
SUMMARY: The pundits, mainstream legacy media, and your favorite drunk uncle are all wrong wrong wrong! The Republican party isn’t divided into some sane throwback to Goldwater-Nixon-Rockefeller Republicans and a minority of bomb-throwing MAGA Trumpites that grew out of the wicked radiation accident that produced Reagan, Poppy, and W. They are all MAGA nihilists bent on destroying our democracy by any means necessary including neutering the House through a prolonged Speaker fight in order to get an authoritarian democratic bomb-throwing fascist into the office. Their next step is to revisit the government shutdown. To stop them, we must refamiliarize ourselves with the principles of democracy and make every election a single-issue election, only true democrats allowed.
KEY WORDS: The Great Civics Lesson, Democracy, Republican Party, MAGA Republicans, Mike Johnson, House Speaker, Anti-Democratic, Democratic Principles, Government Legitimacy, Compromise, Equality Before the Law
COMMENTS: What do you think the chances are that the American electorate wakes up from its fifty year slumber and finally realizes that the fascists are in the House and boots them all out in 2024? I’d love to hear from you in the comments.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) today said, “We need a speaker of the House that reflects the values and the views of Republican voters across the country, and they support President Trump and they support his agenda.”
October 24, 2023 Letters from an American by Heather Cox Richardson
Speaker Mike Johnson the Embodiment of Republican Anti-Democratic Views and Values
With the UNANIMOUS election of Mike Johnson (R-Baby Jindal’s Ass), I guess we can parse out the values and the views of Republican voters across the country actually are just by examining Mike Johnson’s views and values:
- ELECTION DENIER:
- Amicus Brief: As has been widely reported, he led an effort to get Republican Congress people to sign an amicus brief in Ken “Will You Pardon Me Now? How ’bout Now? Now? Paxton’s (AG-Corruption) ill-faited law suit to overturn the 2020 election. He argued that changes to election laws during the #COVID19 pandemic were unconstitutional, which any budding authoritarian knows is a better excuse to run roughshod over democracy than trying to get people to believe your overwhelming evidence of election fraud in Venezuela is real. Of course, it was at I2I4’s behest.
- Defaming Dominion: He was an early promoter of defaming Dominion Voting Systems stating in a radio interview, “…a software system that is used all around the country that is suspect because it came from Hugo Chávez in Venezuela, when you have testimonials of people that like this, but in large numbers, it begs to be litigated and investigated.” Of course, it has to be litigated and investigated, just like they had to investigate women accused of consorting with the devil during the Medieval Witch Hysteria. So many people are saying it.
- VOTING RECORD: He’s never met a social conservative cause that he wasn’t more Jesusy, further right, or more condemning of than all the other social conservatives put together. His motto is, allegedly, Hate the sin; punish the sinner. He’s against abortion under any circumstances believing, apparently, that god will sort all of that out. Strangely, he still thinks people should seek medical care — as long as they can pay for it — rather than letting god sort out their cancer. He’s against marriage equality because gawad. He thinks poor children should starve because their characters’ are deeply flawed and are as such are hated by gawad. He thinks books are instruments of the devil and should be burned at the stake along with whatever librarian or teacher promoted them. You get the picture.
We can only conclude that every Republican Representative endorses his views and values because they voted for him when they had options for electing a more moderate Speaker. The entirety of the party must support and accept his inherent anti-democratic beliefs and methods. Thus, the Great Civics Lesson for the American people continues.
COMMENT: What do you think about Rep. Mike Johnson’s record and his election to House Speaker?
The American Electorate’s Inherent Misunderstanding of Democratic Principles and Practices
Americans have been sleeping at the democratic wheel for far too long. We’ve just assumed that since we are the world’s greatest democracy that we would always be a democracy. You know, whatever it was we did would be democratic. How could you be the world’s greatest democracy if your every instinct, thought, reflex, and inclination wasn’t democratic? That’s just good logic.
Given our recent electoral history, it is clear that we, as a group, are not sure what democracy means. It seems that most of us think that as long as votes are held and the “majority” wins, we have a democracy. Taking into consideration who actually gets to vote, the complexity of drawing voting district lines (gerrymandering), and the structural inequalities inherent in our system are just too difficult to think about. As long as I can vote, it must be a democracy, right?
Enumerating the Basic Principles of Democracy
Let’s see if we can enumerate the qualities that make a democracy a democracy, okay?
Sources of Government Legitimacy
in a democracy, Legitimacy comes from the people
The legitimacy of the government comes from the willingness of the governed to follow the laws it creates. In a democracy, we voluntarily and willingly follow the laws. If we think the laws are wrong, we know that we have recourse to change the laws either through court cases or legislation.
In Non-Democracies, Legitimacy comes from Violence
In all other forms of government, people obey the laws because they fear the violent repercussions that will occur if they don’t. They have no ability to affect the law or how it is enforced. Consequently, anyone who is advocating violence, using violent rhetoric and imagery, or promoting extra-judicial politically-based violence is anti-democratic and pro-authoritarian.
The track records of the parties makes it obvious who is promoting the use of violence to enforce obedience: Gym Jordan encouraged his supporters to threaten the lives and well-being of Republicans who opposed his Speakership candidacy. A substantial number of Republican senators who voted against convicting I2I4 did so because they feared for their lives or for the safety of their families. Every time a Republican doxxes an opponent, don’t they get inundated with hateful death threats? Wasn’t Pelosi’s husband attacked? Haven’t FBI offices been attacked? Aren’t hate crimes on the rise?
COMMENT: What are your thoughts on the legitimacy of our current government and the potential risks it faces in terms of losing the confidence and acceptance of the governed? How do you perceive the current state of government legitimacy and the implications it may have on our society?
Compromise Between Political Parties is the Heart of Democracy
Minority rights is one of the biggest differences that democracy has from other forms of governments. These are not ethnic, racial, or cultural minority rights, although their rights are protected in a democracy, too. It is the political minority who has the right to have their views heard and considered in a democracy.
The Majority Needs the Minority for legitimacy
We don’t want a bare majority of opinion to run roughshod over the minority. Just because you can get 50.1% of the vote for something, doesn’t mean you ought to do it. Brexit is probably the poster child of disregarding the views of the minority, since it passed with 50.1% of the vote and has been nothing but an unmitigated disaster that no one has been able to correct.
When the governing majorities are as slim as they are in the House and Senate, then you have to compromise to get legislation passed and do the work of the people. The street goes both ways, though. The minority cannot just have a knee-jerk opposition to everything the majority wants.
Majority rules in a democracy, but a sensible majority takes the views of the minority into consideration, and a sensible minority doesn’t block everything the majority does just because it isn’t the way it would do it. The operative term here is sensible. Obviously, the Republican minority in general, and the minority of the Republican House calling itself the Freedumb Cockups isn’t sensible. If they were, would they have given themselves such a derogatory name as Freedumb Cockups?
The Minority Must Accept the Majority’s Approach
Right now, we’re experiencing the effects of a political party whether in the bare majority or in the minority refusing to cooperate with the other party to govern and legislate. One person caused the House Speaker crisis that paralyzed Congress during massive crises in the world. A filibuster-proof majority of sixty votes is needed to pass legislation in the Senate. A single senator is blocking military appointments because of they lost the political fight on abortion. The Senate Republicans refuse to even consider Democratic Supreme Court nominees and push through their nominees in unprecedented fashion with no regard for the views of the minority. The Republican Party regularly shuts down the government or threatens to over budget impasses and political stunts.
COMMENT: What can Democrats do to help promote compromise and bipartisan cooperation and legislation in Congress? Should the views of the Republicans be taken into consideration by Democratic majorities given the lack of compromise and cooperation coming from Republicans?
Equality Before the Law: The Role of an Impartial Judiciary
Everyone is equal before the law. Given the number of prisoners who have been exonerated after spending decades in prison, we can be forgiven if we start to doubt the reality of this, but it is a stated principle of democracy, and one that we are working towards. The law should be applied evenly and justly without fear or favor.
The only way an impartial judiciary works is if we believe the judiciary is impartial. The only way we believe that is if it behaves in an impartial way. We follow the rules and participate in society when we trust that we are going to be treated fairly by the judicial system.
The Corrosive Effects of bias and corruption within the judiciary and Justice Department
We don’t dole out prison sentences, Congressional investigations, and constitutional decisions based on how much money the parties involved have, political beliefs, or who are friends with whom. If we don’t believe that the judicial system is fair, then there is no reason not to take the law into your own hands and we are back to rampant violence in the country.
Which party is accusing the judiciary and the Justice Department of bias while “their” Supreme Court justices openly accept bribes? Which party is advocating locking her up through extra-judicial processes? Which political party wants to use Congressional and criminal investigations to further their political goals and ambitions?
COMMENT: How important is confidence in our judiciary and criminal justice system? How can we support a return to an impartial judiciary?
Protecting Our Democracy by ONLY Voting for Pro-Democracy Candidates
That the Republican Party is anti-democratic is painfully obvious. They aren’t even trying to hide it. They are actively undermining our democracy by favoring violence as the way of enforcing their political will, refusing to govern if it means compromising with their opponents, and tilting the scales of justice into a dunking arm to drown all opponents as if they were common Medieval witches.
Unfortunately, we have a political press willing to dub Republicans who just voted for an election denier and opponent to civil rights as Speaker, normies, as in normal people. Worse, we have an electorate who continues to elect these authoritarian proponents to office.
Our democracy will remain under grave threat as long as every election isn’t about electing pro-democratic candidates and defeating anti-democratic ones.
It is long past time for us to rise up as one people and in one voice demand that our democracy continue. The Republican Speaker “fight” shows us who they are. As Mad-dog Greene said, they have a Speaker that reflects their views and values, which are profoundly anti-democratic. Now, we have to defeat them up and down the ballot at the local, state, and federal levels. It is the only way of preserving our democracy.
COMMENT: What are your thoughts on the erosion of democratic principles and practices in our society? How do you believe we can safeguard and strengthen our democracy?

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Imagery Attribution
This image was generated using Poe’s StableDiffusionXL bot using the prompt, A 1950’s style movie poster for a movie called “The Great Civics Lesson” using the House of Representatives as the backdrop..








As David Brooks states in his most recent book, we need to learn how to “see others more deeply” as a way of helping us not be seen as the opposition and thus we hopefully become “more deeply seen”. Have you read this book?
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Howdy James!
No I haven’t read David Brooks’ latest. I’ll check for it in the library or get an excerpt from amazon.com.
I’ve always been curious about phrases like seeing people more deeply. Does he elaborate on it at all? I suppose he means that we should recognize each other as being people. While we generally reciprocate emotions, with our political divides, we find it much harder to do. It is one of the insidious effects of grievance politics is to use stereotypes instead of nuanced political views.
Getting around those effects is going to take more than seeing and being seen. One way to do it is to talk about personal situations that reflect common values. For example, I talked to an anti-masking anti-vaxxing scoffing co-worker about the death of my mother who died of congestive heart failure due to old age. He has worries about his own parent’s health. It made it easier for him to understand my position on masking and vaxxing to not infect those with vulnerable relatives.
It works, but it ain’t easy… and it helps if you’re prepared with some of those bridging experiences and situations so you’re not trying to think on your feet.
Huzzah!
Jack
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I had a great lesson many years ago about the relationship between the majority and the minority in a democracy. i was involved in a couple of very well intentioned and democratically oriented organizations that had bought into the notion that making decisions by consensus, by unanimity, was the ultimate of democracy. A member who disagreed could go along with the majority, abstain from a vote, or block consensus. The peer pressure was intense. I realized that this policy was really both anti-democratic, and dysfunctional in systems terms. Unanimity eliminates the error correction function of the minority who are able, when things go wrong, to say “We told you so.” And history is replete with examples of authoritarian systems running headlong over one sort of cliff or another. All of the principles of a healthy democracy lead to a functional system able to correct it’s errors. But there is one more necessity in that, an educated and involved citizenry with a deep cultural consensus on those values. The damage the Republican Party has done and is doing to that is almost incomprehensible.
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Howdy Bob!
The role of groupthink in the demise of countries and nations deserves its own post. Nothing replaces healthy debate in the decision making process. Nothing stifles debate like weak egos and narcissism. The Republicans are a slow moving train wreck of a dumpster fire: fascinating to watch, disastrous when it ends.
The other damnable thing is that most know full well the damage they are causing and want it. Why the press can’t manage to report it as such consistently.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Oh and place a bet on the pool-boy-type scandal taking Robinson down.
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The press gets easily distracted by personalities and horse races.
The thing about that insistence on unanimity consensus decision making is that it is an error of logical typing. The consensus has to be several levels meta to the decision and debate level, as the Rules of the Game and Core Values levels. Plus, it makes a virtue of groupthink.
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Howdy Bob!
That is a great point about the role of metacognition in the whole planning and executing scenario. Executive dysfunction correlates with a minimal amount of metacognition, I’ll wager, and executive functioning with higher amounts. One of the differences between the psychopaths in prison and the psychopaths out of prison is executive functioning. One of the differences between a twenty year authoritarian regime and a five year one is executive functioning, I’d guess based on that. I think you can safely say, though, that groupthink will eventually catch up with almost all autocrats. It might not result in the downfall of the entire government, but it will with the replacement of the autocrat.
We’re back to the problem with a for-profit press. Horse races and personalities sell — that’s why the WWF and the real housewives franchise are so successful — and the research and analysis useful to keep an electorate well informed about the conditions and options the country is facing don’t.
Huzzah!
Jack
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The press also falls prey to groupthink in the form of “conventional wisdom” and “common sense”. It happens a lot in the framing of events. The current example is the framing of the fighting between Israel and Hamas as “The war started on October 7th.”, when the thing is more accurately seen as an episode in a long conflict.
As for executive functioning and metacognition, as you’ve often observed, thinking is hard.
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Howdy Bob!
I’m no journalist or even have much training in journalism, but it seems to me that there are two competing pressures in journalism, conformity to expectations and notoriety and titillation, and one compelling interest, avoiding accusations of bias. When covering complex stories, it is best to stick to expectations. Thinking is hard, so keep it simple and don’t stray too far from the norm. But, surprise and sex and crime sell. Even if they don’t sell, per se, they make great clickbait headlines that drive clicks, but you can’t use it if it will invoke accusations of bias.
When something like the Republicans removing their own Speaker and needing three weeks, multiple candidates, and untold secret and public votes to find a new one, how do they cover it? If they go the notoriety titillation route, they need to play up the unusualness of the whole thing angle, but that leaves them open to accusations of bias. Even though this is completely abnormal, they can only mention it in passing and not make the center of their coverage because bias. Only the outlets that are already known to be biased (MSNBC and the like) can report on it as being abnormal. What’s the most normal way of reporting on an abnormal situation? Horse race. What’s the most normal thing to report on electing a Christian zealot MAGA fanatic to the second place in presidential succession, normalize the issues and minimize the extreme behaviors.
Same goes for the Israel-Hamas thing and mass shootings. Report on them as if they are completely unique events unconnected to anything in the past or other situation.
The imperative in modern journalism is to play it safe, especially when the politicians have undercut the basis for the sensationalist yellow journalism that was famous in the past by propagating sensationalist views and issuing outlandish soundbites. For the mainstream press it all seems win-win as in getting lots of clicks, views, and shares without taking any chances.
Huzzah!
Jack
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I think the journalists need to get over avoiding accusations of bias. If they report anything “negative” about a politician or several, they will be accused of bias anyway.
I miss George Carlin, Molly Ivins, and Lenny Bruce. We need their like again, badly.
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It’s funny how we really seem to be lacking any kind of visionary in politics, industry, or entertainment. Maybe it is the influence of social media, but we seem to be concerned much more about the immediate and much less concerned with creating a better future in anything other than a slogan.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Instant gratification rules.
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