Pogreba Vs. Zinke: The Politics of Emasculation

by William Skink

Personal attacks, selective indignation, hypocrisy. Is it just online comments that are toxic, or has the entire realm of politics become toxic?

Let’s take Don Pogreba Vs. Ryan Zinke as a case study.

But first, let’s take a look at the person who most significantly lowered the bar for American politics: Karl Rove. This Daily Kos piece features a good summation of Rove’s handbook:

Tactic #1: Take the Offensive.
“Throws opponents “off message,” so they cannot get their message across. In addition, a candidate who is on the defensive generally makes a poor impression on voters, who are looking for positive and assertive leadership.”

Tactic #2: Attack Your Opponent’s Strengths.
“Rove’s tactic of attacking an opponent’s strengths forces his opponent to back away from the very qualities that makes them an attractive candidate.”

Tactic #3: Accuse Your Opponent of What He/She is Going to Accuse You Of.
“‘You say that I don’t love you! I think it is you who does not love me!’”

Tactic #4: Go Negative, Then Cry Foul.
“campaign typically “goes negative” early, using scare tactics or lifting comments out of context. Once the opponent retaliates, the Rove camp calls public attention to their “dirty” campaign tactics.”

Tactic #5: The “Big Lie”.
“Ironically, it is the very magnitude of a “big lie” that makes it believable. The response of the voters can be summarized as follows: “Well, there must be some truth in the assertion, or they wouldn’t be able to say it. Where there’ smoke, there’s fire.””

Tactic #6: Appeal to Moral Values.
“At campaign events, Bush openly discussed his “faith-based” approach to government, declaring that his religious beliefs were at the core of his political decisions.”

“Twenty-two percent of voters polled said that the issue of moral issues mattered most in deciding how to vote for president. Of those 22 percent, 80 percent voted for President Bush.”

There are more tactics, but you get the idea.

In Pogreba vs. Zinke, what I see is tactic #2 at play, attack your opponent’s strength. Zinke’s masculine identity, as it relates to his special forces military service, is used to its fullest to form Zinke’s political identity. To attack this, Pogreba uses what I will call political emasculation.

This was used most recently by Pogreba in the post I took issue with for a different reason, titled Zinke’s Bizarre Love for Vladamir Putin and Aversion for the Truth. Apparently insinuating homoeroticism in the title wasn’t enough for Pogreba. When Pogreba wanted to depict Putin as a “dishonest autocrat”, of the many, many sources he could have used as evidence that Putin is a dishonest autocrat, Don decided to go with a Buzzfeed article depicting the 16 most homoerotic pictures of Putin.

This is by no means been the only post that Pogreba has taken his direction from Karl Rove’s handbook. In a post titled Why is Big, Bad Zinke Such a Coward?, a bad photo-shop picture plastering Zinke’s face on the cowardly lion from the Wizard of Oz tops the post, along with the use of words like “mewling”:

It seems Congressman Zinke is so afraid of refugees coming to the United States that he’s spent the past few days since the Paris attacks distorting the evidence and mewling that a relatively tiny commitment to giving aid to refugees who would be thoroughly vetted somehow threatens our national security. Our brave Congressman is so afraid of letting a tiny number of refugees escape a brutal war that he’s shown himself willing to lie and demagogue to keep them from our shores.

Here is the definition of the word:

mewl
verb
gerund or present participle: mewling
(especially of a baby) cry feebly or querulously; whimper.

I was thinking of word choice after Pogreba again used the word “shrill” to describe me. When Donald Trump used that word to describe Hillary, it was seen as a continuation of his sexist perception of women. Is this another attempt at emasculation?

A few posts back I mentioned my concern over the attempt to depict JC as mentally unstable. It seems the tactics of dismissing and marginalizing women in our culture has now become a handy political tool to try and do the same with people who have different perceptions about what is happening in our world.

Take this snip about hysteria from a Time piece, titled 11 Ways to Avoid Sounding like a Sexist Jerk:

Female hysteria was once the catch-all diagnosis for a woman with problems, and it didn’t disappear entirely from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of mental disorders until 1980. But the trope of the crazy, emotional, moody, hysterical, PMS-ing, crazy woman — or worse, the crazy, emotional, hysterical romantic stalker — remains in full force.

Not only does this trope remain in full force for marginalizing women, but as a political weapon this trope has evolved into a means of dismissing or marginalizing other opponents of mainstream political partisanship.

Reality Averse Partisans on Syria

by William Skink

One of the persistent criticisms of this blog is that we utilize sources outside the mainstream when looking at US foreign policy. It was with this criticism in mind that I took a look at one of the claims uncritically passed along by ID, in another obsessive post about Ryan Zinke. The title of the post: Zinke’s Bizarre Love for Vladimir Putin and Aversion to the Truth.

Mostly this is just another throw-away attack on Zinke by a Democrat partisan, but since it uses foreign policy as the particular vehicle for this attack, it’s worth examining, especially the claim that Putin’s Russia is NOT fighting ISIS in Syria, but those mythical moderate freedom fighters trying to oust Assad.

Here is the claim, in the partisan’s words: As for Putin, Russia just started dropping bombs in the conflict, many of them not directed at ISIS, but at other groups opposing the Assad regime.

Upon closer examination of the Reuters article one discovers that it’s not just Zinke who displays an aversion to truth. It seems the West still clings to the fantasy that there are moderate opposition forces fighting under the banner of the Free Syrian Army worth supporting, and now Russia seems to be redefining this fictional western construct. From the link:

Putin told an annual meeting at the Russian defense ministry that on Friday Russian planes were assisting “in uniting the efforts of government troops and the Free Syrian Army”.

“Now several of its units numbering over 5,000 troops are engaged in offensive actions against terrorists, alongside regular forces, in the provinces of Homs, Hama, Aleppo and Raqqa,” he said, referring to the Free Syrian Army.

“We support it from the air, as well as the Syrian army, we assist them with weapons, ammunition and provide material support.”

If the US would have dispensed with the fiction of the Free Syrian Army months ago, Putin wouldn’t have this fiction to co-opt. This Independent article is from October 4th, while problematic in some regards, has this to say about the makeup of the FSA:

These men were originally military defectors to the FSA, which America and European countries regarded as a possible pro-Western force to be used against the Syrian government army. But the FSA fell to pieces, corrupted, and the “moderates” defected all over again, this time to the Islamist Nusrah Front or to Isis, selling their American-supplied weapons to the highest bidder or merely retiring quietly – and wisely – to the countryside where they maintained a few scattered checkpoints.

Washington admitted their disappearance, bemoaned their fate, concluded that new “moderates” were required, persuaded the CIA to arm and train 70 fighters, and this summer packed them off across the Turkish border to fight – whereupon all but 10 were captured by Nusrah and at least two of them were executed by their captors. Just two weeks ago, I heard in person one of the most senior ex-US officers in Iraq – David Petraeus’s former No 2 in Baghdad – announce that the “moderates” had collapsed long ago. Now you see them – now you don’t.

But within hours of Russia’s air assaults last weekend, Washington, The New York Times, CNN, the poor old BBC and just about every newspaper in the Western world resurrected these ghosts and told us that the Russkies were bombing the brave “moderates” fighting Bashar’s army in Syria – the very “moderates” who, according to the same storyline from the very same sources a few weeks earlier, no longer existed. Our finest commentators and experts – always a dodgy phrase – joined in the same chorus line.

Yesterday John Kerry met with his Russian counterparts. What was discussed? Mike Whitney thinks the topic of discussion may have included a mysterious airstrike on the Syrian military which just happened to coincided with an ISIS offensive. From the link:

When Kerry arrives in Moscow tomorrow he’ll be rushed to meeting room at the Kremlin where he’ll be joined by Lavrov, Putin, Minister of Defense Sergey Shoygu and high-ranking members from military intelligence. Then, following the initial introductions, Kerry will be shown the evidence Russian intelligence has gathered on last Sunday’s attack on a Syrian military base east of Raqqa that killed three Syrian soldiers and wounded thirteen others. The Syrian government immediately condemned the attack and accused US warplanes of conducting the operation. Later in the day, Putin delivered an uncharacteristically-harsh and threatening statement that left no doubt that he thought the attack was a grave violation of the accepted rules of engagement and, perhaps, a declaration of war.

Why would Putin be so pissed about this attack? Here’s Whitney with more context:

Why would an incident in the village of Ayyash in far-flung Deir Ezzor Province be so important that it would bring the two nuclear-armed adversaries to the brink of war?

I’ll tell you why: It’s because there were other incidents prior to the bombing in Ayyash that laid the groundwork for the current clash. There was the ISIS downing of the Russian airliner that killed 224 Russian civilians. Two weeks after that tragedy, Putin announced at the G-20 meetings that he had gathered intelligence proving that 40 countries –including some in the G-20 itself–were involved in the funding and supporting of ISIS. This story was completely blacked out in the western media and, so far, Russia has not revealed the names of any of the countries involved.

So, I ask you, dear reader, do you think the United States is on that list of ISIS supporters?

Then there was the downing of the Russian Su-24, a Russian bomber that was shot down by Turkish F-16s while it was carrying out its mission to exterminate terrorists in Syria. Many analysts do not believe that the Su-24 could have been destroyed without surveillance and logistical support provided by US AWACs or US satellites. Many others scoff at the idea that Turkey would engage in such a risky plan without the go-ahead from Washington. Either way, the belief that Washington was directly involved in the downing of a Russian warplane is widespread.

So, I ask you, dear reader, do you think Washington gave Turkey the greenlight?

Finally, we have the aerial attack on the Syrian military base in Deir Ezzor, an attack that was either executed by US warplanes or US-coalition warplanes. Not only does the attack constitute a direct assault on the Russian-led coalition (an act of war) but the bombing raid was also carried out in tandem with a “a full-scale ISIS offensive on the villages of Ayyash and Bgelia.” The coordination suggests that either the US or US allies were providing air-cover for ISIS terrorists to carry out their ground operations.

Cheap political points from a local partisan obscures an increasingly dangerous showdown between two nuclear armed states fighting a proxy war in Syria. Americans have been lied to about the nature of this conflict from the very beginning. Another important fact to consider is this: Russia’s military operation in Syria is in accordance with international law because they are there at the behest of the Syrian state. America and its NATO allies are in violation of international law. A pesky little fact, to be sure, but part of the reality Americans don’t seem to understand.

Maintaining that “Assad must go” virtually guarantees war with Russia. At Consortium News, this piece about Cornering Russia is worth reading. Here’s a bit of important insight from the article, specifically from Steven Cohen, worth highlighting:

“The chance for a durable Washington-Moscow strategic partnership was lost in the 1990 after the Soviet Union ended. Actually it began to be lost earlier, because it was [President Ronald] Reagan and [Soviet leader Mikhail] Gorbachev who gave us the opportunity for a strategic partnership between 1985-89.

“And it certainly ended under the Clinton Administration, and it didn’t end in Moscow. It ended in Washington — it was squandered and lost in Washington. And it was lost so badly that today, and for at least the last several years (and I would argue since the Georgian war in 2008), we have literally been in a new Cold War with Russia.

“Many people in politics and in the media don’t want to call it this, because if they admit, ‘Yes, we are in a Cold War,’ they would have to explain what they were doing during the past 20 years. So they instead say, ‘No, it is not a Cold War.’

“Here is my next point. This new Cold War has all of the potential to be even more dangerous than the preceding 40-year Cold War, for several reasons. First of all, think about it. The epicentre of the earlier Cold War was in Berlin, not close to Russia. There was a vast buffer zone between Russia and the West in Eastern Europe.

“Today, the epicentre is in Ukraine, literally on Russia’s borders. It was the Ukrainian conflict that set this off, and politically Ukraine remains a ticking time bomb. Today’s confrontation is not only on Russia’s borders, but it’s in the heart of Russian-Ukrainian ‘Slavic civilization.’ This is a civil war as profound in some ways as was America’s Civil War.”

Cohen continued: “My next point: and still worse – You will remember that after the Cuban Missile Crisis, Washington and Moscow developed certain rules-of-mutual conduct. They saw how dangerously close they had come to a nuclear war, so they adopted “No-Nos,’ whether they were encoded in treaties or in unofficial understandings. Each side knew where the other’s red line was. Both sides tripped over them on occasion but immediately pulled back because there was a mutual understanding that there were red lines.

“TODAY THERE ARE NO RED LINES. One of the things that Putin and his predecessor President Medvedev keep saying to Washington is: You are crossing our Red Lines! And Washington said, and continues to say, ‘You don’t have any red lines. We have red lines and we can have all the bases we want around your borders, but you can’t have bases in Canada or Mexico. Your red lines don’t exist.’ This clearly illustrates that today there are no mutual rules of conduct.

“Another important point: Today there is absolutely no organized anti-Cold War or Pro-Detente political force or movement in the United States at all –– not in our political parties, not in the White House, not in the State Department, not in the mainstream media, not in the universities or the think tanks. … None of this exists today. …

I find it incredibly discouraging to see a critical understanding of one of the most dangerous moments in world history sacrificed to stupid, short-sighted partisanship. There’s no intelligence applied, just cheap, opportunistic attacks further burying the reality of a conflict America has exploited from the start of the unrest.

Money, Politics and Montana Democrats

by William Skink

We know money corrupts politics. Studies have shown (PDF) that money impacts policy, public opinion be damned. It is obvious, when one looks at the data, that Congress literally doesn’t care what we think about the policies that affect our lives.

A column from Dan Brooks called out Jon Tester’s corruption recently, and if Tester was a Republican you’d be hearing about this on the liberal blogs. But Tester is a Democrat, so it’s kinda awkward when evidence of his corruption pops up. From the link:

Tester voted for Dodd-Frank when it passed in 2010. The version of the bill for which he voted contained a provision that allowed the federal government to require financial advisors to prioritize their customers’ financial success ahead of their own—to sell the investment that fits the client, not the one that yields the biggest fee. Now that Labor is ready to implement that rule, however, Tester is against it.

He has also raised about $3 million in campaign contributions from the financial services industry over the course of his career. In what I can only describe as an exciting coincidence, $2.3 million of those contributions arrived in 2015. By staunchly opposing the fiduciary rule, Tester appears to have served his own financial interests at the expense of those of his clients, the voters of Montana.

People in this country know money corrupts politics. That is part of the appeal of Donald Trump; he is rich, therefore not beholden to the funders that are required to go anywhere in American politics.

It’s a problem that Jon Tester is the chair of the Democratic Campaign Committee.  And it’s a problem that Bullock is raising corporate cash for Democrat Governors.

Democrats in Montana should be more sensitive to this. Greg Gianforte is going to get some serious looks from Montanans because his wealth from his success in the private sector will make him appear less beholden to the corrupting influence of money. Tester and Bullock chose to be corporate money beggars for the Democrat cash machine. Will that harm them during their respective reelection campaigns?

Good Reads for Down Time

by William Skink

After another glorious break from blogging I have a report to file from the heartland. Visiting with family gave me ample opportunity to waste some downtime with cable news, and I can officially state there is nothing else going on in the world except for Trump and San Bernardino. I saw no breaking news of Turkey invading Iraq. Just Trump and terrorists and Muslims, but if I’m like most America, maybe I’m just repeating myself, right?

Traveling to Kansas City also provided me the opportunity to visit a few book stores I like to check out when I’m in town, and they didn’t disappoint. Two titles in particular stand out. The first I found, interestingly, at Barnes and Noble. I finished it in three days. The book: Drugs as Weapons Against Us, by John L. Potash.

I can’t recommend this book enough, and it couldn’t have come, for me, at a better time. Potash carries on, and greatly expands on Dave McGowan’s work with Weird Scenes Inside the Canyon: Laurel Canyon, Covert Ops, and the Dark Heart of the Hippie Dream. From the Opium Wars to Tupac, Potash connects some compelling dots. The title seems justified, despite whatever insight some of us may claim regarding certain mind-expanding substances.

The other score–this one from Half-Priced Books–really had me going. The Occult Technology of Power was first published in 1974 (you can read it here). It’s structured as a sort of final lesson from a Financial Capitalist to his son, who is about to take on his father’s empire. Read it, it’s brilliant.

Week in Review

by William Skink

It was good to take a week off blogging. And boy what an interesting week it has been. Obama took advantage of the holiday lull to quietly sign the NDAA, making it much more difficult to ever close Guantanamo and further funding “moderate rebels” in Syria and Ukraine to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. Meanwhile, someone must have slipped something into David Cameron’s water supply because he suddenly started having hallucinations that there were 70,000 moderate fighters fighting the good fight in Syria. That’s almost as wacky as making the unsourced claim that refugees in Syria are fleeing a real genocide.

Syrians are fleeing an increasingly volatile proxy war that shifted dramatically when Russia intervened two months ago. Since this intervention it’s become increasingly difficult for the west to maintain the false narrative that for 4 years of misery America and it’s allies have been fighting ISIS. Far from fighting ISIS, it’s increasingly looking like Turkey and Israel have been buying ISIS oil on the black market.

Zerohedge has been prescient in looking at who is on the spending side of the millions of dollars ISIS pulls in every month low-balling barrels of oil on the black market. The implications are significant. And they will be ignored.

A quick side note: I just want to say that, personally, I have zero concern regarding JC’s mental stability. The “real genocide” link features a pretty disturbing personal attack depicting JC as full of rage and in need of professional help. I wonder if the other contributors over there will condone this attack with their silence? Or maybe instead they’ll invite Jonathan Hutson to do a guest post advocating for criminal charges against JC.

I commend JC for keeping his cool. I’m sure years of activism gives one a thick skin, especially when that activism is about the environmental conditions necessary to sustain life on this planet.

Oh yeah, this week also marks the start of a little discussion going on in France right now amongst world “leaders” about what humans are doing to this planet and whether or not there exists the political will to do what engineers say is actually feasible: total switch to renewable energy in 30-40 years.

So far one of the initial takeaways is this: France has successfully exploited its 9/11 to suppress protests and go after individual activists with the emergency powers rushed through, post-attack. And the media is, as usual, helping smear the protesters by blaming protests for disturbing a memorial to casualties of the terrorist attacks, and not the actual cause, which was the violent police actions.

I don’t plan on writing a lot at RD this month. I’ve got a month off work, a kick-ass new electric guitar and a story nearing 50 pages. And tomorrow I’m going to see Frank Zappa’s son get down at the Wilma!