raise on a voice vote could be nailed down.

Part of the reason things might be so jacked up is how that damned 1901 Constitution concentrates power down in the Gump.

Filling the loopholes in our law which Mike Hubbard says makes his “consulting” kosher and making it where citizens, especially those in the Fourth Estate, are aware of when a politician is scoring lucrative side deals is something that needs to happen regardless of whether Mike skates or is slammed.

As to disclosures and transparency that Statement of Economic Interests (SOEI) are supposed to provide, I still don’t understand how a politician, especially one in a powerful position like Speaker, can hide his or her “consulting” behind a closely-held corporate entity. Mike and Susan Hubbard’s SOIE forms seem significantly incomplete in several instances.

In the trial, there was some testimony about other politicians doing consulting deals like what Mike said he’d be doing for the SEAGD. I want to know more and hope the press will press for answers. Politicians using the Ethics Commission to secretly paper over their side deals is another facet to the Hubbard trial. There’s been testimony about a press release on when the SEAGD hired Mike but apparently few, if any, folks saw it. If journalists saw it and didn’t see fit to pass that along to the citizenry then that’s another can of worms.

My understanding is also that there’s supposed to be a searchable database of lobbyists and principals. I can get an Excel list of each but that’s not anything close to what’s needed. The Ethics Commission’s website frankly makes the Legislature’s ALISON look good. Stephen Jackson’s OpenBama site, which is no longer with us, was an example of what’s needed. And it ought not to be left up to citizens to do the damn work for free – especially when the likes of Mike Hubbard was cashing big checks for his hustling.

A hung jury might also keep the reality of how law gets made in the public’s eye. The way the Business Council of Alabama (BCA) had their hooks into Mike was even worse than this long-time critic of the man and machine imagined. I believe it was Will Brooke who testified about something to the effect of how the BCA board discussed making sure Mike was taken care of and kept in place. Even if we never heard from Ferrell Patrick, he was I suppose representative of how many lobbyists maneuver and massage the process. Billy Canary, of course, had his very own specially scheduled audience with the Speaker.

Whether we call them ‘Big Mules’ or just special interests, there appears to be some relative wealthy principals with money to spend. And that money hasn’t just been going to Mike Hubbard. From cash in campaign coffers to paying for PR, business seems to be booming. Mike and his fellow travelers have been for years talking about making Alabama more “business friendly.” I’ve about decided they’re willing to do that by making it downright unfriendly for everybody else.

A hung jury might even force the members of the Alabama House to act – especially if there’s a special session in the works. Word is that the testimony isn’t lining up with what Mike has told his members and other denizens of Goat Hill. Even if the jury were to cut him loose, on reasonable doubt or whatever else can impact a deliberation, surely few folks in this benighted state can think what Mike’s been up to is proper. Politicians and the voters who put/keep them in office need to also remember the aggressive and dismissive way Mike and his crew couched this investigation as a “witch hunt.”

A hung jury gives the other politicians another chance to step up and tell Mike he can’t remain Speaker. As arguably the most powerful person in the Legislature, the impact he may have had on Dr. Don Williamson and others hauled in to testify is another discussion worth having. I’m also looking forward to hearing Rep. Pebblin Warren down into Macon County explain why she was supposedly sitting there with Team Hubbard as that jury was being struck.

Lastly, a hung jury might be a chance for the state and Mike to cut a deal. I’m still not sure what happened with Greg Wren but his plea had him agreeing to talk. Getting Mike to lay it all out there still might be worth a generous offer. Mike would need to step down and take some time getting his businesses in order before being allowed to jump into presumably lucrative lobbying and political consulting. Mike could perhaps try to offer something up if he’s convicted and to try to get a lenient sentence I suppose. I’ve always thought that once a tipping point was reached that there might be a chance several secrets would be revealed. Then again, Mike might not want to go deep sea fishing. He might also need to be careful if he’s operating a tractor around his fish ponds.

Another potential positive from a hung jury is that it might force citizens and the press to ponder how in the hell this mess happened. I’ve gone back and read coverage where Mike flat out lied to journalists but more often got away with dissembling and deflecting. Access journalism from a harried and leaned out press pool is an unfortunate fact of today’s media world. Still, some old-school aggressive questioning and investigative journalism might have rooted out some of these schemes way back when. That Mike would have never put himself in this position had these deals been out in the open is a thought I’ve kept having over the last few months.

James A. Baldwin supposedly said, “It is certain, in any case, that ignorance, allied with power, is the most ferocious enemy justice can have.” Mike sneaking around seems to have been certain. And he was surely allied with power. Then again, I’ve been thinking that some of the folks behind the scene will be glad to see him go or at least have his sails trimmed. I’ve thought some might have started seeing Mike as a monster they couldn’t control or at least that he got too big for his britches. Still, Reddy Kilowatt, Alfa, Big Timber and … could have surely reeled Mike in if they’d wanted to.

So that’s it. But I’ll make a prediction. I’m expecting convictions on at least a few counts. That jury might hang up, however.

If they cut Mike loose, which I just don’t see based on what all I’ve read and heard about the trial, I’m hoping some journalists can get to some members of the jury to see how the deliberations went. Where the jurors found it proper to acquit might provide some good information about how to improve the ethics laws so future shenanigans can be avoided.

Steve Flowers predicted a sophisticated jury with professors and such so it might also be interesting to see how that panned out.

One last comment, at least until I closely read this missive and start doing edits and updates, is that I think Baxley and the defense did as good a job as they could with the facts and the law. I’m guessing Mike insisted that he ought to testify and there’s not much a lawyer can do with a client like Mike Hubbard. Maybe they’re hoping the appellate courts will save Mike if he’s convicted and he felt like testifying might be worth the risk. Then again, Mike just might be a narcissistic sociopath who started believing his own lies.

Feel free to straighten me out in the comments or just add to the ideas I’ve conveyed. I can’t promise I’ll be always where I can approve or moderate comments but I’ll try.


testing blog post

Yakima_2008_Returning_from_the_Rubber_House
Here’s a test post to park and see how it goes. I need to decide about the image posting on the blog page but it’s a start. By the way, this is out at the Yakima Training Center back in 2008 when we were driving back from a good day’s training in a high tech shoot house. I never was Billy Badass but felt pretty good that my little group was ready to clear a house by then. Unfortunately, they soon found out I could type and handle paperwork. It was all downhill after then.