O'Donnell praises the NYPD!

WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2024

O'Donnell gets it right: Lawrence O'Donnell remembers. He also broke out of a type of box with some comments he made last night.

In this age of "segregation by viewpoint," it's very rare to see someone on cable news do what O'Donnell did. He made a significant observation which may have tended to tilt away from the more typical line of his own political / cultural tribe.

As he started his MSNBC program at 10 o'clock Eastern, O'Donnell recalled police conduct from his own late high school / early college years. As he spoke, Columbia students were being arrested, and removed from Hamilton Hall, by the NYPD.

In our view, O'Donnell's aim was true. Speaking with Alex Wagner, he praised the progress put on display by the behavior of New York City's police. Here's the bulk of what he said:

O'DONNELL (4/30/24): Good evening, Alex. I have of course been watching all your coverage here, and what we have seen on the videos so far is actually the most organized and calmest and most professional police intervention we have ever seen on a college campus.

There is not a huge collection of those. But there is enough, beginning in 1968, to show how different this one is. 

The 1968 version [at Columbia], those 700 arrested students were gleefully beaten by the NYPD.  In those days, the police departments that were going into campuses were gleeful about the violence that they were visiting upon those anti-war protesters. And it was relentless, and it was vicious, and it was cruel, and it was extended to the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago where what happened there was declared, by the commission who investigated, "a police riot."

That's not what we are seeing tonight. Our screen has been filled with what clearly do appear to be Columbia students walking out calmly, escorted by a police officer, both of them, the police officer and the student, walking very calmly to whatever that arrest destination is, what vehicle they will put those kids in and take them where they are going.

So this, this so far, is nothing like what we've seen in the previous dramatic and violent interventions by police departments in the past on campuses.

It could get worse. We could get an after-action report that indicates that really rough things went on there. But so far, there hasn't been even the slightest hint of violence in what we've seen tonight.

To watch O'Donnell's statement, you can start by clicking here. We'll note that some of the people arrested last night may not have been college students. That said:

As far as we know, O'Donnell's portrait of the late 1960s is basically accurate. The "police riot" which took place in Chicago is, of course, a matter of historical record.

It was during that era that our own modern-day Blue America began losing contact with the white working-class contingent of modern-day Red America. At that time, the stresses of the Vietnam War and the Dawning of the Age of Aquarius were driving a powerful wedge between different groups. 

There was a lot of imperfect conduct on the part of angry members of the white working class. There was a lot of imperfect conduct from some of Blue America's various contingents.

In Blue America, we've never quite abandoned the condescension and disdain we began to show toward our obvious lessers at that point in time. On the whole, we've failed to walk back that tribal mistake. One result may be the election of Donald J. Trump to a second stint in the White House.

New York's finest skipped the violence last night. O'Donnell chose to take notice.

Our blue tribe rarely has anything good to say about those who live and work on the other side of our failing culture's lines of demarcation and class divide.

Last night, O'Donnell praised the NYPD for its professionalism. It seems to us that the gentleman had the right idea.


CONCERNS: New York Times merges with Enquirer!

WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 2024

Agamemnon will have to wait: As it turns out, the rage of Achilles—along with the rage of Agamemnon himself—is going to have to wait. 

So too for that one overwhelming human concern—the one concern which lay behind their famous bouts of rage. Can we learn to see ourselves more clearly by reviewing the western world's first great "poem of war?" 

As the trial of Donald J. Trump grinds on, we will have the next several weeks to revisit that Bronze Age war poem.  For today, a journalistic merger has forced its way center stage:

We refer to the way the New York Times has announced its merger with the National Enquirer. More accurately, we refer again to the tabloid-adjacent way the Times is reporting the Gotham trial.

In this morning's print editions, the trial returns to the top right-hand corner of the Times' front page. Reporters Protess and Bromwich are joined by reporters Feuer and Rashbaum in producing the tabloidy news report which appears. in online editions, under this dual headline:

Trump Jurors Hear How Seamy Hush-Money Deals Were Made
Keith Davidson, a lawyer for Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, will resume testimony on Thursday.

Those weren't just any "hush-money deals." They were seamy hush-money deals, the Times has now declared! 

Seamy may be as seamy may do! Principal headline included, the news report starts like this:

Trump Jurors Hear How Seamy Hush-Money Deals Were Made

He was the man behind the hush money, the amiable Beverly Hills lawyer who specialized in celebrity dirt—unearthing it, and then, for the right price, burying it forever.

But in 2016, the lawyer, Keith Davidson, was on the verge of something grander than a run-of-the-mill sex tape or affair. He had two clients shopping stories so big they might sway a presidential election: Their names were Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, and they were ready to tell the world about their sexual encounters with Donald J. Trump.

That kind of reporting will draw readers in. That said, we'll start with the type of claim we addressed in yesterday afternoon's post.

According to the quartet of Times reporters, the amiable Attorney Davidson was "shopping [two] stories so big they might sway a presidential election." 

For the record, the lawyer began by seeking an extremely large payday for those stories. According to his testimony, he started by asking for a million dollars, according to CNN and also according to Rubin.

The New York Times left that part out. But those stories must have been very big. They must have been very important!  

In our view, the stories in question may tell us something about ourselves—about our deepest concerns. As we noted yesterday, one of those major stories went exactly like this:

On one occasion in 2006, Donald J. Trump allegedly had (fully consensual) sex with a woman who wasn't his wife!

For the record, Trump says it never happened. The woman in question says it happened exactly once, way back in 2006, in a fully consensual manner.

That's the extremely big story around which the Gotham trial turns. We start with the obvious question:

Could the broadcast of that (unconfirmable) story have changed the shape of the 2016 race?

We'd say it could have changed the race—though in whose favor, we can't necessarily say. But it seems to us that this fact tells us a great deal about us the people—about our concerns, ourselves.

Did Donald J. Trump commit a felony in paying (a fraction of) the very large sum the amiable lawyer had originally sought? 

Everything is possible! But as we noted yesterday, the tortured legalities of this situation aren't our main concern.

We're mainly interested in what this remarkable episode may say about us—about the things we secretly care about, about our most basic concerns.

As with the ten-year siege of Troy, so too here—there seems to be one major concern which lies at the heart of this silly, dumb story. And while we're at it, let's consider what Jonathan Alter has said.

Alter's a very experienced, very capable journalist, and a thoroughly decent person. We even know him tiny tad.  

Way back when, writing for Newsweek, he broke the story about the very strange personal history of Gennifer Flowers, who also wanted to tell a story. As far as we know, the story Flowers told turned out to be almost totally false.

Yesterday afternoon, at this link, Alter filed a short report for the Times about yesterday's testimony at the trial. Was Alter a spectator at the trial? His dispatch doesn't say.

At any rate, Alter's brief report lets us touch on several key points. Headline included, here's one part of what he wrote:

Karen McDougal Almost Went on ABC News, but Then Trump's Team Paid Her

[...]

Much of Davidson’s testimony involved McDougal, whose hush-money deal was a kind of a dress rehearsal for the alleged crime, which is Trump and Cohen covering up the hush money paid to Stormy Daniels. For a time, American Media Inc., the owner of The National Enquirer, was in competition with ABC News for McDougal’s story, which led to a memorable moment in court. Davidson claimed a group of women he derided in a text as “the estrogen mafia” wanted her to tell her story to ABC News.

With what crime does Trump charged? Based on the highlighted passage, Alter seems to think that the additional unlawful act Trump was allegedly trying to conceal was the money paid to Stormy Daniels. As we noted yesterday morning, Lisa Rubin thinks the additional crime is the money paid to McDougal.

Meanwhile, the Times published a detailed essay in which Rebecca Roiphe says that the additional unlawful act could be any one of a number of things—and that "we may never learn which crime the jurors believe Trump was seeking to commit or cover up."

Legal analysts on the Fox News Channel routinely describe this undetermined state of affairs as a legal outrage. Due to the "segregation by viewpoint" which now controls "cable news," this claim is never tested by legal analysts from Bue America.

That said, it doesn't sound like a crazy claim. We've now finished Day 9 if this trial and no one seems to be sure concerning the nature of the crime the defendant is charged with!

Continuing directly, Alter wrote this passage. In our view, this helps us become more clear on a very basic point:

“We had it all set. We picked the date, camera crews, makeup,” Brian Ross, the ABC News correspondent, told me this afternoon by phone. “Then she called and said, ‘My family doesn’t want me to do it.’” Ross thinks the real reason this explosive story didn’t come out was that ABC News, which doesn’t pay for stories, became leverage: “In retrospect, they were using us to get to Trump for the money.”

For better or worse, ABC News wanted to report McDougal's story in standard journalistic fashion. According to Brian Ross, the effort fell through for a basic reason:

McDougal could have "told her story" any time she chose. But McDougal didn't want to tell her story. McDougal wanted to tell her story for a large mountain of cash. 

So too with Stormy Daniels. In that sense, Daniels was "silenced" by Trump, or by his associates, in precisely the way she had sought.

Alter also offered the passage shown below. On this morning's Morning Joe, Lisa Rubin confirmed the key part of this passage:

After American Media paid off McDougal, David Pecker, the former publisher, backed out of paying hush money to Stormy Daniels.

But when Davidson demanded the payment, Cohen began offering a million excuses for why Trump couldn’t pay. “I thought he was trying to kick the can down the road until after the election,” Davidson testified, which will be an important part of the prosecution’s case.

When it was clear Trump wouldn’t pay, Davidson testified that Cohen said, “Goddammit, I’ll just do it myself.” It was then that Cohen set up a dummy corporation to send Davidson the money and began trying to get reimbursed by Trump.

All of the texts and phone calls between Davidson and Cohen are still one step removed from Trump. But they pre-corroborate what Cohen will say “the boss” told him to do, and that is critical.

Say what? According to Alter's account, it became clear at one point that Trump wasn't willing to pay Daniels. At that point, Cohen stepped in and said he'd have to do it himself.

This morning, Rubin quoted Davidson quoting Cohen the same way. Does that undermine some of the  story-telling in Blue America surrounding this alleged crime?

McDougal and Daniels came looking for cash, perhaps like Flowers before them. Tabloid outlets like the Times go for this sort of thing all the time—and this sort of thing almost surely leads a nation down a long and winding road which leads to a long, slippery slope.

Tabloid entities simply love "seamy" stories like this! Does this possibly tell us something about the actual state of our own concerns? Does it tell us something about Our Concerns, Ourselves?

The rage of Achilles will have to wait. But how much has human nature changed since the Achaeans sailed to Troy with only one thing on their minds?

Tomorrow: Whatever comes next


Two ways of viewing Donald J. Trump!

TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 2024

George Conway, One Other Guy: We just saw George Conway on Deadline: White House refer to Donald J. Trump as "a narcissistic sociopath." 

He also used the term "psychopathy" as he discussed Trump's mental / emotional state. As we've recently noted, Conway has been walking that lonely road since at least October 2019

We just saw Conway take that approach. Then we visited The Atlantic, which currently features a new analysis piece bearing this pair of headlines:

Trump’s Contempt Knows No Bounds
Judge Juan Merchan sanctioned the former president for the first, and likely not the last, time.

The Atlantic's writer is shocked, just shocked, that Trump continues to behave this way.

Fundamentally, there are two basic ways of describing Donald J. Trump. The approach that seems to make scientific / medical sense is the one the mainstream journalistic culture almost wholly rejects.  

The fellow just keeps doing these things! Why do you think that is?

As heard on yesterday's Deadline: White House!

TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 2024

Suppressing the doorman's (false) tale: Once again, it's time for us to fess up. We'll start by quoting the first paragraph of the guest essay we discussed in this morning's report. 

The essay appeared in the New York Times. Headline included, it starts exactly like this:

I Was an Attorney at the D.A.’s Office. This Is What the Trump Case Is Really About.

Now that the lawyers are laying out their respective theories of the case in the criminal prosecution of Donald Trump in New York, it would be understandable if people’s heads are spinning. The defense lawyers claimed this is a case about hush money as a legitimate tool in democratic elections, while the prosecutors insisted it is about “a criminal scheme to corrupt the 2016 presidential election.”

That's how the essay starts. Its author correctly quotes the prosecutors in the "hush money / porn star" case. 

The prosecutors allege that the defendant, Donald J. Trump, engaged in “a criminal scheme to corrupt the 2016 presidential election.” For all we know, that may turn out to be a provable legal case. 

That may turn out to be a winnable legal case. But as we noted last week, we aren't especially interested in the legalities of this utterly silly affair.

We're interested in what we regard as a type of cultural absurdity. We refer to the claim, widely made by Blue America's leadership cadres, that we voters needed to hear Stormy Daniels "tell her story" before we could decide how to vote in 2016.

That notion strikes us as embarrassing, silly—absurd. Let's recall what Daniels' story is:

Daniels claims that on one occasion, in 2006, she engaged in (fully consensual) sexual relations with Donald J. Trump. 

Donald Trump says it didn't happen. At any rate, that's the story Daniels claims she wanted to tell.

Ten years after the alleged sexual congress, did we the people need to hear that allegation before we could know how to vote? The notion strikes us as a form of madness. It strikes us as crazy, absurd.

A few weeks ago, we spent a week working from the basic concept of "madness." The notion that we the voters needed to hear Daniels tell her (unconfirmable) story strikes us as a prime example of that familiar but unfortunate state of affairs.

Had Trump engaged in consensual sex, on one occasion, ten years before the election in question? We're now told that he "corrupted the 2016 election" by keeping us from hearing that claim.

For what it's worth, we don't doubt that the allegation is true, though we also don't know how to prove it. We're saying something different:

We're saying it's crazy to think that voters should be encouraged to base the way they vote on factors of that type. Eventually, we'll walk you through the long and winding slippery slope which follows that kind of thinking.

Sad! Once you buy a concept like that, there's little turning back. Consider something Andrew Weissmann said on yesterday's Deadline: White House.

The statement was made early in the four o'clock hour. Susanne Craig asked Weissmann a question:

Did he think that Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal would be called to the witness stand during the "porn star" trial? Would that be necessary? she also asked.

Due to a glitch at the Internet Archive, we can't like you to videotape of the exchange. But this is what Weissmann said:

WEISSMANN (4/29/24): It's not necessary to know whether, in fact, it was true or not true. Because if you just look at what the opening was with respect to the three pieces—the doorman, Karen McDougal, Stormy Daniels—those are the three pieces. 

And everyone agrees, including the D.A., that the doorman's story was false. But that doesn't mean that you don't have a motive to suppress it, because you don't want the risk of how it's going to play out.

Now the one reason it might be useful to put it on is you might have a stronger motive to squash it if you know that it's true. So I think that they might [testify], but—

At that point, Weissmann was interrupted. That wasn't the clearest possible statement, but we were struck by this:

Within Weissmann's formulation, Donald Trump and David Pecker had caused the doorman's story to be "suppressed." 

Because the doorman's sleazy story was false, we're wondering why they shouldn't receive the Medal of Honor for arranging to do just that?

As Weissmann notes, everyone agrees that the doorman's salacious story was false. Why shouldn't we the people be glad that our 2016 election wasn't affected by the promulgation of a bogus story like that?

Question:

Did Donald Trump really "corrupt the 2016 presidential election" by arranging for an NDA with a woman who wasn't his wife? 

Should we really regard her silence as a corruption of our democracy? Or did her attempt to "tell her story" possibly constitute the real attempt to corrupt an election?

Also this:

Did Trump and Pecker "corrupt the 2016 presidential election" when Pecker purchased the doorman's (false) tale? 

Weissmann didn't use that language, but when he says the story was "suppressed" and "squashed," it seems to us that his language is taking us in that peculiar direction.

In our view, it's an embarrassment to see Blue America's thought leaders repeatedly saying it—repeatedly saying that we needed to hear Daniels "tell her story" before we could decide how to vote. 

Have we reached the point where we think that's the way our most important political judgments should work? Because a wide array of presidential candidates, including some of those we love the most, have kept their infidelities to themselves as they've sought the White House.

Did they "corrupt" the elections they won by suppressing news of their sexual histories?  Should candidates be filing their tax returns and their list of sexual partners?

At one point, we all agreed that it made better sense to avoid such subject matter in running our White House elections. Today, we Blues are so desperate to find a way to beat Donald J. Trump that we're walking away from a long list of things we once said. 

It's reached the point where it can almost sound like Trump "corrupted the 2016 election" when he kept us from hearing a story which he presumably knew to be false! Trust us:

A slippery slope leads downhill from there if we run our elections like that. We'll be inviting waves of sexy stories—some of them true, some false. 

David Pecker "suppressed" a false story! By normal standards, that almost sounds like an action which might seem morally good!

For ourselves, we're not interested in the legalities of this unusual legal case. For ourselves, we're thunderstruck by the poor judgment, and the political desperation, found within the culture!


CONCERNS: On MoJo, Rubin defines the crime!

TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 2024

But then, up jumps the Times: As far as we know, President Lincoln never voiced concern about the future of "our democracy." 

His moral insights and intellectual skills came from the realm of the gods. In one of his two most famous speeches, he used language which was more evocative to give voice to that same concern:

LINCOLN (11/19/63): The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here...It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us...that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

"Our democracy" is a somewhat fuzzy construct. By way of contrast, this president spoke of government of and by and for the people.

Of the people, by the people? They're around us every day.

Today, we're engaged in a great tribal war. Citizens of both Americas—Red and Blue—say that they're concerned about our democracy. 

So people said in that new CNN poll, the survey released just this week. In yesterday's report, we noted the numbers:

"Among Democratic-aligned voters," 67 percent of respondents called protecting democracy an extremely important issue in this year's White House campaign. "On the GOP-aligned side," the number was somewhat smaller, but still stood at 54 percent. 

As with Lincoln's other most famous address, so too here. In effect, the two sides are "praying to the same God"—but they don't agree on what our democracy needs protection from.

Their concerns are our concerns, though only in a sense. Before we return to the western world's first poem of war, we want to review a basic question which has arisen in recent weeks.

There were no elections in the late Bronze Age, Agamemnon, lord of men, never faced an electorate.

Today, elections are a very major component of what we regard as "our democracy"—and in the current election campaign, one of the major party candidates is locked up in a New York City courtroom, charged with 34 felony counts.

This has never happened before. The question which has arisen is this:

With what crime—with what manner of felony—does Defendant Trump stand charged?

With what manner of felony does Donald J. Trump stand charged? In a situation which speaks to our basic capabilities, it's remarkably hard to find out.

Yesterday morning, on Morning Joe, legal analyst Lisa Rubin offered an explanation of this knotty matter. To watch videotape of the exchange, you can start by clicking here

With what crime does Trump stand charged? Where the rubber met the road, this is what Rubin said:

RUBIN (4/29/24): The crime that the former president has been charged with is falsification of business records as a felony. And in order to establish that he's committed a felony as opposed to a misdemeanor, you have to show that he falsified business records with the intent to conceal another crime. And that's where David Pecker comes in.

David Pecker is critical to the establishment of the conspiracy to promote Trump's election through unlawful means where at least one act was taken in the direction of those unlawful means. 

David Pecker was there for the formation of the conspiracy. David Pecker helped execute the conspiracy. David Pecker's payment to Karen McDougal, which he understood would pose campaign finance law problems, was that unlawful means.

So through David Pecker, prosecutors have gotten a lot of what they needed to establish that this was felonious and not just your, you know, everyday garden variety misdemeanor.

As far as we know, everyone agrees with Rubin's basic construct. To show that Trump engaged in felonious conduct, you have to show that he "falsified business records with the intent to conceal another crime."

The prosecutors will have to prove that Trump did falsify business records. According to Rubin, the additional crime he was allegedly trying to conceal was Pecker's payment to McDougal.

(For reasons we haven't seen explained, McDougal wanted to "tell her story," such as it was, in the midst of our 2016 White House campaign. Also, she wanted a big sack of cash for telling her story, and Pecker showed her the money.)

As of yesterday morning, the additional crime Trump was trying to conceal was Pecker's payment to McDougal. That's what we the people were told on yesterday's Morning Joe.

Rubin's analysis aired at 6:15 a.m. It was rebroadcast during the 8 o'clock hour. Meanwhile, a guest essay appeared at the New York Times which seemed to say something substantially different. 

The guest essay appeared beneath this headline, with this pair of author identity lines:

I Was an Attorney at the D.A.’s Office. This Is What the Trump Case Is Really About.

By Rebecca Roiphe
Ms. Roiphe is a former assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.

[...]

Rebecca Roiphe, a former assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, is a law professor at New York Law School.

We're not sure we've ever read a less coherent essay. Along the way, the essay seems to offer a different set of views concerning the additional crime the defendant is charged with trying to conceal.

Along the way, the essay calls into question the capabilities of an array of elites within our own Blue America. It calls into question the capabilities of the New York Times itself, but also of our assistant district attorneys and of our law professors.

In our view, the essay by Professor Roiphe is very hard to parse. That said, along the way it makes such statements as these:

Mr. Trump is accused of creating 11 false invoices, 12 false ledger entries and 11 false checks and check stubs, with the intent to violate federal election laws, state election laws or state tax laws. The number of lies it took to create this false record itself helps prove intent. His defense attorneys will claim that he was merely trying to bury a false story to protect his family from embarrassment. The timing of the payments—immediately after the potentially damaging “Access Hollywood” tape was released and right before the election—makes that claim implausible.

[...]

More important, jurors are particularly good at applying common sense. Mr. Trump didn’t go to all this trouble just to protect his family members, who might have known about accusations of his involvement with the porn star Stormy Daniels or similar ones. We may never learn which crime the jurors believe Trump was seeking to commit or cover up, but they can still conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that this was his intent.

[...]

For the prosecution, the elements of the crime in this case do not require a finding that Mr. Trump interfered with the 2016 election. Nor does it matter whether he had sex with Ms. Daniels. Instead, the real elements concern the way Mr. Trump used his business for a cover-up. By emphasizing the crime he was intending to conceal rather than the false business records, the prosecution also risks confusing the jury into thinking about whether the lies affected the election. It might lead them to wonder why Mr. Trump wasn’t charged with this alleged election crime by the federal government—a talking point that he has promoted publicly.

Start with that first excerpt. The defendant is charged with falsifying business records "with the intent to violate federal election laws, state election laws or state tax laws?"

Or state tax laws? That one small word seems to suggest that, even now, we don't know what additional crime Trump is charged with trying to conceal. And sure enough:

In that second excerpt, we're told that we may never know which crime the jury came to believe he was trying to cover up! In the third excerpt, Professor Roiphe seems to assert that Trump did in fact "use his business for a cover-up"—but she herself doesn't specify the additional crime she has in mind.

We may never know! Along the way, Roiphe says this about the New York State law under which Trump is being prosecuted:

Lawmakers in New York, the financial capital of the world, consider access to markets and industry in New York a privilege for businesspeople. It is a felony to abuse that privilege by doctoring records to commit or conceal crimes, even if the businessman never accomplishes the goal and even if the false records never see the light of day. The idea is that an organization’s records should reflect an honest accounting. It is not a crime to make a mistake, but lying is a different story...

Prosecutors and New York courts have interpreted this law generously, with its general purpose in mind. The element of intent to defraud carries a broad meaning, which is not limited to the intent of cheating someone out of money or property. Further, intent is often proved with circumstantial evidence, as is common in white-collar cases. After presenting evidence, prosecutors ask jurors to use their common sense to infer what the possible intent may be, and New York jurors frequently conclude that a defendant must have gone to the trouble of creating this false paper trail for a reason.

As she starts, Roiphe agrees with Rubin's basic construct. That said, is it possible that prosecutors and New York courts have interpreted the law in question too generously—have let "the element of intent to defraud" carry too broad a meaning? 

It seems amazing to hear that we may never know the basis on which the defendant ends up being found guilty by a Gotham jury. For the record, these strange pronouncements are part of what is routinely denounced when Red America's citizens listen to the legal analysts on the Fox News Channel.

Such complaints are standard of Fox. It's hard to say that these complaints are crazy.

Rubin says that Trump is charged with the attempt to conceal a crime by David Pecker. Other observers have said and suggested that Trump is charged with trying to conceal—well, elsewhere the explanations can get very confusing.

Along comes the former assistant D.A., published in Blue America's leading newspaper. She says we may never know what the defendant will be found to have tried to conceal! 

We're on Day 9 of the "hush money" trial, and this is a peculiar measure of our basic capability.

Coherent behavior by the justice system is one basic part of government of and for the people. It's a basic part of "our democracy"—and in this instance, it's a basic part of an ongoing White House election campaign.

We're in Day 9 of an unprecedented criminal trial. Can anyone define, with any certainty, the felonious conduct with which the defendant stands charged?

In Blue America, we talk "hush money" all day long. The hush money payment to the porn star has become our leading concern.

Within this somewhat puzzling mess, is there an echo of the concern at the heart of the western world's first war poem? Can we learn to see ourselves more clearly if we revisit that earlier Bronze Age war?

Tomorrow: Just one thing on their minds


Colin Jost takes the sketch artists down!

MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2024

Straight outta Staten Island: For what it's worth, we disagree with Jason Zinoman's assessment of Colin Jost's performance at Saturday night's TV dinner.

(That doesn't mean that Zinowitz's assessment is "wrong.")

We thought Colin Jost was good. We'll score this as his best joke:

It is the best time in history to be a courtroom sketch artist. My God, the most famous man on Earth is on trial, and there’s no cameras allowed. Just the artists, their pastels and their desire to make Trump look as bad as possible.

We're omitting the tag line, which didn't rise to the level of the joke. 

We're imagining that the joke about the Gotham sketch artists came straight outta Staten Island. Jost grew up in that wild island province, with a family inheritance he mentioned Saturday night, to great effect.

The leading authority on Jost's family background tells us this:

Colin Jost was born and raised in New York City in the Grymes Hill neighborhood of Staten Island. His mother, Kerry J. Kelly, was the chief medical officer for the New York City Fire Department, and his father, Daniel A. Jost, was a teacher at Staten Island Technical High School.

His grandfather was a Staten Island firefighter too, as he described in moving detail at the end of his presentation. 

Just a guess! That kind of background may give a performer eyes to see the way the world may look—not necessarily crazily—to those on The Other Side of the current continental divide. We liked that particular joke because it crossed that type of line.

We also liked his early, well-delivered joke about "Doug," along with the way he quickly brought it all back home to his own status as a type of "second gentleman." Returning to the leading authority, we like what the highlighted line may seem to imply:

Jost names Norm Macdonald as a primary influence for his Update anchor work. Macdonald's tone was the one Jost grew up with in high school. He also names Tina Fey as an influence.

We have one semi-small complaint about Fey—a semi-small complaint derived from her feature film, Mean Girls. But in our view, she has a very level of wit. 

(For ourselves, the two most impressive sets we ever saw were both performed by Paula Poundstone. They're tied with the set we saw Dana Carey perform in San Francisco in the summer of '85. That was the original Church Lady comedy club set, which carried a thoroughly different punch from the way it was recreated for SNL after Carvey arrived there.)

We thought Jost was good in a very challenging assignment. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, the New York Times offered this (perfectly reasonable) retrospective about the late Kenny DeForest, a little-known but highly regarded comedian who recently died very young:

What’s So Funny About a Dead Comedian?
Kenny DeForest was beloved among his fellow stand-ups. After his sudden death, they came together to grieve—and to confront comedy’s eternal question: Too soon?

As we noted over the weekend, the Times decided at some point to treat stand-up as an art form. That article approaches stand-up as a cultural phenomenon and as a lifestyle. 

We'll admit that the journalistic framework sketched by those headlines strikes us as a bit odd. That said, we'll renew our earlier request:

As the Times is presenting reports of that type, is there any reason why they can't report on the extremely strange comedy stylings which now drive a great deal of the work on the Fox News Channel?

That channel's termagant delivers jokes, every night, which are unmistakably misogyny-adjacent. Millions of people watch what he does. Should the Times be averting its gaze?

Jost was influenced by Tina Fey? Good for Colin Jost! Three cheers for Tina Fey!


CONCERNS: We say "our democracy" is our concern!

MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2024

How well do we know ourselves? "Your concerns are my concerns," the Hemingway character said.

We refer to the Mariel Hemingway character in the 1979 feature film, Manhattan. According to the leading authority on the topic, "the film received critical acclaim," though it didn't match the Best Picture Oscar win of its immediate predecessor.

At age 18, Hemingway was nominated for the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress. In the face of some unusual subject matter, Manhattan was also nominated for Best Original Screenplay.

"Your concerns are my concerns," the Hemingway character tells her boyfriend near the end of the film Culturally, there was an element of strangeness involved? The authority explains:

Manhattan (1979 film)

[...]

The film opens with a montage of images of Manhattan and other parts of New York City accompanied by George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, with Isaac Davis narrating drafts of an introduction to a book about a man who loves the city. 

Isaac is a twice-divorced, 42-year-old television comedy writer who quits his boring job. He is dating Tracy, a 17-year-old girl attending the Dalton School. 

Say what? The boyfriend was 42 years old. He was basically living with the largely unparented Hemingway character, who was still a senior in prep school. 

So it sometimes went in 1970s film. It was an era in which Brooke Shields, then age 11, appeared nude in one scene in Pretty Baby (1978), which we regard as a searching film about traditional gender roles.

We don't recall the extent to which the relationship in Manhattan produced critical cultural comment. We don't recall whether it produced any such commentary at all.

As noted, Manhattan was widely praised by major critics, largely for an array of fairly obvious reasons. The New York Film Critics Circle gave its director their award for best director of the year.

"Your concerns are my concerns," the Hemingway says to her boyfriend, in a truly beautiful line reading. It was never entirely clear what those concerns really were. 

So too for us who live in Blue America at this parlous point in time. What are our concerns at this time? But also, and very important:

Just how well do we understand ourselves? Favorable self-portraits to the side, just how well do we understand the true nature of our concerns?

Yesterday, a gruesome set of polling data emerged. All such data are, of course, subject to various forms of error. Also, these new numbers emerge as a bit of an outlier.

That said, these new statistics from CNN have Candidate Trump leading Candidate Biden by six points nationwide—49-43 percent. Those numbers could be substantially wrong—or they could be basically accurate, if only at this point in time.

Those numbers could be substantially accurate! That said, what sorts of concerns could be driving such figures? 

CNN asked! According to CNN's polling director, 65% of registered voters called the economy extremely important to their vote for president. 

No other issue scored that high. Headline included, CNN's report adds this:

Considering other issue priorities for the upcoming election, 58% of voters call protecting democracy an extremely important issue, the only other issue tested that a majority considers central to their choice. 

Nearly half call immigration, crime and gun policy deeply important (48% each), with health care (43%), abortion (42%) and nominations to the US Supreme Court (39%) each deeply important to about 4 in 10 voters. At the lower end of the scale, just 33% consider foreign policy that important, 27% climate change, 26% the war between Israel and Hamas, and 24% student loans.

There remain sharp partisan differences in which issues are most critical to choosing a president. Among Democratic-aligned voters, protecting democracy (67%), abortion (54%), the economy (52%), gun policy (51%) and health care (49%) all rank as key for about half or more, while on the GOP-aligned side, it’s the economy (79%), immigration (71%), crime (65%) and then democracy (54%).

Foreign affairs and climate change, good-bye! On the brighter side, a majority of respondents in each major party called "protecting democracy" a major issue. 

But what did respondents have in mind when they chose that as a point of concern? We were struck by this additional observation:

But the poll finds that Biden voters and Trump voters largely just don’t understand each other. Among those who do not currently support Biden, 66% say they don’t understand why anyone would support him, and 63% of those not backing Trump say they can’t understand why anyone would support him.

Our concerns may not be their concerns! And make no mistake:

When it comes to "protecting democracy," Red America's voters are thinking of one set of possibilities. Voters in our own Bue America will typically be thinking of something different.

According to the CNN survey, Biden voters and Trump voters "largely don't understand each other." This week, we'll be exploring a different question:

How well do we voters in Blue America understand ourselves? How well do we understand our own stated concerns?

Over and over, again and again, our thought leader say that their major concern involves the possibility that we will lose our democracy if Donald Trump wins—that this could be our last election.

But what are we eager to be talking about as we conduct our sacred elections? As with other human groups, we're inclined to paint a lofty portrait of our concerns, but when the rubber meets the road, what kinds of tracks are we leaving?

Did Donald J. Trump commit a crime with respect to his alleged sex life?

For ourselves, we don't especially care about that. That said:

Dating to the dawn of time, we humans have frequently displayed a tendency to be concerned with little or nothing else.

As a matter of basic anthropology, what exactly are our concerns? Has anything changed through the ages?

Day after day, we portray our concerns. How well do we know ourselves?

Tomorrow: Late Bronze Age election