7 minute read

The Anderson Files: Self-deception and hidden

EDITORIAL

Editor, Matt Cortina Senior Editor, Angela K. Evans Arts and Culture Editor, Caitlin Rockett Special Editions Editor, Michael J. Casey Adventure Editor, Emma Athena

Contributing Writers, Peter Alexander, Dave Anderson, Will Brendza, Rob Brezsny, Paul Danish, Sarah Haas, Jim Hightower, Dave Kirby, John Lehndorff, Rico Moore, Amanda Moutinho, Leland Rucker, Dan Savage, Josh Schlossberg, Alan Sculley, Ryan Syrek, Christi Turner, Betsy Welch, Tom Winter, Gary Zeidner

SALES AND MARKETING

Account Executives, Matthew Fischer, Sami Wainscott

Market Development Manager,

Kellie Robinson Advertising Coordinator, Corey Basciano Bookkeeper, Regina Campanella Mrs. Boulder Weekly, Mari Nevar

PRODUCTION

Art Director, Susan France Senior Graphic Designer, Mark Goodman Graphic Designer, Daisy Bauer

CIRCULATION TEAM

Dave Hastie, Dan Hill, George LaRoe, Jeffrey Lohrius, Elizabeth Ouslie, Rick Slama

Founder/CEO, Stewart Sallo Editor-at-Large, Joel Dyer

Cover photo, Marsha Steckling

May 21, 2020 Volume XXVII, Number 40

As Boulder County's only independently owned newspaper, Boulder Weekly is dedicated to illuminating truth, advancing justice and protecting the First Amendment through ethical, no-holds-barred journalism and thought-provoking opinion writing. Free every Thursday since 1993, the Weekly also offers the county's most comprehensive arts and entertainment coverage. Read the print version, or visit boulderweekly.com. Boulder Weekly does not accept unsolicited editorial submissions. If you're interested in writing for the paper, please send queries to: editorial@ boulderweekly.com. Any materials sent to Boulder Weekly become the property of the newspaper.

690 South Lashley Lane, Boulder, CO, 80305 p 303.494.5511 f 303.494.2585 editorial@boulderweekly.com www.boulderweekly.com

Boulder Weekly is published every Thursday. No portion may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. © 2020 Boulder Weekly, Inc., all rights reserved.

Boulder Weekly

welcomes your correspondence via email (letters@ boulderweekly.com) or the comments section of our website at www.boulderweekly.com. Preference will be given to short letters (under 300 words) that deal with recent stories or local issues, and letters may be edited for style, length and libel. Letters should include your name, address and telephone number for verification. We do not publish anonymous letters or those signed with pseudonyms. Letters become the property of Boulder Weekly and will be published on our website.

The pandemic is challenging governments around the world. However, the Trump administration’s response stands out as monumentally incompetent and corrupt. There was plenty of advance warning, and the U.S. government spends billions on disaster preparedness.

In previous health crises, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) was the most prominent voice of the federal government. Now it is sidelined while Trump confuses everybody with misinformation, lies and bullshit.

Now Trump speaks of the pandemic in the past tense and says the economy should “re-open” while public health experts express serious worries, if not alarm. The media reports both viewpoints equally. That’s a problem. Jason Linkins, deputy editor of The New Republic, notes:

“... If this pandemic were happening somewhere else — confined to a foreign country or a computer simulation — the media would likely treat the matter with factual clarity. But the moment the coronavirus hit our shores, it got subsumed within our dumb politics, and from there, into a media infrastructure that’s built on the notion that the best way to cover ‘politics’ is to retreat to a neutral point of view, disregard the idea that there are objectively correct and incorrect positions, and instead, through an absorbing interest in ‘optics’ and ‘messaging,’ Self-deception and hidden agendas during the pandemic by Dave Anderson

choose winners and losers.”

The Rev. William J. Barber II says the Trump administration is engaging in “public policy mass murder.” He is a cochair of The Poor People’s Campaign, a progressive grassroots group that is urging resistance to or noncooperation with state plans to “reopen” the economy.

The campaign is calling on Congress, the president and state governments to follow the advice of public health experts to protect the many employees who can’t work from home. They are disproportionately uninsured, low-wage laborers. Even before the pandemic, the campaign demanded that the government provide health care and paid sick leave for all.

Glenn Kirschner, a former federal prosecutor for three decades, believes that Trump will have to face a number of gross negligence suits once he leaves office. “I actually think he will see

ORDER FOR CURBSIDE PICKUP

M E NU BoulderJapango.com PHON E (303) 938 0330 All Wine, Beer & Sake is 30% Off

ORDER FOR DELIVERY Uber Eats | Door Dash | Grubhub

OPEN DAI LY 11:30AM – 8PM

• Gifts for any cook • Fun and colorful kitchenware • Specialty foods, local and imported • Gadgets, cookware, and kitchen essentials • Louisville’s one-of-a-kind kitchen shop

728 Main Street • Louisville • 720.484.6825 www.SingingCookStore.com

WE ARE STILL OPEN! Follow our Instagram for updated hours at our three open locations:

5340 Arapahoe Avenue, Boulder 1015 Pearl Street, Boulder 11232-A S. Hover Rd #400, Longmont

BEST COFFEE HOUSE COFFEE ROASTER

CUP OF COFFEE LATTE / MOCHA

charges brought in each jurisdiction in which people have died as a result of his gross negligence,” Kirschner argued in a Deconstructed podcast interview.

Trump’s lawyers argue that he has total immunity from both investigation and prosecution while he is in office. So he is fighting as hard and as nasty as he can to be re-elected. He and his cronies are embroiled in a mindboggling number of scandals, which could land them in prison.

The stench of fascism is in the air. Around the country, heavily armed militias threaten elected officials in Democratic states while Trump cheers them on. It is important to stress that they represent a tiny portion of the population. But their mobilization is coordinated by right-wing tycoons and organizations. The most powerful figure in Congress, Sen. Mitch McConnell, is furiously filling the federal judiciary with young far-right judges. Trump is determined to put federal law enforcement (like the FBI and the Justice Department) and the intelligence agencies under his personal control rather than allow them to be subject to Congressional oversight or any public pressure. He has even overturned the military’s courts-martial of war criminals.

In her 2007 best seller, The Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein described how corporate elites frequently use “the public’s disorientation following a collective shock — wars, coups, terrorist attacks, market crashes or natural disasters — to push through radical pro-corporate measures.”

She showed how University of Chicago economist Milton Friedman and other free market fundamentalists used crisis (natural and engineered) to shred the social safety net, impose austerity economics and bust labor unions. Her stories include the U.S.-supported military coup in Chile, the war in Iraq, refugee crises, market crashes and climate catastrophes.

In Capitalism and Freedom, Friedman wrote, “Only a crisis —actual or perceived — produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the right-wing is pushing its least popular policies and more hidden priorities while we are struggling to survive. The Trump administration has rolled back environmental regulations. The National Labor Relations Board suspended all union elections and is making it harder for workers to unionize and to keep the unions they have. Republicans are trying to suspend the payroll tax, which could bankrupt Social Security, providing the GOP the excuse it needs to slash or privatize it. Abortion opponents are using the pandemic to close clinics. Trump and McConnell are threatening a desperately needed stimulus package for the U.S. Postal Service.

Meanwhile, Democrats are cautious about “reopening” the economy due to public health concerns. Wendy Schiller, a political science professor at Brown University, told The Guardian that this creates a dilemma for the Democrats. She said: “Trump will run on a message of hope from now until November, and he’ll basically dare the Democrats to prove him wrong. And then he’ll say, ‘You don’t believe in America. You’re betting against America.’”

The April 13 issue of The Hill has an op-ed entitled “Could the coronavirus reelect Trump?” by Keith Naughton who is a co-founder of the consulting firm Silent Majority Strategies. It is an intriguing view from the right-wing.

Naughton notes that Trump has been criticized for being optimistic. Democrats and many in the media have “talked doom and gloom” and mused about a new Great Depression. He says: “...There is no doubt that the country is going to go into a significant recession of undetermined length and casualties will be high.

“However, the bar for ‘success’ has been set very low — not just by Trump, but primarily by the media outlets he disdains. Every end-of-theworld report depresses public expectations. Since politics is all about perception, the anti-Trump media have done the president an immeasurable service in their criticism. Trump doesn’t have to do a good job against the coronavirus — he just has to do a barely competent job to exceed expectations.”

Will a daily death count of thousands become the “new normal”? Trump will, as usual, create massive confusion, play the victim and get into nasty fights with the media, China and the World Health Organization. A new reality TV shitshow every day.

This opinion column does not necessarily reflect the views of Boulder Weekly.

This article is from: