The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

The Flynn Pardon Is The Right Thing To Do + Mishandling Russia

So, Michael Flynn has been pardoned by Trump. His crime was lying to the FBI about talking to the Russians before Trump was inaugurated.

Even a man like Trump can do the right thing occasionally, usually for the wrong reasons. It is entirely reasonable and routine for a President-elect’s advisors to talk to foreign governments. Flynn asked the Russians to not retaliate against the US, because Trump did not intend to let the sanctions for Russian election interference stand, once he was President.

This is not a crime. It was prosecuted as one under the Logan act, which has never been used for this purpose. Plenty of other politicians have done this, indeed, as Greenwald points out, Biden is doing so right now.

Next, lying to the FBI about something which is not a crime, should not be a crime. (Honestly, just never talk to the FBI or cops if you aren’t forced to. Ever. For any reason. Remember, they can lie to you.)

You really don’t want it to be the case that you have to tell the truth to any group of police, just because they ask.

There are a great number of tragedies in US foreign affairs under Trump, though less tragic than under Obama or Bush Jr (no Libya, no Iraq). One of the greatest is that, contrary to what you constantly hear, he in fact made US/Russia relations even worse, slamming the Russians with more and more sanctions and withdrawing from nuclear weapon treaties. This is the actual fact, for someone supposedly a Russian “asset” Trump sure acts awfully strange.

“He’s their asset,” I yell, as he kicks them repeatedly in the ribs.


(It’s my annual fundraiser (and going slower than normal this year.) If you value my writing and can afford to, please consider donating.)


The Russians likely had an influence project in the 2016 election, it was minor, and only “cost” Clinton the election in the sense that everything did. They have a smaller economy than California and one-third the population of the EU. Yes, they punch above their weight militarily, but the real threat is just that they still have a lot of nukes. The Russians are only a threat to the West if they are pushed into a corner.

Further, in raw geopolitical terms, what has happened over the past 30 years is that they went from wanting to be Westerners to being China’s key strategic partner. They will be at the core of China’s new alliance, providing muscle and resources.

Acting as if Russia is the USSR is deranged. They aren’t nearly that powerful. Acting as if they are some third world country one can push around is also deranged: they aren’t that weak, they’re still a continental power with high tech and nukes, and they have options like allying with China.

Imagine the geopolitical situation if Russia was a firm western ally. Rather different, isn’t it?

It is probably as well they aren’t, simply because there needs to be a counterbalance to the West. Since the fall of the USSR America and its allies have proved that absolute power in the hands of a sole-superpower will be abused, over and over again. The cold war sucked, but when the USSR was around, it put some limits on Western bullying, only because there were other options.

The China/Russia axis (which will wind up including much of Africa) will provide that alternative again.

In the broader sense, this is a pity, but when Americans “won” the Cold War they decided it meant they were victorious for all time, it was, in Francis Fukuyama’s utterly foolish phrase “The End of History”.

History never ends, imperial arrogance always leads to horrible behavior and stupid mistakes, and here we are, staring down a new cold war.

One of the only smart things Trump appeared serious about at the start was having good relations with Russia. That it didn’t happen is one the bad things about the Trump administration, not one of the good things.

As for Flynn, he had every right to do what he did, and, again, a free standing lie to cops should not be a crime. Hatred of Trump or Russia is not a good reason to normalize anti-civil liberties behaviour or apply a double standard to something like a President-elect’s people talking to foreign countries.

If it is, I look forward to Biden apparatchniks being charged with the same crime.

No?

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57 Comments

  1. ttu595

    There are a great number of tragedies in US foreign affairs under Trump, though less tragic than under Obama or Bush Jr (no Libya, no Iraq).

    Essay question: Which is worse? Igniting or reigniting regional conflicts as crap proxies or because we can, or a small hurricane of nasty, mean, spiteful and flat-out stupid gestures? Show your metrics.

    PS IIRC it isn\’t a crime to lie to cops, per se-and they get to lie to you too, so there. But it may be a crime to lie to the FBI in the course of an investigation. (Like most of those who comment my pixels are only tangentially related to the actual post.)

  2. mago

    Pardon Assange and really kick em in the balls.

  3. Thomas B Golladay

    PA vote certification blocked by a Federal Judge: https://thepostmillennial.com/breaking-pa-election-certification-process-blocked-by-judge/

    With Arizona’s blocked by the Governor, just one more state blocking or flipping means Biden doesn’t get 270 and 12th Amendment kicks in.

    Likely to be Nevada as one local race is getting thrown out, problem is those ballots had the Presidential Race on them and Trump is arguing if they are thrown out, he wins, and legally he is right. Whether the Nevada Governor or State Congress agrees is another matter as Nevada Canvassing Board certified yesterday.

  4. nihil obstet

    The U.S. is close to having a system of secret law, in that laws never before enforced are dredged up to persecute the judges’ idea of a bad actor. So they find corruption legal as long as the “quid pro quo” is never recited in the exact format they demand for themselves and their friends, and communication is illegal from members of the other tribe.

  5. bruce wilder

    “Hatred of Trump or Russia is not a good reason to . . . apply a double standard . . .”

    Partisanship applies double-standards in the absence of genuine principles.

    That was the tragedy of the Obama Presidency: that bad results from Bush II engendered a general consensus in favor of reversing course from the Bush Administration, resulting in two successive wave elections that gave the Democrats the power of the Congress and the Executive and then . . . crickets.

    Policy and consequences ceased to matter to either party, the elites of both Parties inert and deaf to the views and concerns of ordinary people or, generally, the interests of the country. Hillary Clinton went into 2016 completely insensitive to the consequences of the previous 25 years of policy choice. Politics was no longer about taking care of the country or making prudent and humane choices for the state.

    Trying to prove that Trump colluded with Russia to win election was a form of psychotic delusion. “Clueless” hardly covers it. Biden had his 78th birthday the other day. Very few that old would be capable of carrying out the duties of the office and Biden is certainly not one of those few, and people who gave him the nomination cannot possibly have thought he could do the job. That kind of cynical disregard for the importance of the office seems to me to simply be a continuation of the recklessness that has typified governance and politics since roughly 1990.

    Invading Iraq on a false premise was completely reprehensible on principle and we let it go. Failing to prosecute rampant financial fraud at the root of the 2007-8 GFC was evil and stupid. Failing to reverse the ill-conceived war on terror, end by prosecution official torture and murder — well that was the end of principle in American politics. Clinton circumventing campaign finance law (well, really she violated the law, but since there is no possibility of prosecution, her scheme becomes circumvention) was just a lame coda, just as Obama ignoring his responsibility for declining life expectancy was. (Remember when we thought Reagan’s reluctance to acknowledge AIDS was a scandal of irresponsibility?)

    There are no genuine principles in play in American politics, at least insofar as mainstream political media are concerned.

  6. Hugh

    I disagree. For the last 46 years since the pardon of Nixon, no President and far too few federal officials have gone to prison for their crimes. If more had, things might be better than they are. At the least, they would know that actions have consequences, not just for us rubes but for them as well.

    You can get money from a bank by taking out a loan, or robbing it. One’s legal, the other isn’t. Trump or Flynn could have given a public speech saying he wanted to roll back Russian sanctions. That wasn’t illegal. But Flynn getting on the phone as a private citizen for a quid pro quo conversation with Kislyak was. I do not agree with the Trump let’s erase all lines view that’s it’s all OK if you can get away with it. There are strong reasons, unless you love chaos, why we have one government at a time. Nobody forced Flynn to talk to the FBI. Nobody forced him to lie. He did so because he was arrogant and thought he could get away with it. Nor did anyone force Flynn to illegally act as a paid unregistered agent of the Turkish dictatorship. Again it is a recipe for chaos this idea that you can lie to the FBI or any other investigative body –if you want to. Nor is illegality of lying to a federal agent theoretical. It is 18 US Code § 1001.

    I would also point out again that a pardon is not an exoneration. Accepting a pardon is an admission of guilt for the pardoned crime. As Chief Justice John Marshall wrote, “A pardon is an act of grace, proceeding from the power entrusted with the execution of the laws, which exempts the individual, on whom it is bestowed, from the punishment the law inflicts for a crime he has committed.”

    Although it is unlikely in the Obama/Biden let’s look forward not back Administration, Flynn could be forced to testify under oath since he has no 5th Amendment protection since he as already been pardoned. Also pardons do not extend to future acts. So if Flynn lied in his testimony he could be prosecuted for perjury.

  7. Zachary Smith

    I think I agree with almost everything in this little essay. Though I know little about Flynn, it’s my opinion he was actively pursued by the FBI, and probably unjustly. Talking to the FBI without the presence of both a lawyer and your own tape recorder is a really dumb thing to do.

    They have a smaller economy than California and one-third the population of the EU.

    I can’t really dispute this, but it sure makes me uncomfortable. An internet search suggests a person can substitute Texas, Spain, or Italy in the “smaller economy than” role. Mostly it just doesn’t seem reasonable. A search did turn up this at what appears to be a Russia-friendly site:

    Russia VS America: Real Income Comparison

    To compare the salaries you must do a series of adjustments. First step is to determine what is the net salary after taxes. In Chicago, pay-roll taxes charged to the worker would amount to 25% for the above mentioned salary (federal and state personal income taxes plus FICA, i.e. social security and medical charges to the worker). In Russia the corresponding taxes amount to 13%. (13% is the flat personal income tax and there are no personal taxes on social security). Further, we have netted the average health care costs from the salary, which in the US would amount to $11,600 while in Russia with universal healthcare they would be zero. We also considered paid vacation and holidays, which were imputed as 7 days for Chicago and 22 for Russia. (In reality the difference could be bigger in Russia’s favor, as much – and a growing number – of the population does not get paid vacation in the US).

    Finally, I don’t really trust GDP numbers. Does a bunch of Wall Street computers selling securities to each other really equal “wealth”. I’m inclined to doubt it.

    https://www.awaragroup.com/blog/russia-vs-america-real-income-comparison/

  8. Ché Pasa

    Whether lying to the FBI should be a crime is a matter for legislation. For now, it is a crime, one I’m sure Flynn knew he was committing, and as Hugh points out, his pardon does not exonerate him. As for Logan Act violations, it should have been repealed long ago. It wasn’t. Too useful, I guess, as a cudgel over the heads of the recalcitrant.

    On the other hand, there is such a thing as prosecutorial discretion — so not everyone who lies to the FBI or violates the Logan Act is necessarily going to be prosecuted and convicted/plead out. Overcharghing, politically tainted prosecutions, and entrapment are constant within our criminal justice system top to bottom and many, many prisoners are serving time for crimes they didn’t commit. Flynn did commit the crime he pled guilty to.

    So long as he’s president, Trump can pardon anyone he wants, including apparently himself. The powers that be knew that from the outset of his regime, and so far as I can tell, they were/are fine with it.

    So let the pardons flow.

  9. Ian Welsh

    The moment you decide that something should be a crime just because power says it is, rather than because it is just, you’ve no longer got much of morality.

  10. Zachary Smith

    This essay got me thinking about pardons, and from there my thoughts moved to this question:

    Can a president sell pardons?

    A search turned up nothing definite. Does anybody know? As I recall from my history reading, the Vatican once sold pardons called “Indulgences”.

    Trump is now working for himself – for the money. Prolonging all the fuss about the Stolen Election is reportedly netting him about $10 million bucks every day from his gullible “base”.

    A new post at the MOA site has this title: “Israel Is (Again) Pushing For War On Iran”

    A post there states this opinion:

    In fact, war with Iran is the only thing that Trump hasn’t yet delivered to Israel/Netanyahu. The Trump Administration has already: moved the US embassy to Jerusalem; declared Golan Heights to be Israel territory; practically handed the West Bank to Israel, withdrawn humanitarian assistance from the Palestinians; continued to work on toppling Assad; declared that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards a terrorist organization; assassinated Gen. Soleimani; and pressured Persian Gulf monarchies to normalize relations with Israel.

    If the price is right, I can imagine Trump doing this. Other comments there object this would mess up his chances at 2024, but I’m with his niece on that one – there is no chance he’ll do more than milk that possibility for money. One loss is all his fragile ego can stand. Smashing Iran might be extremely profitable, for it is something the Apartheid state wants very badly.

    So as his Presidency winds down, what else can he legally do to feather his nest?

    https://www.moonofalabama.org/2020/11/israel-is-again-pushing-for-an-attack-on-iran.html?cid=6a00d8341c640e53ef026be427033b200d#comment-6a00d8341c640e53ef026be427033b200d

  11. Ché Pasa

    Sad to say, our governments are neither particularly moral nor just. It is the nature of the beast. It’s part of why we must always be fighting those governments for justice and some sense of moral purpose. It’s never-ending.

    There are too many cases more egregious than Flynn’s.

  12. Hugh

    “you’ve no longer got much of morality”

    And if everyone gets to decide which laws they want to obey, then you won’t have a society, or a functioning government, or laws, or morality.

    Morality is about how to act in society, an idea that goes back as far as Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics. If you’re alone on a desert island, morality doesn’t exist because the only person you can affect is yourself.

    I don’t get treating Flynn like some innocent waif when he was just another Washington player running scams. We’re supposed to keep the government from ever having reliable information and let anyone lie to it and supply it would false information because otherwise that would inconvenience carnies like Flynn. Strange priorities.

  13. BlizzardOfOzzz

    Flynn didn’t exactly cover himself in glory — actually he brought most of his problems on himself, first by pleading guilty when he thought he was innocent (cowardly) and also lying to Pence (why he got fired). But “lying to the FBI”? What a joke. The FBI doesn’t even record the interview, but their agent writes notes after the fact, and then *other FBI employees can edit the notes* (this happened) — then they accuse you of lying based on their doctored notes. When Trump’s DOJ went to drop the case on that basis, the judge refused, effectively appointing himself prosecutor, and had been stalling for months as of the pardon. A total farce all around — a pardon was the obvious way to put it out of its misery.

  14. Ten Bears

    The traitor pled guilty. He did it.

    Fascinating, Ian, just … fascinating.

  15. Hugh

    Trump’s DOJ would be that political POS Bill Barr. And Flynn pled guilty twice to what BOO implies were evidenceless charges.

  16. Hugh

    Meanwhile it’s being reported that Biden will appoint Brian Deese an executive at Blackrock as his top economics advisor at the White House. As they say, what could go wrong?

  17. Ché Pasa

    As for the Russia Thing, I never put much stock in it, though the claim that it was entirely fabricated is simply wrong.

    It was an outgrowth of the ill-advised reanimation of the Red Scares of previous eras. Who came up with this stupid idea, I don’t know, but for reasons that have never been clear, the notion of Russia today as the equivalent “enemy” as the Soviet Union and Putin as some sort of Stalinesque figure to be feared and loathed took hold in the internationalist and neo-imperialist factions of the foreign policy establishment, and we were off to the races. This happened way before the Trump campaign. And it sucked in dozens if not hundreds of agents in numerous departments. Frankly, it was crazy.

    It’s yet another form of scapegoating as distraction. Flynn and Trump and a whole bunch of others got caught up in it, and the not-so-bright take anti-Soviet… er… Russia propaganda as some kind of gospel. Anti-communist drums beat constantly on all sides of the political spectrum. It’s nonsense. It’s a distraction.

    That Flynn was oblivious or thought he could ignore the reality of the imaginary Soviet Threat is remarkable, to say the least. Perhaps he was persuaded the Trump was God and His desire would override anything else. I don’t know. Whatever the case, he was engaged in risky business in his contacts with the Russian state apparatus. As were numerous other Trump loyalists.

    He should have known. I’m pretty certain he did. If he’d been smart, he could have kept these contacts at arm’s length but no. He’s not too bright, is he?

    Russia’s interest and involvement in the 2016 election was real enough, as was the interest and involvement of numerous other nations (including Oh, Canada and several snotty Middle Eastern countries), but it did not lead directly to the election of Trump or the failure of the Clinton campaign. It could not have done so. So far as I know, the Clinton campaign never claimed Russia was responsible for Trump’s election. They claimed it was a factor in it. Yes, it was, but not even remotely the deciding factor. That was no doubt she herself. But I digress.

    Back to the question of whether lying to the FBI “should be” a criminal offense. In some people’s eyes — not Ian’s I’m sure — the answer depends on your status and political persuasion. If you’re a high-status individual with popular political backing, say like Flynn, then no, lying to the Lying FBI trying to entrap you should not be a crime (though it is.) If you’re a low status con man or high status of the wrong political persuasion, then absolutely lying to the FBI should be criminal. See how that works?

    As a practical matter, there is no moral absolute about lying, as society functions or doesn’t based on whole categories of acceptable and unacceptable lies, who tells them, when and why. The absurdity of the FBI claiming some kind of moral absolute high ground was apparent generations ago during the Hoover era. Yet here we are facing the same hypocritical demands from a falsely “moral” agency supported by criminal law.

  18. Plague Species

    In the broader sense, this is a pity, but when Americans “won” the Cold War they decided it meant they were victorious for all time, it was, in Francis Fukuyama’s utterly foolish phrase “The End of History”.

    Most “Americans” just went about their lives as they always did. It wasn’t like the end of WWII. It was much more abstract than that. For the Insiders, it was another matter entirely. They quickly got the blackboard out and started strategizing about what would take the place of the Cold War. There was suddenly an agitant void. What would or should fill that vacuum? Enter the War on Terror.

    There is not one America, but many. There is no such thing as a USian or an American. Citizens of the United States are a diverse lot, a consortium or amalgamation of many different misconceptions and delusional perspectives. It’s a fool’s errand to label citizens of the United States with a broad brush and indict them all accordingly for the sins of the wealthy elite.

    Any way, yeah, Flynn lied to liars. Trump fired him, if you recollect, for Flynn’s lying which is rather ironic considering Trump is the Liar In Chief. They’re ALL scumbags, Flynn included. Biden & Crew, Trump & Crew, Flynn, the alphabet agencies to include the FBI. ALL of them are guilty as charged. Trump did not do the right thing. They’re ALL lying crooks and they ALL belong behind bars. That should ALWAYS be our stance and it doesn’t matter who puts them behind bars so long as they are behind bars or dead. Sure, it should ultimately be US who does it, but for now, any proxy who does it will have to suffice.

    Speaking of pardons, Biden’s pick for the head of the DHS, Alejandro Mayorkas, the fascist Batista Cuban, lobbied Bill Clinton on behalf of Carlos Vignali’s father, Horacio the scumbag, to have Carlos pardoned. Clinton didn’t pardon him but did commute his sentence. Carlos is now living the High Life. A high level drug-dealing scumbag who no doubt murdered many people along the way. All the while poor black folks were being locked up in droves for minor drug offenses as a result of Clinton’s crime bill that Biden wholeheartedly supported and cheerleaded. Guess who else lobbied for Vignali’s pardon? The Roman Catholic Cardinal, Roger M. Mahoney. Catholicism — the religion of pedophiles a drug dealers.

    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-feb-19-mn-27370-story.html

    In the first formal explanation of the matter, the chief of staff to former President Clinton said Sunday that convicted drug dealer Carlos Vignali was released from prison because of intervention by a “broad range” of influential Los Angeles community leaders–singling out U.S. Atty. Alejandro N. Mayorkas and Roman Catholic Cardinal Roger M. Mahony.

    And Clinton, while not directly defending his commutation for the son of Horacio Vignali, a wealthy Los Angeles political contributor, said he was disturbed generally over lengthy sentences for first-time drug offenders. “I felt that they had served long enough.”

    Also Sunday, three Republican attorneys Clinton claimed had “reviewed and advocated” a presidential pardon for fugitive financier Marc Rich sharply denied the former president’s statement. Later, a former spokesman for Clinton said he had meant to imply only that the attorneys had reviewed the case, and not the merits of the pardon itself.

    Presidents should be stripped of this pardoning power. It’s preposterous they can do this. It’s become a mockery of any semblance of justice.

  19. Plague Species

    So many important well-connected people were so concerned about the poor privileged thug Carlos Vignali. Here’s another.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/whos-hugh/

    In 1995, Rodham was invited to join the Castano group, a team of attorneys pursuing a federal class-action suit. When that suit fell through in 1996, the group allied itself with several state attorneys general and their suits against tobacco companies. It was during this time that the lawyers met several times with deputy White House counsel Bruce Lindsey. (Lindsey, by the way, is who Rodham reportedly lobbied about the Carlos Vignali prison commutation case.)

    Critics charged that Rodham was underqualified to join the lawyers’ group and was only invited because of his White House ties. Republicans attacked him on the floor of the Senate for his role, his connections to Clinton and his potential financial windfall from a settlement.

    They’re ALL crime families, are they not? It’s all about self-dealing and it transcends political parties. It’s a mandatory prerequisite to political power, in fact, or to power period, political or otherwise. Thou must self-deal is one of the holy commandments of their perverse religion.

  20. Stirling S Newberry

    If you are worried about Flynn, we need to speak about “priorities.” Get the worst, punish them, everyone else reports to work, with no consequences.

  21. Plague Species

    Everyone, and I mean everyone, involved in Vignali’s commutation and who covered for Horacio, should be executed and that includes Hugh Rodham and Bill & Hillary Clinton. Think how egregiously malevolent this is considering Clinton’s harsh, nay brutal, crime bill. This is as heinous as anything the Trump Crime Family has done, and it’s just the tip of the iceberg.

    This is an excellent article. True investigative reporting. A rare find these days.

    https://www.laweekly.com/las-underground-power-broker/

    Father Vignali’s friends in politics — who wrote letters on Carlos Vignali’s behalf — have backed away from him. Pardongate, it seems, left too much of a stigma for its survivors to handle. After all, Congressman Xavier Becerra still holds office. So does Supervisor Gloria Molina. Former Councilman Richard Alatorre, a recovering cocaine addict once banished from City Hall by a graft conviction, has been reborn as a consultant. Former Councilman Mike Hernandez, who also admitted to abusing coke, found new life as a deputy to council members Bernard Parks and Jan Perry. Former state Senator Richard Polanco retired from politics amid scandal talk but as a consultant can be expected to exert influence at City Hall. Mayoral candidate Bob Hertzberg could play a role in Villaraigosa’s administration. Cardinal Roger Mahony is still cardinal. And while former U.S. Attorney Alejandro Mayorkas resigned in shame after lobbying for the younger Vignali’s release from prison, Sheriff Baca is up for re-election next year. With too much to lose, current and former officials avoid questions and act as if the Vignalis are irrelevant.

    The two Minnesota officers at the center of the Vignali case remain bewildered by the media’s portrayal of the father as a lovable advocate for his son’s freedom. Only after Pardongate was over did the White House “inadvertently” produce DEA documents that revealed startling allegations about Horacio Vignali. The allegations flashed on the L.A. Times’ front page for a day but never gained traction. Adams and Wehr still have trouble swallowing the image of Vignalis’ money and charm being enough to move elected officials, including the county’s top law enforcer and the region’s top federal prosecutor, to extraordinary and inappropriate lengths. Their police sense is offended.

    They are not alone. Current and former federal prosecutors and a federal judge in Minneapolis suggest something else was going on — perhaps something more consistent with the give and take of big-time drug enforcement. Having shared their unvarnished opinions with their counterparts in Los Angeles and talked to reporters at the Times to no avail, they are astonished at the city’s ability to avoid airing its dirty laundry.

    I hope this is not too Q-Anonish for some people’s tastes.

  22. Plague Species

    If I was a political cartoonist, the perfect cartoon right now would be Trump and all his “baggage” being extracted from the White House via a crane while blacks and lgbt and Hollywood gleefully and dutifully move Biden’s “baggage” into the White House.

  23. bruce wilder

    “What really happened” is buried under a mountain of tailings left from mining the fool’s gold of Russiagate.

    It is a case of weaponized narratives spun up out of a near total disregard of factual or moral truth. The manipulation of public opinion in an expedient way — a “means” — becomes its own “end” and no one looks back. The quality of public deliberation is completely lost in this way of conducting the political discourse.

    As Ian points out, continued hostility to Russia, as if it were the Soviet Union, is unrealistic and unwise foreign policy. But, that is never considered. David “axis of evil” Frum asserts baldly from Twitter and the pages of Mrs Steve Jobs’ Atlantic that Russia made Trump President and Trump is pardoning Flynn to reward Flynn for concealing that Truth.

    Once you are lost in this sea of agnatology — and that is what these processes create: an unfathomable depth of indeterminant and conflicting assertions with no hard foundation of undisputable fact visible — you cannot possibly sort it out with confidence. An honest person does not want to sacrifice brain cells contending with manipulative disinformation and conflicting speculative, counterfactual interpretations of imaginaries and looks for a trustworthy narrator and finds . . . David Frum or Rachel Maddow or Sean Hannity or the self-impressed worthies of the New York Times or Washington Post. Not one of whom is the least bit trustworthy. So, Google or Facebook or Twitter is going to “help” by making sure that the lies of the great and good (not!) are featured and the marginalized witnesses remain marginalized and the truth — if it is out there — never goes viral except possibly as an incredible conspiracy theory. (Does Hillary enjoy chopped baby on her pizza? Prove she doesn’t! Meanwhile ignore her banal amoral corruption to assert she was the lesser-evil messiah who would have saved us with her “qualifications”.)

  24. Ché Pasa

    The Clintons face the guillotine after their paymasters. Priorities, Plague, priorities.

  25. bruce wilder

    Flynn was, in the original contretemps over his contacts with the Russian ambassador, caught in the meat grinder of contested narrative construction.

    The FBI was interviewing him for the sole purpose of entrapping him and they succeeded. They did not in their interview with him ask him a single question about his conversation with Kislyak with the purpose of learning a fact they did not already know. That Kislyak’s communication with Moscow and his interview with Flynn were recorded was disclosed with strangely little concern about sources and methods.

    Elsewhere Pence had been manipulated into asserting that no substantive communications with the Russians had taken place, as Obama imposed sanctions for the alleged election interference and other sins. Sessions, not the brightest bulb, was manipulated into asserting he had never met the Russian ambassador and MSNBC bobbleheads confidently asserted that it was very strange for incoming Administration officials to encounter ambassadors.

  26. marku52

    Selling pardons? Too late. Bill Clinton already did it, pardoning Marc Rich in exchange for political contributions.

    That’s the great thing about American corruption, it’s not like you have to slip the gas guy a 20 to get your gas turned on. It’s massive and it is right out in the open….

    http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1862257_1862325_1862324,00.html

  27. Eric in Kansas

    Thanks for the conversation, all.

    I just had a terrible thought:

    Pence 2024.

    I fully agree with whoever said that Trump was done.
    But Pence could easily be that more disciplined evil.

  28. Hugh

    The 2016 election was determined by the Gore thing, not the Russia thing. That is the Democratic party hierarchy selects for us the worse candidate and campaigner they can find, they proceed to try to thrust this candidate down our throats and tell us TINA, and they are shocked, shocked when this does not work on us deplorables.

    80,000 or so votes was the number Clinton needed to win in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin and so win the electoral college. But even if Russian interference shifted this number of votes in the election as a whole, the chance that interference shifted these votes as needed in these three states is zero. And while Russian interference was loudly condemned, the much larger political interference of a country like Israel through AIPAC and a Sheldon Edelson is treated as normal, accepted, and nothing to see here.

    Re Russia, I don’t see why it is so hard to accept that Putin is a dictator who presides over a class of pirate oligarchs. Russia is a very big country with lots of nukes but outside of Moscow is disturbingly third world. I think the US completely botched aiding Russia in its political and economic transition from communism and the old USSR. But my view of Putin is pretty harsh. He’s a dictator, a thug, and an opportunist. He is also an incredible screwup. Strategically, he has managed to render hostile (Poland and the Baltics) or destabilize (Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia. Armenia) his entire western border. That is a huge and amazing failure. He has also racked up a long and economically damaging list of sanctions (even with Trump’s foot dragging on some of them). His one foreign policy “victory” was Syria, where for a couple of bases he tied himself to a permanently failing state which he helped to destroy but doesn’t have the wealth or resources to rebuild. Much like Trump he completely blew his response to the coronavirus. When he exits the scene, his successors are going to face a garbage dump of problems. And Russia has the same 2030 deadline on climate change as the rest of us. Siberia isn’t just melting. It’s burning up.

    As for Trump and the Russians, what was surpassing strange about the 2016 Trump campaign was that if you threw a rock at a Trump gala you were likely to hit six Russians. And no, that is not usual in American politics. Also a lot of people on Trump’s staff tended to “forget” or deny ever meeting any Russians until directly confronted with evidence that they had (“Oh, those Russians, that meeting”) Flynn and Kislyak weren’t some one-off. They fit right in. Was it stupid? Was it criminal, at least unethical? Why not both?

  29. S Brennan

    “The Russians are only a threat to the West if they are pushed into a corner” This has been largely true since Gorbachev and definitively true for the last 30 years but, we keep shoving them into the open arms of China anyway because the anti-Russian narrative suited the needs of the 3-letter agencies.

    As for Flynn,

    1] His original lawyers had a VERY LARGE CONFLICT OF INTEREST that deserves prosecution in it’s own right. The Covington attorneys were threatened by Mueller’s team with prosecution of their FARA filing, they could/should have been witnesses in the case itself and they did not disclose this to Flynn, instead they urged him to take a guilty plea to sweep their “mismanagement” of the FARA filing under the rug.

    2] The original notes from the interview did not indicate the General lied, only the notes as amended by disgraced political apparatchik Strzok did and even when altered by Strzok, the infraction was the use of law that had been used in 200 years, pretty weak tea. Indeed, when the FBI moved to clear Flynn due to a lack of ‘Derogatory Information’ texts with Lisa Page show Strzok lied to keep the investigation against Flynn open.

    3] FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe text “FUCK FLYNN AND THEN WE FUCK TRUMP” should reveal to the most clueless that this was not an investigation, it was a operation to ruthlessly eliminate opposition to the Deep-State, an operation that any Gestapo officer would be proud of.

    No, it’s the FBI that lied, that concealed evidence, that offered perjured testimony, not Flynn.

    Anyone who supports what the FBI did in the Flynn case is not a liberal, not a lefty, not a progressive. No, people who support what happened to Gen. [Ret.] Flynn are hard core fascists and should addressed correctly as an enemy of the US Constitution.
    _____________________________________

    Finally it’s worth recalling that in 2014[?] then Gen Flynn, head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, documented that the Obama Administration was funding, training and arming terrorists [in contravention to US law] to kill Syrian civilian populations in order to overthrow Assad.

    Now I know, so many here are so imbued with unquestioning Party loyalty that, like loyal Gestapo adherents, you support the funding, training and arming of terrorists [in contravention to US law] to kill civilian populations. Fine, let’s just be clear then, that is who you are and that is why you support the show-trial of Flynn. Gen. [Ret.] Flynn falls into the same category as all truth tellers and that is why he was persecuted.

  30. S Brennan

    “that had been used in 200 years”

    Should read

    that hadn’t been used in 200 years

  31. Much larger political interference of a country like Israel through AIPAC and a Sheldon Edelson is treated as normal

    Been my contention all along Putin is a pawn in a grander game but … (1 Cassandra’s grandson, nobody listens and 2) such tends to draw out crazies that make the malcontents around here look positively polite. Someone else mentioned “snotty little Middle-East countries” and that pretty much nails it: even though they’re all cousins they’ve nothing if not a three, perhaps five thousand year history of refusing to get along with each other. The Sauds, Israel, are as sophisticated at doing what we invented as the Ruskies, they’re all stirring the pot, and I’ve no doubt they’re all pawns in a grander game.

    ‘Bout a year into this I made the observation that if it were the Ruskies, then by all accounts they ran the perfect con. Pulled the perfect one over, pulling one over of course one of America’s great national pastimes. But for the mark. But for the rube.

    They only perfected what we invented.

  32. Hugh

    A point I wanted to make in all this is that Trump was not anti-Establishment. He is what I would call Establishment marginal. He never made the Establishment A or B teams, but he wanted to and resented them. So when he came to office, he started with the C team and over time went down from there to the D and now F-ers. C team guys, like Flynn, had some kooky ideas and were sufficiently tarnished to fall out of and keep them out of the top tiers of the Establishment. Like many in that first Trump group, he was about as good as Trump could expect or tolerate. This didn’t mean that Flynn wasn’t a crook and a hustler. He was.

    Trump is not loyal, pretty much the opposite. So while Flynn was Trump’s kind of hustler and crook, you have to wonder what Flynn has on Trump for Trump not to forget or turn on him. Or maybe the pardon was one way for Trump to give the finger to that part of the Establishment so triumphal over Biden’s win. In which case, can the pardon of Manafort followed by the Trump family be far behind?

  33. Ten Bears

    There’s the crux of the matter: what does Flynn have on Trump?

  34. Hugh

    Flynn as truth teller. Thanks, I needed a laugh. I guess this means we are to believe him when he pled guilty twice to lying.

  35. S Brennan

    “C team guys, like Flynn” – Hugh

    Yeah sure, General Flynn, the Directer of Defense Intelligence Agency, is dismissed is a loser…spoken by our anonymous DNC waterboy. Okay Rambo, let’s see your Service medals and campaign ribbons. Oh that’s right, you may love war but..uh…just couldn’t find the recruiting station..could you?

  36. S Brennan

    As for Flynn,

    1] His original lawyers had a VERY LARGE CONFLICT OF INTEREST that deserves prosecution in it’s own right. The Covington attorneys were threatened by Mueller’s team with prosecution of their FARA filing, they could/should have been witnesses in the case itself and they did not disclose this to Flynn, instead they urged him to take a guilty plea to sweep their “mismanagement” of the FARA filing under the rug.

    2] The original notes from the interview did not indicate the General lied, only the notes as amended by disgraced political apparatchik Strzok did and even when altered by Strzok, the infraction was the use of law that had been used in 200 years, pretty weak tea. Indeed, when the FBI moved to clear Flynn due to a lack of ‘Derogatory Information’ texts with Lisa Page show Strzok lied to keep the investigation against Flynn open.

    3] FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe text “FUCK FLYNN AND THEN WE FUCK TRUMP” should reveal to the most clueless that this was not an investigation, it was a operation to ruthlessly eliminate opposition to the Deep-State, an operation that any Gestapo officer would be proud of.

    No, it’s the FBI that lied, that concealed evidence, that offered perjured testimony, not Flynn.

  37. bruce wilder

    @Hugh — the A-team guys have not been looking good for some time now.

    That makes building a narrative on the bargain-basement quality of many of Trump’s appointments hard to sustain. Flynn does not seem any great prize it is true, but the effort to persecute him — and that is what it was, your legalisms notwithstanding — is impossible to justify.

  38. Hugh

    Bruce, the Establishment is the Establishment. It is a class and power thing. I’m not saying its either good or right, But the idea that the lower levels of a cesspool should somehow be better than the top ones because they are even kookier and more criminally inclined I don’t buy.

    SB, don’t you have a Bund meeting to go to or do the Proud Boys take Thanksgiving off?

  39. nihil obstet

    If Putin wasn’t trying to affect U.S. elections, his own people should be impeaching him. It’s part of a head of government’s duty to create the best situation for his country and its people. When there’s a hegemon like the U.S., that means most foreign governments should be working on it.

    If we want straightforward, fair elections, we need to set them up. I don’t care whether it’s Charles Koch or Benjamin Netanyahu or Vladimir Putin doing something dastardly to our elections (which are plenty dastardly on their own). Our elites insist on keeping the means of manipulating the vote and then try to make the use of those means by anyone but themselves illegal. It can’t work. It’s also wrong.

    Freedom of speech has become a special privilege of Americans rather than the human right specified in the constitution. So they say that if a Russian pays for it, it’s criminal. If a corporation pays for it it’s free speech. We are allowed to hear only what our rulers approve of.

  40. Synoptocon

    What’s the primary learning? Just this – if your lawyer sells a conspiracy theory benefiting the President hard enough, he will pardon you and no one will even notice the quid pro quo.

  41. bruce wilder

    “the idea that the lower levels of a cesspool should somehow be better than the top ones because they are even kookier and more criminally inclined I don’t buy.”

    And, I am saying the thesis that the lower levels of said cesspool are actually and objectively “kookier and more criminally inclined” is unsustainable. Kooky and criminally inclined, yes, but more??! That looks indistinguishable from falling for the better PR of the top levels.

  42. S Brennan

    @Hugh,

    As I said above to your elitist dismissal of a man who repeatedly risked his life for his nation:

    “Okay Rambo, let’s see your Service medals and campaign ribbons. Oh that’s right, you love war but..uh…just couldn’t find the recruiting station..could you?”

  43. Hugh

    Constantly reducing everything to a false equivalence is unlikely to lead to either understanding or solutions, bruce. Flynn gets a pass from you because anyone and anything that touches on Russia gets a pass from you.

  44. Hugh

    SB, in the US, there is civilian control of the military. Sorry this conflicts with your thing for military juntas. You know your beloved Führer ducked out of military service with a bogus bone spurs deferral. Your other beloved Führer did serve in WWI and that turned out so well for Germany and the world didn’t it?

    Have you ever considered looking at the world minus your hate-driven, conspiracy-filled delirium?

  45. bruce wilder

    “a false equivalence” ?!!

    No, dear Hugh — simply a plea for persistent standards reasonably related to objective fact and prudent expectation.

    The following is the kind of thing I personally try to avoid lapsing into.

    Trump is not loyal, pretty much the opposite. So while Flynn was Trump’s kind of hustler and crook, you have to wonder what Flynn has on Trump for Trump not to forget or turn on him. Or maybe the pardon was one way for Trump to give the finger to that part of the Establishment so triumphal over Biden’s win. In which case, can the pardon of Manafort followed by the Trump family be far behind?

    You probably do not see what is wrong with this “form of reasoning”, with its counterfactual speculation run rampant.

    “Putin is a dictator” does not come with much information attached. Putin is a masterful politician in an office with immense authority, in a country with a long, sordid history of authoritarian and totalitarian government. What he does to address various problems, domestic and international is of potential interest to me, but of no apparent intetest to you. That leaves little to discuss.

  46. Hugh

    The right wing has its fantasies. You have yours. Both are dead ends.

  47. Plague Species

    Putin is many things, dictator included, a politician he is not. Biden is a politician. Clinton is a politician. Obama is a politician. None of the above Americans are leaders, but they are consummate politicians parading as leaders. Putin is a leader, but not a “good” leader. Josip Broz Tito is an example of a “good” leader, and he was no politician either. Putin is no Marshal Tito. He could never fill such prominent shoes. I’d consider Castro a “good” leader, all things considered, and like Putin and Tito, Castro was no politician.

  48. someofparts

    I figure the Dems lose one or both Senate seats in Georgia. Then the Senate Rethugs block all Dem domestic policies for two years and take back the House in the mid-terms. In 2024 a Rubio/Hawley ticket beats the Harris/Mayo Pete ticket by a landslide.

  49. S Brennan

    Again Hugh I offer this reciprocation of factual information to refute your conjectural ad hominem, lies and self delusions:

    Ref; Flynn

    1] His original lawyers had a VERY LARGE CONFLICT OF INTEREST that deserves prosecution in it’s own right. The Covington attorneys were threatened by Mueller’s team with prosecution of their FARA filing, they could/should have been witnesses in the case itself and they did not disclose this to Flynn, instead they urged him to take a guilty plea to sweep their “mismanagement” of the FARA filing under the rug.

    2] The original notes from the interview did not indicate the General lied, only the notes as amended by disgraced political apparatchik Strzok did and even when altered by Strzok, the infraction was the use of law that had been used in 200 years, pretty weak tea. Indeed, when the FBI moved to clear Flynn due to a lack of ‘Derogatory Information’ texts with Lisa Page show Strzok lied to keep the investigation against Flynn open.

    3] FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe text “FUCK FLYNN AND THEN WE FUCK TRUMP” should reveal to the most clueless that this was not an investigation, it was a operation to ruthlessly eliminate opposition to the Deep-State, an operation that any Gestapo officer would be proud of.

    No, it’s the FBI that lied, that concealed evidence, that offered perjured testimony, not Flynn.

  50. Hugh

    Flynn provided his Covington and Burling lawyers bad information when they made his Foreign Agents Registration Act filings. Your castle in the clouds defense would only come into play if Flynn had innocently misinformed his lawyers. Of course, Flynn had a personal interest in asserting his misinforming his own lawyers was “innocent” and dumping the responsibility on them, and oh yes, we are supposed to believe Flynn who has pled guilty twice to lying to the FBI this time when he’s telling us he isn’t lying.

    I have no idea what you think Strzok lied about with regard to this, or if this relates to Bill Barr’s political decision to pull the plug on Flynn’s prosecution. Strzok’s wiki does state, A comprehensive review in February 2018 of Strzok’s messages by The Wall Street Journal concluded that “texts critical of Mr. Trump represent a fraction of the roughly 7,000 messages, which stretch across 384 pages and show no evidence of a conspiracy against Mr. Trump”.

    And you may not like the way McCabe expressed himself (and I was not able to verify the quote outside of right wing sources) but the legal tactic of law enforcement working its way up the food chain from lesser figures to more important ones has been around since the 1920s.

  51. bruce wilder

    Putin is many things, dictator included, a politician he is not.

    I think moral judgments are important, but moral judgments preliminary to judgment of facts and circumstances tend to obscure rather than produce insight. I have scarcely any idea what you mean by ” ‘good’ leader”, let alone why you would deny Putin the dishonor of being acknowledged a politician. Party politics plays a central part in how he has achieved, wielded and maintained power and party politics is more or less how “politician” is defined.

    I have seen Cuba and it is not as happy or well-organized a society or economy as Russia. Yugoslavia did not work out, either. I do not know if that is relevant to your idea of leadership.

    Hugh thinks Putin is “a screwup” because of the pattern of stalemate with neighbors over the fate of enclaves in places like Moldova (Russian Bessarabia, a slice of Romania reclaimed by the Soviet Union after WWII) and Georgia. The frozen conflicts all have a history going back to the Soviet Union, which often required its constituent states to grant autonomy to regions of contrasting ethnicity. They became open conflicts with the fall of the Soviet Union in the form of competing claims to independence, before Putin’s time in the highest offices. They have become issues, because of attempts by Western powers to alter the balance of power along Russia’s border and Putin has used these conflicts as points of leverage against NATO expansion. As far as I can tell, he has been fairly successful in inhibiting NATO expansion. I, personally, think NATO expansion or even continuation is foolish, and certainly I can see his point-of-view.

    As for Putin as leader of the oligarchs or their pawn, I think that mistates his relation to the oligarchs. Russia uses state-sponsored enterprises in key sectors to counter the power of the oligarches and has made an example of other oligarchs. Would that a U.S. President went after the Kochs or Google or Apple or JPMorgan Chase.

  52. Plague Species

    Exactly, bruce, Yugoslavia ultimately disintegrated after Tito’s death. He managed to maintain a highly functional socialist state on the doorstep of the Soviet Union that was independent of the Soviet Union. Western forces and alliances sought to eviscerate the amalgam that was Yugoslavia after Tito’s death, and in fact, during Tito’s tenure but Tito was able to hold them and their efforts at bay. Once Tito passed, the West broke in and exploited the old fissures and fractures to tear Yugoslavia asunder in their project to eviscerate the last vestiges of socialism remaining on the planet. It worked. Like a charm.

    We have acquaintances from Bosnia. They speak fondly of the Yugoslavia of their youth. It was a wonderful place once upon a time. They still to this day cannot fully grasp how it all went so horribly wrong so instantaneously. Literally over night they were commanded to hate one another when the previous day they were friendly neighbors. Sound familiar? Same thing is playing out in America. It appears a balkanization is under way and no doubt brought to us by the same malevolent demons who brought it to the Balkans post Tito.

    This is why I consider Tito a good leader. He managed to hold Yugoslavia together and enable it to thrive for four decades after the ravages of WWII all the while standing up to both the West and the Soviet Union. His failure is that he was too good of a leader in that he didn’t create an apparatus that could survive his passing and fill his shoes.

    Same applies to Castro. He was up against enormous odds. He effectively had to fight the Western capitalists his entire tenure. They tried every trick, dirty and clean, in the book to topple him and fail Cuba. Those tactics are what made life miserable for Cubans and yet in a number of ways, Cuba still found ways to thrive despite modern material depravation. There is no way Castro, all of that considered, could have left the fate of Cuba to a democratic process. The West would have easily exploited that process and they would have used it to gain power again and install another Batista 2.0.

  53. S Brennan

    Hugh, this comment of yours shows what an ignoramus you are:

    “Flynn provided his Covington and Burling lawyers bad information when they made his Foreign Agents Registration Act filings.” –

    If this was true, Covington and Burling lawyers would have even a greater conflict of interest. You are such a stupid git, you never show any signs of thinking ahead two steps.

    After reading that line I couldn’t even be bothered to read the rest of your 2nd rate propaganda. Your sole contribution here is to pull stuff out your ass and throw it at the wall to see if it can stick. Every time your wild accusations are disproved you simply reach behind you to throw another handful.

  54. Hugh

    “but moral judgments preliminary to judgment of facts and circumstances tend to obscure…”

    Or like bruce, deny the facts or bend and twist them into a knot until Putin becomes this great guy. This lovefest of his is just embarrassing.

  55. Hugh

    Speaking of which… Trumpers also have this problem of it’s the story, not the facts that count. If you don’t call them out on their lies, they say you can’t. If you do, they just blow up and call names. There is no possibility of debate or conversation. They are useful as illustrations of modern American fascism but otherwise really aren’t worth the bother.

  56. S Brennan

    “But to me the most glaring irony — as I pointed out — is how similar is the transition message sent by Brennan on Friday to the Iranians when compared to the one sent by Gen. Michael Flynn to the Russians during the 2016 transition after the Obama administration sanctioned Moscow. The message of both Flynn and Brennan was virtually identical: don’t over-react or excessively retaliate: a new administration will soon take power and wants to work with you, so don’t do anything rash now that could prevent that from happening.

    But the difference is that while Brennan was predictably celebrated for his message to the Iranians, with viral likes and re-tweets, Flynn was criminally investigated by Jim Comey’s FBI for his. After Comey, then the FBI Director, ordered the investigation into Flynn’s ties to Moscow closed at the start of 2017 due to lack of evidence, FBI agents deeply hostile to Trump seized on Flynn’s December, 2016, intercepted phone call with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak — when Flynn was a national security transition official just weeks away from taking over — to continue the criminal investigation on the ground that he may have violated the Logan Act by attempting to subvert current U.S. foreign policy with his message to Moscow not to overreact and instead to wait for the new administration.” – Glen Greenwald

  57. bruce wilder

    @ Plague Species, Hugh

    I have no difficulty calling Fidel Castro a dictator. He maintained himself at the center of national political authority for a long time, but more than that he shaped a polity in which political power was highly centralized in service of communist ideology and still is to a remarkable extent. It can be very hard to take initiative outside the narrow bounds set out from the center, though some things do seem to happen and a few people, at least, are able to realize large ambitions. “Castro is a dictator” is a statement, therefore, as much about the political economy and how it is structured and what it permits as it is about a charismatic individual. Everything economic one might want to do requires a permit; a farmer would need a permit to slaughter a cow. Where the attention of the center is focused, sustained and fully rationalized, things move forward, but lots of solveable problems seem to go unsolved a long time, waiting for the center to figure something out and when those problems are addressed, the results can be oddly inflexible in their standardization. For years, Cuba was short of soap. Now soap is not particularly difficult to make, but the system seemed to make it hard for anyone to get the job done. Embarassed, the government eventually contracted with an Italian firm to set up a chain of oddly modern and attractivd soap stores. It is still hard to find a decent ball point pen or proper guitar strings in a country where every third person is a well-trained musician.

    In Florida, the Batista exiles always took the attitude that the Castros were corrupt and living a high life. Can’t say, Raul ever invited me to lunch, so I cannot say how well he lived. In Cuba, people complain about the petty annoyances and, of course, their own poverty and certain bits of government stupidity are scorned. But, people think the government is earnest, not particularly corrupt.

    The hostility between the U.S. and Cuba is very real and consequential for Cuba. I do not pretend to know what the bounds of possibility there are. But, the difficulties for Cuba are in some large part due to the impositions made to realize a radical egalitarianism, quite apart from official U.S. hostility to other aspects of that ideological program.

    21st century Russia presents a very different picture. The violence that erupts from elite competition among oligarchs for property is hard to fathom. Decades of communist propaganda followed by collapse seems to have left a major deficit in concepts of business ethics and judicial integrity. “Putin is a thug” is an inaccurate label for a man trained as a lawyer and a political economy with a still seriously dysfunctional political culture. “Putin is a dictator” is not quite right for a vast country with local bases of power and an economy featuring some large-scale enterprises run by the infamous oligarchs. How Putin deals with other centers of power and who he chooses to pacify or ally with as either crony oligarchs or local political powers may be questionable. But, that he has to make such deals with, say, the Russian Orthodox or some local power undermines the “Putin is not a politician” story. Putin entrusted Chechnya to a thoroughly awful local warlord, for example, and that compromise regularly reverberates thru Russian politics as the man does terrible things to gays and the status of women as well as drains the Federal treasury, but that was also a finely calculated realpolitik deal typical of Putin’s apparent instinct to suppress hot conflicts. Chechnya was an extremely ugly situation and I cannot say the suppression of hot war and terrorism was not progress of a sort.

    In both Russia and Cuba, national politics are clearly focused on attempts to devise programs to address the country’s manifest economic problems. Cuba has a national strategy, which makes calculated compromises with its egalitarian ideology, compromises that are rapidly undermining the ideological legacy as generational change has completed. Putin talks constantly about the country’s various attempts to get itself out of the middle-income trap enveloping all of eastern Europe, develop a full complement of industrial and high-tech capabilities and generally infill its economy. The Russians are very conscious of the risks of being dependent on commodity exports, for example — that is part of common political awareness.

    I would contrast that with the U.S., where the very real problems of advanced neoliberal de-industrialization and financialization are ignored for the Trump clown show and Democrats shouting about racism and Trump.

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