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Monbiot writes: "A bubble has finally been burst - but will we now attend to the other threats facing humanity?"

St. Paul's cathedral in London. (photo: Vianney Le Caer/REX/Shutterstock)
St. Paul's cathedral in London. (photo: Vianney Le Caer/REX/Shutterstock)


Covid-19 Is Nature's Wake-Up Call to Complacent Civilization

By George Monbiot, Guardian UK

25 March 20


A bubble has finally been burst � but will we now attend to the other threats facing humanity?

e have been living in a bubble, a bubble of false comfort and denial. In the rich nations, we have begun to believe we have transcended the material world. The wealth we�ve accumulated � often at the expense of others � has shielded us from reality. Living behind screens, passing between capsules � our houses, cars, offices and shopping malls � we persuaded ourselves that contingency had retreated, that we had reached the point all civilisations seek: insulation from natural hazards.

Now the membrane has ruptured, and we find ourselves naked and outraged, as the biology we appeared to have banished storms through our lives. The temptation, when this pandemic has passed, will be to find another bubble. We cannot afford to succumb to it. From now on, we should expose our minds to the painful realities we have denied for too long.

The planet has multiple morbidities, some of which will make this coronavirus look, by comparison, easy to treat. One above all others has come to obsess me in recent years: how will we feed ourselves? Fights over toilet paper are ugly enough: I hope we never have to witness fights over food. But it�s becoming difficult to see how we will avoid them.

A large body of evidence is beginning to accumulate showing how climate breakdown is likely to affect our food supply. Already farming in some parts of the world is being hammered by drought, floods, fire and locusts (whose resurgence in the past few weeks appears to be the result of anomalous tropical cyclones). When we call such hazards �biblical�, we mean that they are the kind of things that happened long ago, to people whose lives we can scarcely imagine. Now, with increasing frequency, they are happening to us.

In his forthcoming book, Our Final Warning, Mark Lynas explains what is likely to happen to our food supply with every extra degree of global heating. He finds that extreme danger kicks in somewhere between 3C and 4C above pre-industrial levels. At this point, a series of interlocking impacts threatens to send food production into a death spiral. Outdoor temperatures become too high for humans to tolerate, making subsistence farming impossible across Africa and South Asia. Livestock die from heat stress. Temperatures start to exceed the lethal thresholds for crop plants across much of the world, and major food producing regions turn into dust bowls. Simultaneous global harvest failure � something that has never happened in the modern world � becomes highly likely.

In combination with a rising human population, and the loss of irrigation water, soil and pollinators, this could push the world into structural famine. Even today, when the world has a total food surplus, hundreds of millions are malnourished as a result of the unequal distribution of wealth and power. A food deficit could result in billions starving. Hoarding will happen, as it always has, at the global level, as powerful people snatch food from the mouths of the poor. Yet, even if every nation keeps its promises under the Paris agreement, which currently seems unlikely, global heating will amount to between 3C and 4C.

Thanks to our illusion of security, we are doing almost nothing to anticipate this catastrophe, let alone prevent it. This existential issue scarcely seems to impinge on our consciousness. Every food-producing sector claims that its own current practices are sustainable and don�t need to change. When I challenge them, I�m met with a barrage of anger and abuse, and threats of the kind I haven�t experienced since I opposed the Iraq war. Sacred cows and holy lambs are everywhere, and the thinking required to develop the new food systems that we need, like lab-grown food, is scarcely anywhere.

But this is just one of our impending crises. Antibiotic resistance is, potentially, as deadly as any new disease. One of the causes is the astonishingly profligate way in which these precious medicines are used on many livestock farms. Where vast numbers of farm animals are packed together, antibiotics are deployed prophylactically to prevent otherwise inevitable outbreaks of disease. In some parts of the world, they are used not only to prevent disease, but also as growth promoters. Low doses are routinely added to feed: a strategy that could scarcely be better designed to deliver bacterial resistance.

In the US, where 27 million people have no medical cover, some people are now treating themselves with veterinary antibiotics, including those sold, without prescription, to medicate pet fish. Pharmaceutical companies are failing to invest sufficiently in the search for new drugs. If antibiotics cease to be effective, surgery becomes almost impossible. Childbirth becomes a mortal hazard once more. Chemotherapy can no longer be safely practised. Infectious diseases we have comfortably forgotten become deadly threats. We should discuss this issue as often as we talk about football. But again, it scarcely registers.

Our multiple crises, of which these are just two, have a common root. The problem is exemplified by the response of the organisers of the Bath Half Marathon, a massive event that took place on 15 March, to the many people begging them to cancel. �It is now too late for us to cancel or postpone the event. The venue is built, the infrastructure is in place, the site and our contractors are ready.� In other words, the sunk costs of the event were judged to outweigh any future impacts � the potential transmission of disease, and possible deaths � it might cause.

The amount of time it took the International Olympic Committee to postpone the Games could reflect similar judgments � but at least they got there in the end. Sunk costs within the fossil fuel industry, farming, banking, private healthcare and other sectors prevent the rapid transformations we need. Money becomes more important than life.

There are two ways this could go. We could, as some people have done, double down on denial. Some of those who have dismissed other threats, such as climate breakdown, also seek to downplay the threat of Covid-19. Witness the Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, who claims that the coronavirus is nothing more than �a little flu�. The media and opposition politicians who have called for lockdown are, apparently, part of a conspiracy against him.

Or this could be the moment when we begin to see ourselves, once more, as governed by biology and physics, and dependent on a habitable planet. Never again should we listen to the liars and the deniers. Never again should we allow a comforting falsehood to trounce a painful truth. No longer can we afford to be dominated by those who put money ahead of life. This coronavirus reminds us that we belong to the material world.

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+109 # indian weaver 2015-08-08 11:06
I like Taibbi's writing a lot. This article summarizes my own take on the debate, even though I didn't watch it but have read probably 20 articles about it. I too think that Trump has defied all of the "GOP Conventional Wisdom", and in fact almost everyone's conventional wisdom. If I were a betting man, I'd bet that Trump's ratings go higher, now that he's been victimized by the GOP. If he wins the presidency, I guess we deserve him, right? Wrong? Meanwhile the GOP remains dazed and confused.
 
 
+87 # lorenbliss 2015-08-08 15:21
 
 
+41 # lorenbliss 2015-08-08 15:23
 
 
+71 # Vegan_Girl 2015-08-08 15:36
Sanders is not running on such a socialist platform. He is just center-left. As radical he sounds, he is campaigning for capitalism with a decent social net and some respect for the rule of law.

"To each according to their need." - is implying a maximum wage which Sanders is not proposing.

On the other hand, I completely agree with your description of what Trump represents. The emperor is naked, and wow his body is ugly.
 
 
+30 # lorenbliss 2015-08-08 16:18
Three points in explanation:

(1)-Trump is the true voice of white USia, the Ku Klux, neo-Nazi voice the One Percent likes to keep silenced because -- when it is allowed to speak freely -- the reality of the USian Empire as the Fourth Reich becomes undeniable;

(2)-Hillary has exactly the same Ayn Rand values, but (A) hides them very deftly and (B) is perfectly positioned as an identity-politi cs candidate to silence any genuine discussion of class war -- the one historical truth that, once brought into proper focus, proves beyond argument the necessity of socialism to human survival.

(3)-Sanders, though running as a Democrat, is by his personally declared socialism providing an antidote to seven and one-half decades of anti-socialist toxins. Thereby he is rehabilitating the entire spectrum of socialist thought.

Hence the unprecedented consequences of Sanders' candidacy, and even more so of a Sanders presidency: first the resurrection of the New Deal as President Roosevelt intended it (and most assuredly not as the Missouri political-machi ne operative Truman debased it). Then -- in the socialist renaissance that inevitably follows -- the continuation of the revolution We the People intended when we made FDR our longest-serving president.

The question, of course, is whether the Ruling Class with all its disruptive genius will be able to shatter the united-front majority of oppressed minorities (including Left-leaning whites) that would ensure Sanders' victory.
 
 
+26 # Old4Poor 2015-08-08 20:21
I love Bernie but am concerned that like Paul Wellstone the powers that really rule will arange for something to "happen" to stop him.
 
 
+15 # futhark 2015-08-08 21:39
Thanks for bringing up the murder of Paul Wellstone. Senator Sanders should be constantly on his guard against the tactics that have already taken the lives of so many politicians in consequence of their challenges to the rule of state surveillance apparatus' criminal elites. I found Michael Ruppert's explanation of murder by electromagnetic pulse bomb, disrupting Senator Wellstone's airplane's electronic instruments and controls to be plausible. See Ruppert's book "Crossing The Rubicon" (2004). See also

http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/us-air-force-confirms-boeings-electromagnetic-pulse-weapon/

http://www.opednews.com/thoreau1203_wellstone_assassinated.htm

http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/110102_wellstone.html

These guys have the motivation, means, and ruthlessness to take out any politician that dares to cross them. There is no longer any need for extra gunmen on a grassy knoll and no magic bullets will be required.
 
 
+15 # Old4Poor 2015-08-09 13:24
I never met Wellstone and do not live in his State, but I still miss him. A great loss for the country, along with so many others.
 
 
+9 # tclose 2015-08-09 10:34
Totally disagree with your take on Hillary - she may be many things, but having Ayn Rand values is not one of them. She may not be the answer to every progressive's prayer, but she is so far from Trump and the right wingers that to paint her with the same brush is shameful.
 
 
+6 # WestWinds 2015-08-09 15:05
Quoting tclose:
Totally disagree with your take on Hillary - she may be many things, but having Ayn Rand values is not one of them. She may not be the answer to every progressive's prayer, but she is so far from Trump and the right wingers that to paint her with the same brush is shameful.


--- I don't agree. SHillary Clinton is out for herself. She does whatever it takes to paint whatever picture she thinks you want to see from kissing babies to kittens in her campaign ads. She is a self-professed "fiscal conservative" (translation; supports Trickle-down nothing for working people) while she sits on top of 21.50 million dollars. She votes with the Republicans on important issues and is a war hawk that agrees with imperialism as our country's international policy. She's an upwardly mobile 1%-er that has nothing in common with common people; not even her "little farm house" in NY state.
 
 
+38 # backwards_cinderella 2015-08-09 02:06
Sanders only sounds radically socialist because as a nation, we have veered so far to the right into fascism. He's really only advocating a return to the America of the 50's & the 60's, which ironically is what the Tea Partiers say they want.
 
 
+9 # tgemberl 2015-08-08 19:09
Wow, you really have an apocalyptic view of things.

Trump is not necessarily even a Republican. He has said he's willing to run against Republicans if they don't nominate him.

I don't usually like David Brooks, but I think he nailed Trump's character in this article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/04/opinion/david-brooks-trumps-allure-ego-as-ideology.html

I agree that the Trump candidacy shows the bankruptcy of the Republican Party. They have no real ideas, so Trump is possibly the strongest candidate they have. He does have the appeal of being blunt and not kowtowing to "political correctness."

It's stunning that you think there will be a Trump-Sanders contest. Neither of them is likely to get their respective nominations.
 
 
+7 # ericlipps 2015-08-08 21:08
 
 
+10 # WestWinds 2015-08-09 15:13
 
 
+4 # banichi 2015-08-09 22:36
It is the reaction of a people that has been lied to so often, in so many ways, about what America really stands for in the world - and imperialist, corporate-drive n fascist power, that people are now waking up to the reality. They just don't like what they see - the ones who are responding to Trump - and would like to believe there is a simplistic solution to the dilemma that does not include taking responsibility for themselves on that emotional surge. Anger must have an outlet, and Trump's blame game gives them one.

It helps that the entire Neocon/neoliber al establishment that HRC represents so unobtrusively that you can't get her to really commit to doing anything, only talking about it without the intention to DO anything like Sanders' stands for, is the same establishment that all the Republican candidates represent as well. They and HRC are all lined up with their hands out for money from establishment money sources, so expecting anything else from them is pointless.

Trump does not need establishment money. The populace knows that, which also give him more credibility than all the rest (except Sanders) who are there with their hands out. That's how establishment politics works now, and people are waking up to it, and it pisses them off. So, Trump. He ain't the brightest, and he ain't the best, but he doesn't bother with trying to bullshit people for the moneyed interests. People respond to that.
 
 
+1 # Skippydelic 2015-08-10 15:49
At the same time, though, Trump IS the 1%; to present himself as a 'Man of the People' - someone who's looking out for the 99% - is HORRIBLY wrong!

The Donald is EVERYTHING that Mitt Romney tried (and failed miserably) to be in 2012, in large part because the Tea Party HATED him!

And so, The Donald - without mentioning it, of course - has become a Tea Party candidate!

The fact that he DOESN'T need to suck at the Kochs' teat makes him popular, but once people realize WHY he doesn't need that money, will he still be a right-wing darling?
 
 
+1 # tgemberl 2015-08-10 18:02
WestWinds,
Here's a reflection on that.

Today I watched a little of the 700 Club on TV. The first order of business for their news summary was to bemoan the continued candidacy and popularity of Donald Trump.

Next they had a segment where they interviewed the author of a new book called "The conservative heart: how to build a fairer, happier, and more prosperous America." The author's name is Arthur Brooks, and he's an economist at the American Enterprise Institute. Brooks' emphasis was on what a good heart Ronald Reagan had: Reagan was an optimist who believed that his small government philosophy would be good for the poor as well as everyone else.

(cont.)
 
 
+2 # tgemberl 2015-08-10 18:04
(cont.)
I believe there is some evidence for Brooks' claim there. After all, Reagan signed the EMTALA law about 1986. It said that hospitals had to give care to people whether they could pay or not. I don't know for sure that he signed it with enthusiasm, but it's at least possible that he really was optimistic that our capitalist medical system could take care of everybody to some extent. That has not turned out to be true, at least as our system existed before Obamacare. If someone couldn't pay, the rest of us had to pay for them via higher costs. Obamacare spreads that burden out more equitably. But nonetheless, EMTALA represented our consensus as a society: we don't want people to collapse on the street for lack of basic medical care. And it's not practical to do so in some ways; for example, if someone is run over by a car and knocked unconscious, it just might be that they have the money to pay for their care but are unable to tell us at the time. The most practical thing is to take them to the emergency room and worry about payment later. (cont.)
 
 
+2 # tgemberl 2015-08-10 18:06
(cont.)
Brooks' point, as I understood it, was to emphasize that conservatives needed to be "good-hearted" and generous if they want to win support for their causes. But of course the reality is that there isn't much real evidence that conservative policies help anybody but the 1%. There are still some true believers who accept the arguments that they do, but they are getting fewer and fewer. I could see the worry on Pat Robertson's face. The Republican Party used to have a substantial number of moderate leaders like Colin Powell. I believe that's at least partly because until recently, "the jury was still out" about some conservative ideas. It really wasn't crazy to believe in them. But today the evidence against them has become overwhelming. (cont.)
 
 
+3 # tgemberl 2015-08-10 18:08
(cont.)
Enter Donald Trump. It has to be a terrible testimony to the bankruptcy of a party if their most popular candidate's main qualification for office is that he's an insensitive ... (use your imagination to fill it in.) But I do think that comes close to being his primary appeal: his total lack of self-doubt and ability to dismiss others. For a substantial number of Republicans, that's all they have left. There's nothing else they have to believe in but the ability to say NO, I DON'T CARE. That obviously shows that the grand coalition Reagan created between business conservatives and social conservatives is dying. People like Robertson and Brooks are trying desperately to keep it together, but there's little chance they can.
 
 
+13 # Adoregon 2015-08-09 12:55
All Trumped up for the circus.

Trump's entry into the race for the Republican nomination [for president] is Shakespearean in its poetic justice.
I have never seen the planets align to create such a well deserved clusterfuck, exposing the Republican Party for the narrow-minded, mean-spirited, atavistic troglodytes they are.
 
 
+72 # babalu 2015-08-08 11:11
Thanks, Matt! Totally hilarious but true! The level of trash talk is incredible and seems to be growing! Let them rip themselves apart.

Clash of the money titans: Koch announced an $800,000,000 for president and tRump is raising him and staring him down.
 
 
+83 # Interested Observer 2015-08-08 13:28
"George Will and Charles Krauthammer are smug media weasels only slightly less disgusting than the Rachel Maddows and Keith Olbermanns of the world."

I know what he means, but there is only one Olbermann and one Maddow, and I can't recall hearing much from Olbermann lately. Name your next biggest liberal media pundit or anyone to justify that plural. Bill Maher? Then who? On the other side there is a small army: O'Reilly, Limbaugh, Beck, Hannity, Coulter, Ingraham, those mentioned in the article, occasional eruptions from Dennis Miller, on down to the legions in the hate radio swamp for which there is no liberal equivalent, then add in media evangelists who add further bulk to the same messages. The depressing reality is that the right wing message is by far the bigger media business and has been for quite a while now.
 
 
+18 # Old4Poor 2015-08-08 20:24
Olbermann is currently a talking Whale newsman on a Netflix cartoon, and Rachel is nothing but even handed, Her own views are clear but she is warm and open to those who differ and loves to have them on her show.
 
 
+11 # tclose 2015-08-09 10:10
Excellent point, IntObs. How I miss Keith Obermann - he was the only counterpunch to the O'Reillys and Limbaughs. The problem is that liberal commentators are by nature "warm and open to those who differ", so not easily fit into a mold of bombast and character assassination. Keith transcended that by rising to a proper level of outrage, from which he vented his inimitable commentary.

The other problem is that there is no liberal equivalent to Fox News and other carriers - who gleefully accept the extreme viewpoint of the right wing. MSNBC is not nearly as far left as Fox News is far right - the reason Olbermann was forced out. Would be nice though for MSNBC and Olbermann to try to get together again.
 
 
+67 # danireland46 2015-08-08 13:31
D.C. was supposed to be a gathering of Statesmen. Men and Women, representing their constituents on important national and international issues. Ever since Fox climbed out of the media swamp with its mind-warping excuse for "news", we've become infected with its propaganda and yielded our fealty to the 'Job Producers'. Trump is the only GOP candidate to approximate that description, so 'He's the Man'
How do we survive STUPIDITY?
 
 
+75 # ChrisCurrie 2015-08-08 13:34
One thing that became pretty clear during that debate is that the owners the Fox News Channel are adamantly opposed to any presidential candidate that the can't control.
 
 
+47 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:11
Murdoch is the modern day Hearst and your right he's the puppet master and Donald is NOT dancing to his tune.
 
 
+67 # Vegan_Girl 2015-08-08 13:42
The GOP deserves the worst. What saddens me is that the Trump base should really be voting for Bernie Sanders.

The Trump base consists of people with legitimate complaints who are (finally!) pissed off with the establishment that has refused to represent them for so many years.

I hope that over the next months, Bernie will be able to reach out to them.
 
 
+26 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:14
Sorry , but they'll never vote for good old Bernie. These are the same gang that backed Mussolini, Franco, Hitler, Peron etc et al. I call them petite Fascists. They're brown-shirts and their adoring wives. Matt is right when he calls them Nativists indeed. DT knows who his following is and they'll never vote for a D.
 
 
+36 # Vegan_Girl 2015-08-08 15:25
I think that the rich people who vote for GOP or support the people you mention, do behave in accordance with their interest. However, working class people on the right, to me, are misinformed, confused people. A base to be reached out for. If we stop labeling things and ask people about issues, they are right with Bernie.

The progressives have always been bad at articulating a clear message - which is why the right wing has been so successful.
 
 
+17 # backwards_cinderella 2015-08-09 02:10
It's not that progressives are bad at articulating a clear message. It's that in the US, "I got mine, FU" speaks louder than "All for one, one for all" ever did. If there is anything tragic about the so-called "United" States, this is it.
 
 
+58 # reiverpacific 2015-08-08 13:46
"Last night's debate was the funniest political program in our nation's history. Nothing really comes close." (quote).
D'you mean "Funny, Ha-ha" or "Funny Peculiar"?
To me -maybe 'cause I'm a 'furriner'- much of it was totally surreal. There were some downright EVIL people in that wrecking-ball of a wannabe crew, most of who wouldn't be taken seriously as candidates outside of a Banana Republic -which is what this country is beginning to resemble.
My (American) wife had some good guffaws at it but I "had no stomach for this fight" for very long.
To me, it was a publicity stunt for Ailes' "Fixed" -noose channel.
 
 
+28 # Polisage 2015-08-08 13:47
Bring in the clowns! Between Fux Network and Citizens United, the nation I loved as a youth and served as an adult seems to have been bought by the plutocrats, and the only choices we're going to get will be a Soviet style single party ballot. The only difference is that we don't have to applaud 45 minutes after a speech o avoid arrest.
 
 
+24 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:15
"The only difference is that we don't have to applaud 45 minutes after a speech o avoid arrest." Not yet.
 
 
+21 # istealllamas 2015-08-08 13:48
That debate was literally one of the funniest pieces of comedy ever put on television. I expected it to be funny, but I don't think I expected it to be this goddamn funny.
 
 
+49 # seeuingoa 2015-08-08 13:59
 
 
+38 # kalpal 2015-08-08 15:04
Just a liberal executive will not do it. America needs to elect Democrats to Congress and considering the gerrymandering of the past, that will be difficult.
 
 
+8 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:16
I wish she had run, the the three ring circus of the absurd this is becoming is depressing.
 
 
-9 # insooth 2015-08-09 06:00
Warren would be TWICE the candidate that Bernie is! Tying her up as Veep would truly be a waste. Move over, Bernie.
 
 
+28 # Old Uncle Dave 2015-08-08 14:01
Helluva way to pick a President.
 
 
+21 # Blackjack 2015-08-08 14:09
Repukes have met the enemy and it is them--in the Trump form that they created. I love it!
 
 
+24 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:17
TRUMPENSTEIN !!
 
 
+21 # kevenwood 2015-08-08 14:35
I watched the debate -- here's a perspective from the left.

I thought Bush and Kasich had the best night. Bush seemed most even tempered, most nuanced, most informed, most experienced and most presidential. Not saying I want him as President, of course. Just saying he came across the most presidential among the particularly odd crowd.

Trump was way too bombastic, egotistical and like an irate Joe Pesci at times.
When he cocked his mouth open after an emotionally charged rant, I could see Joe Pesci in him saying "Ok, ok, ok".

Carson was nice, but seemed too soft. Rubio too boyish. Paul too squirley, like the Howard Dean of the Right. Walker too bland. Best ticket of those on stage is a Florida/Ohio ticket, perhaps just what you need to have a chance. Bush-Kasich. One major problem with this ticket. Too White Male.

Me thinks they're doomed to fail. He he he.
 
 
+3 # Old4Poor 2015-08-08 20:31
I watched both debates and think that Fiorina and Rubio came across the best of the lot. I would be concerned that one or both of them could be the GOP ticket but remember last time that the GOP had the possibility of Jon Huntsman and blew by that.

I think that we can count on them to again ignore the candidates who might squeak by and win this thing.

After all, W did not really win either of his elections and the general population seems to understand we need to be more liberal. Why the GOP is trying to suppress Dem voters.
 
 
+37 # m s 57 2015-08-08 14:41
All Praise to Donald Trump. For everyone whose detestation of the reactionary rightists of the Tea Party is complete, Praise Donald Trump! Build a shrine upon his father's resting place for having created just such a megalomaniacal billionaire! He is the instrument of their destruction, and our deliverance. The GOP elites who so cynically created and used the populist uprising of 5 years ago are reaping the whirlwind. Their base is on fire. Their base breathes fire with every word this clown says. He has no understanding of how to run a campaign; my truest hope is that he will spend every dime of his fortune in the service of his futile dreams: to rename the White House to "Trump's White House". He has no understanding of how to run a government; he barely has any idea how to run a business. May he light the Tea Party base on fire! May that base turn on the GOP establishment with all the ignorant venomous bigotry, xenophobia and nationalism they know so well. May he be ever reduced to pauperism from which no bankruptcy court will save him. May he take the panic-stricken GOP elites down with him. May he reduce the Tea Party and the reactionary right to ashes and rubble for all time. This is what he is doing. There is a God in Heaven!
 
 
+38 # Corvette-Bob 2015-08-08 14:48
I hope Trump continues with his wrecking ball campaign and puts the Republican Party out of its misery. A party created by a few billionaires who have used fear, hatred and resentment to stir up dissatisfied old white people who believe that their America has been taken away from them by all of the others.
 
 
-18 # MidwestTom 2015-08-08 16:30
Remember six of the ten wealthiest Congressmen are Democrats.
 
 
+11 # reiverpacific 2015-08-08 20:30
 
 
+15 # Old4Poor 2015-08-08 20:32
Being wealthy in and of itself does not make someone evil.
 
 
+6 # reiverpacific 2015-08-09 10:08
Quoting Old4Poor:
Being wealthy in and of itself does not make someone evil.


Absolutely agreed -but if it's made from lobbyists and corporate/milit ary ones at that, it's anti-populist, crooked and may as well be called a Mafia operation.
The only Billionaire I've ever met and known a little, was a thoroughly decent man and determinedly anonymous in his very widespread philanthropy, in which he used to include what he called drive-by giving when, on hearing or reading of a family or individual being placed in deep hardship through no fault of their own, would find out their address, stuff several $1,000 bills in an envelope and have an employee drive to their door and deliver the untitled package with sworn promise not to divulge the source.
Wish I could afford to do something like that!
 
 
+3 # WestWinds 2015-08-09 16:16
Quoting MidwestTom:
Remember six of the ten wealthiest Congressmen are Democrats.


--- That's Democrats In Name Only.
 
 
+13 # wordly 2015-08-08 14:51
Aside from the politics... Mr. Trump can afford a hair transplant. Is he trumpeting his frugality? Perhaps a pony tail would better suit him.
 
 
+14 # xflowers 2015-08-08 14:57
Dear Matt,

One of your best pieces ever. "Trumpenstein!" Oh, god (not the same one Kelly was referring to I hope!) I thought I'd roll over laughing.
 
 
+18 # Phillybuster 2015-08-08 14:58
Matt is correct. The more the other candidates and Fox beat up on Trump, the more popular he'll become. Trump is the only one who does not carefully audit every syllable that comes out of his mouth. His life's work of salesmanship makes his bombast seem almost believable.
 
 
+14 # kalpal 2015-08-08 15:04
The GOP should pick up its cards and bid no trump.
 
 
+10 # Dale 2015-08-08 15:14
 
 
+28 # Seadog 2015-08-08 15:22
Trump doesn't give a shit! He's like Howard Beale and he's up there screaming ENOUGH I'm Emperor and the rest of you fucking losers need to bow down NOW! LOL, its pure Hollyweird at its best. You cannot make this shit up. I hope he takes the GOP down with him. They deserve this guy, the rest of us however do not.
 
 
+32 # Henry 2015-08-08 15:26
 
 
+43 # Vegan_Girl 2015-08-08 15:43
Scott Walker is a very dangerous man. He destroyed the unions in his home state of Wisconsin and pushed through the most right-wing defund-privatiz e agenda, with extreme hostility towards working class people. He claimed that he will be able to deal with ISIS because he was able to deal with protesting teachers.

He is a promise to people like the Koch brothers. A promise to bust unions, cut services, and disenfranchise people with vigorous hostility.
 
 
+20 # Dongi 2015-08-08 19:28
I heard Walker say "Give the Ukrainians offensive weapons." Putin has said if that happens Russia will consider it an act of war. So if you want World War III, vote for Walker.
 
 
+7 # WestWinds 2015-08-09 16:25
What I still can't believe is why Wisconsin put Walker back into office. I mean WHAT is wrong with these people?????
They can't tell the good from the bad guys any more.
 
 
+8 # MidwestTom 2015-08-08 16:12
I have argued the the uninformed voters really decide who is President. The strange thing about Trump is that he appeals to the uninformed voters from both parties, which is why he appears so strong. He talks publicly like the majority of people do in their everyday life. The 30% of informed voters, split evenly between the two parties will not vote for him, the remaining 70% just might.
 
 
+13 # tm7devils39 2015-08-08 16:45
If Trump ever got to be the Prez...he would be worse than Reagan and Bush II put together.
 
 
-44 # curmudgeon 2015-08-08 17:16
I doubt it....

He can't do any worse than any predecessor by bringing non-politicians and non-revolving-d oor lobbysits into government service.

Time for fresh air....which shows you how bad the stench in the DC swamps is when The Trumpstein's bloviations bring 'smell the roses' to mind.

The only person worse than those two is Obama.
 
 
+12 # Realist1948 2015-08-08 17:26
'Tis the season for trumpery!
noun, plural trumperies.
1. something without use or value; rubbish; trash; worthless stuff.
2. nonsense; twaddle:
His usual conversation is pure trumpery.
adjective
1. showy but worthless.
 
 
+2 # carp 2015-08-08 18:46
The Lincoln Douglas debate between Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain has had to be the most entertaining I have ever seen. You can catch it on You Tube.
 
 
+12 # Karlus58 2015-08-08 19:18
What I saw was the total disrespect FOX had for all of these candidates. It should be clear to all who watched the spectacle....FO X news is the GOP. FOX news is the political puppeteer pulling all their strings, except Trump. So yes, Murdoch set his sights on him from the start. His stooges parading as moderators were given their lines and they didn't miss a beat. As much as I detest these so-called presidential candidates, I felt pity for all of them, except Trump, for he was spot on to their tactics. So, yes, I agree with you Matt. Your assessment is insightful as always.
 
 
+15 # Dongi 2015-08-08 19:41
What's so depressing is that with the epic problems we face, from global warming to Isis, Iran, Syria, Ukraine, Libya, Yemen, Afghanistan to police forces playing escalatio on minority citizens the best that the Republican Party can come up with was that sad bunch of misfits on the stage Thursday night. Whose leader was the loud mouthed bully, Donald Trump. Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.
 
 
+1 # Robbee 2015-08-08 21:32
funnier than the donald is the hill troll above who shat out this one:

"Hillary has exactly the same Ayn Rand values, but (A) hides them very deftly"

- so now we know that hill is exactly the same as rand BECAUSE SHE HIDES IT SO WELL!
 
 
+2 # universlman 2015-08-10 03:42
Possibly a RSN record. I count this comment as #68 of which at this time, only 3 are showing negative numbers with only one neutral zero. Even the trolls seem to be pulling their punches.

For RSN, this must be close to a record positive response to any article.

Having to listen to the endless gaseous discharge from Trumpenstein, and maybe even finding him as commander-in-ch ief is a perfect shit storm, and we own it.

As voters, we have abandoned common sense, we dwell on the negative, and we have a tendency to treat all of our elected leaders and governments as incompetent and/or corrupt. These are mostly GOP ideas, just in case people believe them incapable of coming up with any.
 

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