The GOP memo

The GOP memo has been released; you can download it from this site by clicking here, or you can read it online at the Washington Post.

We’re beginning a dangerous weekend, I think. If Trump is going to try to get rid of Mueller, Rosenstein, Wray, now is the time to act — not after another week of being ridiculed. So if you’ve got one of those split-screen televisions, keep a news channel in the corner during Sunday’s Superbowl.

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Boss Tweed rides again

Among the Progressive Era’s proudest achievements was the professionalization of the civil service. The Buffoon-in-Chief, who demands personal loyalty, aims to undo that and turn every job in the federal government into a patronage position.

All Americans deserve accountability and respect — and that is what we are giving them. So tonight, I call on the Congress to empower every Cabinet Secretary with the authority to reward good workers — and to remove Federal employees who undermine the public trust or fail the American people.

This will inevitably make the civil service the instrument of corrupt politicians rather than the law. We can say that with confidence, because America has been there; recall Tammany Hall and Boss Tweed.

Does anybody doubt that, having scrubbed the EPA Web site of climate data, and the words ‘climate change,’ Scott Pruitt would get rid of climate scientists? That OSHA would get rid of conscientious site inspectors? That Betsy DeVos would get rid of staff who object to the wholesale privatization of public education? That the federal government would become anything but the toy of a corrupt and rapacious executive’s corrupt henchmen?

America’s gravest threat is its president and his enablers.

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Democracy and education

The oldest problem in political philosophy is this: How should society be protected from its Deplorables — the ignorant, the superstitious, the malice-eaten, the disaffected, the disengaged, the desperate, all of those grasping, naive, short-sighted and self-absorved fools who are susceptible to the blandishments of demagogues?

Socrates and the boys decided — this was about 400 B.C. — that the solution lay in the appointment of a philosopher-King, a wise, forbearing, benevolent, forward-looking authoritarian. You can read all about it in Plato’s Republic. Before you decide that might be worth a try, know this: Plato’s ideas were given a try and, when they failed, he was sold into slavery. Though a friend later purchased Plato and set him free, the details of the rest of his life are uncertain.

America’s Founding Fathers decided the solution was the Electoral College, an assembly of men of affairs whose self-interest would backstop a popular vote in favor of a predatory and cynical demagogue — like Donald Trump, for instance. We all know how that worked out.

The Constitution provides no guidance for the selection of Electors. In most states, each party nominates a slate of Electors, and the slate of the party which secures the most votes on Election Day become that state’s delegates to the Electoral College. Most states require, further, that the Electors vote for their party’s candidate and prescribe penalties for not doing so — for ‘faithlessness.’ Whether or not such laws are constitutional is untested, but I frankly doubt it. What, after all, could possibly be the point of the Electoral College meeting to vote if the Electors’ votes are foreordained when the polls close on Election Day?

Here is how the selection of the individual party’s Electors works in practice, from James Michener’s Presidential Lottery:

In late August my phone rang and a voice I knew well and favorably asked, “Michener, you want to be a Presidential Elector?”

It was Milt Berkes, Democratic chairman for my home county …

Our friendship had gone beyond politics, for I liked this former Philadelphia schoolteacher who had moved out to the suburbs to make a good life for his family.

“Well, how about it?” he asked.

Michener accepted, and his account of being an Elector in the year George Wallace aimed to get enough Electoral votes to throw the decision into the House of Representatives, where he would barter his Electoral votes for perpetuation of segregation, is a worthwhile, necessary, read in this year when America is under sustained attack from within by a homegrown demagogue who scorns the niceties of the rule of law.

The philosopher John Dewey had a different solution, set out in Democracy and Education. The population will always, he knew, distribute into a bell curve according to native intelligence, public engagement and interest in public affairs, naivete, command of basic knowledge, and so forth. The solution then, he reasoned, was a well-educated population such that the entire bell curve is shifted to the right.

I was lucky enough to enter school when Dewey’s ideas were still influential and — BONUS! — Sputnik had Americans mad about a Russian capsule transiting overhead and beeping insolently. It may be hard to believe today, but Detroit once offered a good, rock-solid education to its children.

As pleased as I am by the emphasis on Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) nowadays, and the results, the events of the last two years have convinced me that no less importance must be attached to the basics of citizenship: a solid grounding in American history, the mechanics of our experiment in self-governance, how to read a newspaper and distinguish facts from opinion. The successful citizen needs more than that — the ability to locate themselves on civilization’s timeline, an understanding of their own location in the endless parade of rising and falling empires, evolving technologies and ideas, and social turmoil.

If public resources demand that a choice be made between citizenship and STEM, we must choose a solid education in citizenship. I am confidant that Donald Trump’s depredations against our country will be turned back, albeit at the cost of grievous civic pain, but not at all certain that the next demagogue will be turned back. It is not too late to prepare our defense against the Buffoon-in-Chief’s inevitable successors, but we must begin today.

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Quote for the day

It is hard to read all of this, based simply on what is publicly known and excluding what special council Robert Mueller may know, without concluding that we are already in the territory where a case for impeachment can credibly be made.

Of course, these are different times.

The Republican Party is so infected with Trumpism, so fevered in its defense of him, so completely compromised by its alignment with him, that its members are not placing the well-being of the nation and fidelity to the Constitution first and foremost.

Charles Blow

If there was ever a case for studying history, it’s the civic depredations of Donald Trump. Everybody who paid attention during Watergate has seen his schtick before. Everybody acquainted with European history of the 20th-Century — especially the ascents of Nazism and Fascism and the cowardice and moral squalor that enabled it — is unsurprised by the pious rationalizations for turning a blind eye. I’ve no doubt that the American people are sound, or that Trump will be put out. That doesn’t relieve the national disgrace of his election in the first place, and a clear knowledge of our own history would have prevented it.

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McCabe out

Andrew McCabe is out as deputy director at the FBI, following months of attacks by Donald Trump. McCabe has previously announced his intent to retire in March, and the White House denies any responsibility for his decision to leave prematurely.

Andrew G. McCabe has stepped down as the F.B.I.’s deputy director, a move that was widely expected as he has repeatedly come under fire from Republicans in Congress and from President Trump.

Mr. McCabe made his intentions known to colleagues on Monday, an American official said. He will immediately go on leave and plans to retire when he becomes eligible in mid-March.

No clear-headed adult would ever accept a White House denial, but if he had leave time stacked-up and now wants to cash it out, that’s not unheard of.

So … who knows? I incline toward the suspicion that McCabe was pressured to leave, but I’m sure we’ll learn more as this administration continues its disintegration.

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