Undead sexist cliche: women are merely support systems for their vaginas

That’s how Virginia Roberts Giuffre quotes Jeffrey Epstein’s misogny: “a woman is a life-support system for a vagina.” It’s an attitude I suspect many of the rich, influential men entering Epstein’s world of subordinate, controlled women would agree with. Probably many men beyond that, the same way they’d agree with neo-Nazi Andrew Anglin’s claim that women’s wombs belong to men.

This is patriarchy, the belief that any man outranks all women; no matter how much of a failure you are, you can always look down and see women securely under you. It’s the world of misogyny. Sexists believe (for example) that all women want to be tradwives; misogynists don’t care what they want, they’re going to force them into that role anyway. Anglin, for example, claims that as women don’t know they’ll be happiest as a submissive tradwife, men have to force them into it.

Another variation is Stephen Miller’s Katie Miller declaring that having multiple babies is biological destiny; having a womb defines women and women’s purpose in life. No, it doesn’t. The ability to have babies does not equate to an obligation or destiny to do so. Katie Miller, like so many female misogynists, is a special snowflake who has her own career, money and obviously doesn’t feel any qualms about Republicans making it ever more difficult for moms, whether it’s cutting off SNAP benefits or watching ob/gyns move out of red states.

Right-wing misogynists are increasingly open about how much they resent women who insist on being people rather than vaginal support systems. Jesse Watters of Fox News, for instance, dismissing Hilary Clinton as a woman who did a man’s job and in his opinion, badly. Though “opinion” implies he’s actually put some thought into it rather than spitting out whatever insult comes to mind.

For some in the forced-birth movement, women’s only value is, similarly, that they serve as incubators for the fetus. We know contraception reduces abortion rates; nevertheless, the Toddler Administration destroyed $10 million in contraceptives intended for USAID. Avoiding pregnancy is a sensible decision if you don’t want a baby but for Republicans it’s a sign you’re an irresponsible slut.

As they’re continuing to assert the right not to be pregnant, even after the Dobbs decision, enthusiasm for treating women who get abortions as murderers is growing among forced-birthers. It’s not something the entire movement agrees on — some disagree strongly, some merely see it as bad optics — but a lot of them would sooner see women dead than let them control their own bodies. And plenty of cops and prosecutors are already eager to prosecute women. And to cooperate with their abusers. As Jessica Valenti says at the link, it’s “the predictable outcome of living in a reproductive police state bent on surveillance and punishment.”

Women have turned themselves in for drug treatment when they learn they’re pregnant and gotten locked up instead. They’ve been arrested for being on legal prescription meds while pregnant, for drinking while pregnant (it’s legal), arrested for painting while pregnant (fumes might have hurt the baby!) and for getting shot in the belly while pregnant (she should have de-escalated the confrontation instead of putting the baby at risk!). In many cases, the victims of this persecution are POC. My apologies for not providing links, but you can find most of these examples in Undead Sexist Cliches, with footnotes.

As Jessica Valenti notes, until they can completely criminalize abortion and abortion pills, they’ll settle for little cruelties, like forcing women who have miscarriages or abortions to collect the blood and tissue and give it to a doctor. They’re also targeting websites that provide morning-after pills. And of course, harassing women. Even women with nonviable pregnancies, as noted at that last link. Georgia Republican Terry England, more than a decade ago, said it was no big deal if a woman carried a dead fetus to term — cows and pigs do it all the time! Ectopic pregnancies? Many forced birthers and doctors don’t support abortion for those either. The woman at the link lost her fertility as a result.

They’re also lying that the reason for the witch trials was to fight abortion. This fits into the speaker’s (Noleen Sedra) worldview — feminism is modern witchcraft! — but we have ample records of trials and accusations and no, that is not what the witch trials were about. She’s either ignorant or lying.

To end on an up note, sort of, here’s a great profile of an abortion clinic escort who’s not backing away despite forced-birther hatred.

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Reviews of mostly disappointing nonfiction

Walt Disney was a name to conjure with when I was a kid. The movies of the 1960s and 1970s were no classics but there were still rereleases (Snow White left me terrified of the Queen for years), the Wonderful World of Disney TV show, the comic books and the legend Disney had built up over years. Small wonder BABES IN TOMORROWLAND: Disney and the Making of the American Child, 1930-1960 by Nicholas Sammond intrigued me. Alas, like The CIA Book Club the title is clickbait; unlike that book, the content did not intrigue me and I DNFed.

Sammond’s focus isn’t a bad topic: with 20th century urbanization and the new medium of moving pictures, bringing up kids suddenly seemed harder than ever before. Would movies expose them to bad influences? Would living in the city make it easier for them to fall into vice and sin? A boom in child-rearing advice followed, and of course, never went away. Walt Disney cannily promoted himself as a safe haven: you could trust him to turn out quality, family-friendly movies that would be safe for kids. However Disney is little more than a subplot and Sammond draws unconvincing conclusions — did you know the subtext of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” in Fantasia is that if you leave your kids unsupervised, they’ll screw everything up? The child-rearing stuff wasn’t interesting to me without that.


REACTION! Chemistry in the Movies by Mark Griepp and Marjorie Mikasen seemed full of promise when I started reading and they discussed Jekyll and Hyde topics such as the recurrent use of mirrors in the film adaptations (a point I wish I’d included in Watching Jekyll and Hyde) and speculate about the makeup of Jekyll’s formula. However the movie is also wrong on one point and as it moves on to Invisible Man, The Absent-Minded Professor and more it makes many curious choices. How do you write about cocaine’s history as an anesthetic and not mention the film Edge of Sanity? Why include Back to the Future — yes, plutonium is a chemical, but needing it to power the DeLorean hardly makes this a movie about chemistry? Ultimately the creator seem more interested in real-world chemistry than the movies and I needed more of the latter.

As Paul in Let No Man Put Asunder has the ability to see Kirlian auras I thought an interlibrary loan of PICTURING AURA: A Visual Biography by Jeremy Stolow might be useful. It was, but it was also a slog to read through. Stolow’s history of efforts by mystics, Russian Senmo Kirlian and multiple other parapsychologists to visualize, photograph and explain the human aura is way too credulous about the psychics he profiles and suffused with academic jargon. Among the interesting stuff was the career of screenwriter/parapsychologist Thelma Moss, an arguments that Russians weren’t as big on psi-research as legend tells (Soviet scientists found it incompatible with Marxist ma terialism). Among the weaknesses are that Stolow identifes the paranormal nonfiction magazine Fate as science fiction, making me wonder, as with Reaction!, what errors I’m not catching.

The winner of the week was Samantha Cole’s HOW SEX CHANGED THE INTERNET AND HOW THE INTERNET CHANGED SEX: An Unexpected History. Cole shows how sex goes back to the earliest days of the Internet: a bulletin board providing AIDS information, a Playboy centerfold that became the first digitally transmitted image, sex workers discovering the Internet offered safer ways to conduct their business. Standing against all this were censors, squeamish social networks and nervous hosting companies who flinched from useful sexual information as much as they did hardcore porn. This was a good history with some interesting points (people focus on the damage deepfakes could do in politics rather than their primary use, humiliating women); there’s surprisingly little about child porn which may reflect Cole’s frustration with Protect The Children rationales from anti-sex crusaders.

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Bad guys, glaciers and Fritz Lang: movies viewed

Despite their redemption arc in The Bad Guys, the eponymous gang discover in THE BAD GUYS 2 (2025) that like so many real-world ex-cons, their felonious past makes them unemployable, which is leaving them broke. What’s the solution? Hey, if they capture the Phantom Badnit stealing items made of McGuffinite (“That name sounds made-up.”) that would prove they’re legit, right?

Of course it doesn’t work out like that. Wolf, Snake, Webs, Piranha and Shark end up blackmailed by the Bad Girls (though the movie doesn’t give the gang that name) into pulling one last job with them, stealing a space shuttle as the ultimate heist. Would it surprise you to know both sides are planning a double cross?

This works better as a sequel than I’d heard, though the continuity doesn’t quite sync with the Bad Guys Netflix series (the series shows Webs working with them in their pre-fame days; the movie has her signing on after they’re already big time). Clearly the producers are now in franchise mode so this ends with seeding for Bad Guys 3. I hope they can keep up the quality. “They’re escaping west in a hot-dog truck — probably all beef, possibly chorizo.”

I also caught the team’s Halloween special, Haunted Heist, in which they rob the haunted mansion of a legendary thief, never mind the supposed curse on his loot. This was stock holiday stuff, less effective than A Very Bad Christmas. “I’d never pose in chiaroscuro — it’s so tacky.”

TIME AND WATER (2026) is an Icelandic author’s documentary on his family life and how the glaciers his grandparents once scaled are now dying in the age of global warming, the small Ok Glacier already having Gone to Dust. Poetic, though the appeal, like many other documentaries, is primarily the Pretty Pictures. “The glacier is no longer in geologic time.”

FOUR AROUND THE WOMAN (1921) is the final film in that Early Years Fritz Lang set TYG got me for Christmas. As shady businessman Rudolfe Klein-Rogge works on some scheme, he also worries about his wife cheating on him. The woman’s former sweetheart would love it if that were true, but he too is entangled in the criminal skullduggery. At least I think that’s the case: I had trouble following the crime plot, possibly because Plushie was in loud barking mode (even with a silent film, that’s distracting). Still the mix of crime schemes and social decadence, with looks at high society and low, make this feel more like Lang’s later films than The Wandering Shadow or Harakiri did.“In this fateful hour, I have come to set you straight.”

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Not a stellar week but I didn’t collapse into a black hole either

A combination of things slowed me down this week: invoices to submit to our insurer, Trixie having a recheck exam, having the cleaners in. That means spending two to three hours shut in with the cats and Trixie to ensure the cats don’t react to strangers in the house by bolting out. It’s a possibility, particularly with Snowdrop, as he’s still skittish after 18 months as an indoor cat.

I’m also having some odd twinges in one knee. Nothing serious but I set up a PT appointment for next week. Oh, and one problem that eats away at my time — a few minutes here, a few minutes there — is that Plushie is refusing to eat his meds on the food or treats we normally give him. We have a limited range of options as eating anything with fat would trigger his pancreatitis and related diarrheal problems. It took twice as long as last week to get the drugs into him. TYG and I are both quoting that line from A Christmas Story, “Every family has a child who won’t eat.”

I got some advance work done on my two Local Reporter articles for next week. Beyond that, I only wrote 6,500 words on the redraft of Let No Man Put Asunder. That’s primarily because I hit a tough point: the chapters I worked on this week were way too talky and slow in the previous draft. I knew that; I knew what would happen once the action kicks in; I did not know what should replace the slow, talky bits. That led to a couple of hours of dithering and not writing and only sort-of thinking about writing.

Eventually I reminded myself that I had to write something so I might as well bite the bullet; if it didn’t work, I’d rewrite. I accelerated the Community of All’s attack on the city of Bluestone, cutting out a lot of the talk. I used a teleportation spell to throw Paul and Mandy into the middle of the trouble without any “what should we do?” discussion. Coupled with some other changes, I think it works much better.

That was pretty much it. I can’t tell you how good it feels to write fiction and know I’ve made at least one small step toward finishing this draft. Hopefully more steps on more fiction next week.

Oh, and New Myths is holding my story “Honey on the Grave” as a contender for one of next year’s issues. Not an acceptance but the first non-rejection I’ve had in a while.

On that note, have a great weekend.

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Wisp and Plushie, the love that is not to be

For whatever strange reason, Wisp has been flirting with Plushie lately. Rolling over and showing him the belly —

— or simply sitting close and nuzzling his face.

She still gets annoyed when he takes up my lap before she does.

Plushie doesn’t seem troubled by her interest, just baffled. Which admittedly is his response to most things.

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The depressing state of American public health when it’s run by idiots and liars

“A major flu outbreak has sickened nearly 160 troops at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas less than two months after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that U.S. troops would no longer be required to be vaccinated for the flu, defense officials said.” And since that report, the flu has spread. Who could have predicted that? Well, anyone competent, which lets out the Toddler and Hegseth.

“At HHS, disability education would fall under the oversight of an agency head, Kennedy, who has spent decades spreading disinformation about autism and villainizing autistic people.”

“PEPFAR has provided over $8 billion to South Africa since its founding under President George W. Bush. South Africa has about 8 million people living with HIV, the most in the world.” The Toddler is killing the program. On top of which “states and health organizations are waiting for $211 million in grants to grow their 988 suicide hotline capacities, $75 million to build out global disease outbreak response, $3 million to build treatment centers for opioid addiction and $95 million for programs that “improve the overall performance of the public health system.” Thank the Toddler Administration’s new grant-review system.

“Measles running rampant, public health destroyed, a trillion dollars ripped from Medicaid, inadequate physician payment, stupid immigration rules,” — why many American doctors want the AMA to stand up to Republicans.

“Republicans are calling on federal authorities to impose stringent regulations on the abortion drug mifepristone, citing the dangers posed by the drug’s largely unregulated use to Americans’ drinking water. A coalition of 15 red state attorneys general is urging the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to add mifepristone to the agency’s Contaminant Candidate List, which would likely trigger safety studies and potentially stricter regulations under the Safe Drinking Water Act.” This is a bullshit excuse for regulating mifepristone — especially coming from the party that’s otherwise buddy-buddy with all polluters.

“there have been times where I’ve dropped these and, and caused panic because, you know, need to find the drug, because you’ve just dropped a thousand dollars that might be now behind a couch or, you know, down a drain or something like that.” — a look at how one cancer-drug manufacturer staved off generic versions so they could keep selling a 28 cent pill for $1,000.

“U.S. health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is pursuing federal government access to most Americans’ medical records, in a quest to research a link between vaccines and autism — a connection the medical establishment studied for decades and flatly rejects.” Like we should trust anyone in this administration with our personal info.

“FDA leaders under President Trump are moving to abandon a decades-old policy of asking outside experts to review drug applications, a move critics say would shield the agency’s decisions from public scrutiny.”

“We believe that 35% roughly of the people that are using the Affordable Care Act are not legit because they have never filed a claim.” — RFK’s fellow crackpot Mehmet Oz.

“The Food and Drug Administration’s top vaccine and gene therapy official resigned on Tuesday after a public campaign against him led by the right-wing influencer Laura Loomer” — another person who should have zero influence on public policy.

The Administration has good goals on paper about fighting addiction but accomplishing them “will be difficult in the face of the administration’s mass layoffs of federal employees, cancellation of research and community grants, attacks on organizations and practices that serve people who use drugs, and cuts to Medicaid, the state-federal health insurance program for low-income people that is the largest payer for addiction and mental health care nationwide.

I suppose it’s no surprise the administration is also gutting HIV research.

“Officials at the Food and Drug Administration have blocked publication of several studies supporting the safety of widely used vaccines against Covid-19 and shingles” I imagine they’d like to do the same to studies that say the shingles vax can reduce the risk of dementia.

Covid vaccine has heart-health benefits too. However RFK Jr. is focused on the real threat to our health — the crimes of Dr. Fauci! Which are non-existent. And in this case some of his evidence is coming from crackpot ex-head of intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, who it now appears says whatever her cult leader tells her to. No, not the Toddler, a literal cult leader.

“The Trump administration is proposing to scrap a dozen quality measures for Medicare Advantage plans and not move forward with a Biden administration plan to reward insurers that improve the health of low-income and disabled enrollees” — I’m sure that will work as well as all the other anti-regulatory moves from Republicans over the decades.

RFK Jr. has announced a new podcast “to name the names of the forces that obstruct the paths to public health,” I imagine he won’t be admitting the Toddler and himself are prominent among such forces. Just look at what would happen if Kennedy gets his wish to eliminate vaccines. And CBS news head Bari Weiss is willing to help.

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Women on old covers

First this Lu Kimmel Sex Sells cover from 1955.

This 1929 Weird Tales cover by Hugh Rankin is another Sex Sells cover. Less sexy, though, despite the woman wearing less clothes.

On this uncredited pulp cover, the woman is only in the text. Seriously though, who thought “J. Edgar Hoover vs. Machine-Gun Kelly’s widow” was a gripping idea?

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My, this tweet about Iran didn’t age well

And the Toddler is lying that the new memorandum of understanding with Iran amounts to unconditional surrender. If it did, we’re the ones who surrendered. Giving them $300 billion which is waaay more than they got under the Obama agreement the Toddler abandoned. Something even Republicans in Congress are pointing out. Hell, the Toddler’s hinting that if it goes south, he’ll blame Vice President Vance. Ben Shapiro is happy to blame the turkey on Vance. MAGA podcaster, jackass and Kremlin sock-puppet (allegedly unwittingly) Benny Johnson thinks everyone who doesn’t support the Toddler’s decisions should shut the hell up. NYT right-wing pundit and warhawk Bret Stephens insists the Toddler could have won it, rather than admitting everything the president did was in character. Sen. Lindsay Graham insists it’s an insult to the military to say Iran came out ahead and predicts we’ll soon take the Straits of Hormuz from Iran.

The Toddler has been whining for a couple of months about Republican voters who don’t love him enough. I’m sure this will add to the burden on his snowflake fee-fees. By contrast, he has zero remorse for bombing an Iranian girls’ school and no interest in accepting responsibility. He’s much more invested in punishing the meany poopyheads who spoiled his latest precious, the reflecting pool. Unsurprisingly he’s lying that the pool’s current problems can be blamed on Obama, the media and Biden. Certainly not little baby Donny.

All that said, it’s in our interest (and our bottom line) and Iran’s to end this. But will we? At first we couldn’t even set up the initial talks. At LGM, Robert Farley said last week the obstacles to successful negotiations — including that the current memorandum of understanding only gives us two months — are probably too great. As witness that on the weekend, the Toddler was already ranting about occupying Iran or imposing tolls on the Straits (in between melting down over the reflecting pool). And committing a major diplomatic no-no, threatening Iranian envoys.

Unfortunately even the Toddler, for all his bluster about unconditional surrender, may be aware that he’s failed miserably (though he’s also declared he’s now the most powerful man in all history). And unlike normal people he never retreats to plan or lick his wounds — so what stupid thing will he do next? One possibility: take Cuba. It might be an easier win and he’d then focus on his status as the Great Conqueror and forget Iran ever happened. Or maybe he’ll go back to taking Canada to stop the (non-existent) waves of Iranian terrorists crossing the Canadian border.

One thing we opponents should do next: make him pay a political price! Criticizing his abysmal peace negotiations is not the same as being pro-war; pointing out he’s ended it badly does not make someone pro-war. Nor does ending it make him a man of peace: “Trump is in fact an unhinged bloodthirsty warmonger and anyone who says differently is lying”

Switching to another Toddler controversy, here’s an NYT report assessing the evidence Jeffrey Epstein killed himself, and concluding he did. That was my initial assumption, which changed after reading Perversions of Justice; perhaps I was right the first time. Either way, we still need to know whose names are in the Epstein files.

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Southern Discomfort: Ave Maria!

Even after setting Southern Discomfort in 1973 (as I mentioned last week) my protagonists didn’t seem to catch fire. They didn’t work for me at all.

In the very first draft (again, as I blogged about last week), my protagonist was a tough guy, marginally legal, from the Big Apple. A Southern friend from Pharisee County brought him south after Aubric McAlister’s murder to help find the killer. Several drafts later, my hero became a woman radical in the 1970s. She’d been part of an anti-war terrorist group, though strictly bombing buildings, no killing innocents. When they decided to cross that line she called the cops. That left her completely isolated — the authorities didn’t trust her, her friends on the left thought she was a traitor. Her one remaining friend, a Southerner from Pharisee, invites her south when he heads home for Aubric’s funeral. Not to help with the case but to get her somewhere nobody would know her so she could chill for a while.

I finally realized the main reason none of these characters worked. In most of the drafts they learned the secret of Pharisee — it’s run by a pair of centuries-old elves — in the first couple of chapters. Plus having a buddy to guide them into the county’s mysteries gave them someone to lean on. That reduced the pressure, at least initially. It made them too comfortable.

Second lieutenant Maria Esposito is not comfortable. You can tell from the cover.

The difference from my earlier protagonists is that she’s never comfortable, not from the first moment we see her. The incident three years ago in which she stopped Vietnam Veterans For Justice from committing a murder went horribly wrong: it turned into a firefight that wiped out everyone but her (later I changed that to add a couple more survivors). Despite trying to stop the murder, it was added to the charges against her for previous terrorist acts. She relies on a fake driver’s license, never gives her real name and tries not to attract attention, though her dark Sicilian skin and kinky hair make that hard at times. She’s almost completely isolated from the people around her — a common theme in my writing is emotionally cutoff people learning to reconnect.

Even though she’s on a Greyhound bus full of passengers, she’s effectively alone when she arrives in Pharisee. And discovers the freak torrential rains — nature is literally mourning for Aubric’s death — have stranded her there. Instead of traveling to Atlanta and vanishing into its crowds, she’s stuck in a small town … where the FBI are investigating the recent murders of Aubric and rising black politician Richard Cannon. Just the place for a federal fugitive, right? And then Olwen McAlister, grieving widow, announces she’s had a vision — the only way Aubric’s killer goes down is if Maria helps.

That would be a nightmare even if this were a mundane thriller. Then the supernatural troubles start. In this version (which went through multiple further drafts, I should note) Maria has no idea what’s happening. That makes it more terrifying and keeps ramping up the pressure. Plus she has no friendship with anyone so she has no reason to stick around. She has to spend the first night at Olwen’s — the sheriff made that very clear — but after that she figures she can skip town before the FBI notices her. When Aubric’s killer starts threatening her, Maria has even more reason to run. So she does … but as you’ll see, she doesn’t get far.

Setting things up that way led to other changes. In earlier drafts when Maria discovers there’s something monstrous threatening innocent people it inspires her to stay and fight it. The more emotionally numb Maria of the final draft isn’t so heroic. She keeps trying to run and only changes her mind when Olwen offers her something she desperately needs. Eventually Maria chooses to help for heroic reasons (“I thought I’d gotten rid of my ideals. Turns out they’re a monkey on back.”) but it’s a long slow path.

Onto the spine of her character arc I added lots of other details. Her feelings about other Italian-Americans, many of whom looked down at Sicilians. Her chain smoking. The late Grandma Sophia, a superstitious woman whose warnings about black magic sound a lot more reasonable as Pharisee gets weirder. Her experiences, good and bad, in ‘nam. While it didn’t start out that way, I ended up with Maria’s character arc becoming as compelling (I hope) as the story itself. So that’s a win.

Cover by Samantha Collins. All rights to image are mine.

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They remember back when things were rotten, and think that was the good old days

You may remember a quote from a few months back in which a business owner talked about how good it feels that in the Toddler Era he feels free to say the f-word for homosexuals and the r-word for the mentally disabled — it’s liberating!

I’m quite sure if I said he was an a-hole and a homophobic bigot — both of which appear to be true — he would be pissed off rather than celebrating my freedom not to be courteous. It’s Wilhoit’s law — they want their side free of restraint and protected from consequence but nobody outside their own camp gets the same treatment. That translates in speech to the freedom to toss off racial slurs or insult people but anyone calling them on it is shutting down free speech. Case in point, I have seen right-wing arguments over the years that because of liberal politically correct, woke, thought-policing, they can’t say the n-word! It’s the biggest example of cancel culture ever! Of course, they can say it and they do, but they’ll be criticized for it — and they think they should be able to punch down without anyone ever punching back up.

That’s part of what fuels the endless cries of voter fraud: this is their country, rightfully belonging to property-owning white Protestant men like it was when the Founders approved the Constitution; when Thomas Jefferson said all men are created equal, he didn’t mean anyone else! Their votes should count, nobody else’s.

They want us back to the 1950s (for the enlightened ones) or the 1800s (the reactionary ones) when WASP men were in charge of everything and nobody noticed or brought up bias — it was accepted that was the way it was. It was not in fact accepted and people did bring it up but the voices weren’t so loud (I made the same point back in May). In Paul Campos’ words, “For Roberts, Alito, Thomas, Kavanaugh, Gorsuch, and Barrett, and for hundreds of like-minded federal judges, America is a white supremacist country, and the Constitution is therefore a white supremacist document, and must at all times be interpreted to the extent possible — which is very considerable! — in the light of this fundamental underlying interpretive principle, which naturally includes all the other varieties of extreme cultural reaction (misogyny, money worship etc) that are integral to protecting white supremacy. Anything else is simply a theft of sovereignty from the [white] People.”

That supremacy includes the freedom to treat the “lesser” genders or races like shit.

As Paul Krugman says, the 19th century robber barons were horrible people but they felt obligated to pose as respectable members of society, keeping their bad behavior under wraps (though a lot of what we’d consider bad behavior, such as racism or abusing workers, was acceptable at the time). Now the gloves and the restraint are off. Consideration for lesser mortals? Screw ’em. Let them eat cake.

Similarly bigots and misogynists see no need to hide how much they hate people who are not them. A number of conservative Muslims showed up at the Texas GOP Convention this month. While conservatives are normally willing to ally with anyone on the right — fascists, Nazis, theocrats — it turns out they drew the line at Muslims. They had no hesitation letting their hate flag fly, telling the Muslims they weren’t Americans and couldn’t be trusted ever: even if they seem nice and law-abiding “if they get power, they’ll cut your head off as believers of Christ.” White Christian Republicans, of course, routinely shriek about violence to their enemies, death to gays, but That’s Different.

Rep. Brandon Gill (one of those shitting on James Talarico as not manly enough) then defended the convention attendees, declaring that America cannot tolerate “cultures that have very different ideas about freedom of speech, religion, separation of church and state, the dignity of women, the role of women in public life.” If I pointed out that all of this applies to the Religious Right and suggested that should affect their status in America, Gill would doubtless be screaming. And it does apply to the Religious Right, a large portion of whom think freedom of speech and religion are theirs alone, church and state should not be separated and women have no role in public life. Plus, of course, religious conservatives are the groomers they pretend they hate.

Then there’s their angry insistence that immigrants can never be real Americans like they can — not even a fourth generation American is American enough. Except of course, the Toddler of the United States is only second-generation and they like him fine. And black Americans, who’ve been here since before 1776, will never qualify. It resembles the way that Americans of a century ago set strict laws on who qualified as white or colored — a single African-American grandparent or a great-grandparent, say — but found workarounds to exempt respected white people. In one case the judge concluded that the grandparent might have had some white blood, which meant the person under consideration might be less than one-quarter black — case dismissed!

This ties in to their proposal to end birthright citizenship: “To prove you’re American, you would need to maintain—and produce on demand—an unbroken documentary chain of legitimate transmission from yourself back to some original conferring event. Every link must hold.” America will be remade in the image of the communist states we once despised, a place where anyone in authority can demand “papers, please” or we become a non-citizen (only it will be a lot more paperwork). As Mother Jones says, “the American dream is the idea that in the United States, people’s fate is determined by their own merit, not the status of their parents. But the executive order would create a caste of people who inherit a lesser status from which there could be no escape.” Except of course, anyone the powers that be approve of — this won’t be formally stated but some people simply won’t face the harsh scrutiny others do.

We can see it in the way revoking women’s right to vote has gone from the fringes to something they’ll openly discuss. Or the way they’ve gone from “no woman will be punished for getting an abortion” to pushing to prosecute them for murder. Or stop people even talking about contraception. Or “Whiskey Pete” Hegseth axing women and POC from being promoted to admiral — in his world view, giving someone like that authority to order white men around would just be wrong.

Much like this discussion of the racist British far right points out, the white supremacists have the advantage of a clear vision and a fierce commitment to achieving it. That makes them look decisive and determined which can appeal to a lot of people. As Jamelle Bouie says, we need a vision of our own, not just cleaning up the Toddler’s mess. As I said at the link, fighting for the equal rights of all Americans and gutting the power of those who hate equality might qualify. Until we can make that a reality, we must also push the white supremacist creed back to the fringes of society. Eventually, we banish it.

The founders had a cramped concept of “We, the people.” We can do better. We have to.

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