Author Archives: Ralph

Fascism in America, 2024

[When Fascism comes to America] it will be wrapped in the American flag and heralded as a plea for liberty and the preservation of the Constitution”*. 

  • James Waterman, “The Christian Century”, 1936

 Fascism is a term that is seldom used in reasoned political discourse because it’s extreme and prejudicial due to the inevitable comparisons to Adolf Hitler and Naziism.  Usually, when the comparison is made, the recipient expresses outrage and attempts to transfer outrage to the speaker because they dared to make the comparison, which aims to derail the dialog and comparison. This often works because of the cultural view that America is exceptional and that “America is the good guy” and Fascist Germany is the canonical “bad guy”.  This post examines the parallels between the current political atmosphere and the characteristics of Fascism.  While the comparison is uncomfortable, it is entirely warranted.

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Holocaust Rememberance Day & Discussion

I’m sometimes very impressed with my children (but I’m biased). A few weeks ago while driving one of them back to college, I was talking to one of them about the state of the world, immigration, war and intolerance. During the conversation, he dug up this quote on the topic:

“The increasing immigration of this new group of people is gradually becoming a serious problem. Although one may be far from wanting to deny these unfortunate ones the right to asylum, it must not be forgotten that a large proportion of these arrivals are made up of people whose immigration and settlement in our country meets justified concerns. Pity for them must not blind us to the fact that they are largely unfit for integration into our society.”

Sounds like a reasonable, conservative — almost mainstream(?) — position on Immigration, right? This was actually written about the refugees streaming out of Ukraine because of the problems there caused by the Russians flexing their muscles in the area, which force refugees into Europe — here Germany. Understandable, right?

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Casablanca & Refugees

I was talking to a teenager about great movies this week, and I brought up Casablanca, which I’d first seen at his age. I remarked that we were struck by the incredible number of trite aphorisms in the movie, which of course it created. (“Here’s lookin’ at you kid”, “We’ll always have Paris”, “This is the beginning of a beautiful friendship”, “Round up the usual suspects”…)

However, Casablanca is also a movie with a resonance today that shook me on recounting it. When I watched this movie as a teen I didn’t understand the subtext of the movie. The movies captures the plight of refugees victimized by a war of aggression and the fight against fascism. Even more poignant, most of the cast was international, and many were refugees of the fascist regime of the day, either because of their ethnicity, sexual orientation or other reasons.

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Bravery, Revisited

I originally wrote the first part of this to a friend almost four years ago partly about facing the trauma of sexual assault during (now) Justice Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings.  On the two year anniversary of the onset of the pandemic and with the atrocity in Ukraine, I wanted to revisit the idea of heroic sacrifice, because while this was to one person, it is in a sense universal, and there are “everyday heroes” in all walks of life that are sometimes asked to act heroically without recognition.

——

I could not sleep last night thinking about your question “Would I ask you to do what Dr. Ford is doing?”  I said earlier I didn’t have words to respond.  A sleepless night brought them to me.  

The truth is I recognize I have no right to ask you to do it.  We both know that the cost to you and your loved ones would be high, perhaps impossibly high.  And we know that there are clearly others who’ve got similar experiences who have decided not to come forward, or chose to speak only anonymously.  But I don’t think those people are as strong and mature as you are.

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… Then I’m a Socialist

A few years ago I read a book by Joseph Schumpeter. Two of the points I got from the book are were that Capitalism, left unchecked, leads to corporatism, and that the balance of that tendency is some aspects of the economy being “socialized”. A second point was that to an extent, the United States was already a “socialist” country in many aspects of its economy. Our public schools, water, sewer, libraries, electricity are all “socialized”, and to some extent so is our retirement (Social Security) and health care.

Recently, the role of “socialized” public health has become much more important as the Pandemic approaches. I’ve been struck by the tone some of my “libertarian” friends, and wrote this in an attempt to point out the folly of trying to describe our economy as either socialist or capitalist. The divide is a false choice and that’s clearer in the face of a pandemic.  

I updated this during the Black Lives Matter Protests. (June 2020) Originally posted March 6, 2020.

…Then I’m a Socialist

If providing free vaccines to children (regardless of status) so my children don’t contract avoidable diseases is socialist, then I want to be a socialist;

If requiring that healthcare workers get sick leave to keep them stay home when ill so my mother in a nursing home doesn’t get their flu is socialist, then call me a socialist;

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Prepare for the Coming Pandemic Now

I sent this letter the Oneida City School Superintendent and School Board:

As I’m sure you know, COVID-19 (caused by the Corona virus), has been spreading around the world, with cases in four new countries yesterday.  In China, where the best data is currently available, the death rate is approximately 2 percent. To put that in context, the 1918 flu pandemic, which killed more people in 1918 than all of World War I, had a death rate of slightly less than 2 percent.  COVID-19 is more dangerous in some ways, because subjects are communicable before they show symptoms, promoting the disease’s spread.


While the World Health Organization said yesterday that we are not yet in a pandemic, it is clear that this is just a matter of time.  Yesterday, the Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases recommended, among other things, that the public “should ask your children’s schools about school dismissals or school closures or plans for tele-school“.  (That’s a direct quote, but I can’t cite it in a way that I can link to right now).

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Tenney as “Strongman Supporter”

Under Stalin, the first person to stop applauding was sometimes taken away or treason.  In Nazi Germany, failure to give the “Hitler salute” was considered “un-German” and a crime.  Such has often been the fate of dissenters under the sway of “strongmen” throughout history.

August Landmesser, June 1936.

In that strongman tradition, Claudia Tenney, Congressman who claims to represent the New York’s 22nd District, has suggested that failure to applaud for her leader is at least un-American and possibly treasonous.

After the 2018 State of the Union message, Tenney called Congressmen who chose to sit quietly rather than applauding during the President’s speech rather than applauding “Un-American” and that “they don’t love our country”.   Tenney’s statements are inconsistent with the office she currently holds.

First, our Federal representatives have been not applauding during presidential addresses when they disagree for more than 200 years, indicating Tenney has no sense of the  history or traditions of the office.

Second, in another Tenney-hypocritical irony, I’m certain she would not call the Republicans who sat quietly for President Obama “un-American” or possibly treasonous, and in that situation would she be exactly as “un-American”.  

Third, this exclusionary rhetoric is meant to cast her political opponents as enemies of the state, while wrapping “her side” in the cloak of the nationalist jingoism, straight from the strongman playbook.  

Forth, she was supporting the President, who, incredibly, referred to the action of not applauding as “treasonous”.  Tenney said she “doesn’t know if she’d go that far” (WTF1?).  The President’s reference to not applauding as “treason” is the statement of a would-be strongman.  To have our Congressman call those actions “un-American” and possibly treasonous is to make her a would-be strongman supporter, and proffers the idea that failure to agree with the President is “un-American” and possibly treasonous.

Tenney’s demonization of her political opponents for the most venal of perceived offences — and in support of the President’s even more egregious statements — is an offence against civil government itself and part of a pattern that Tenney and Trump share with anti-democratic forces around the world.

Bluntly, Tenney’s statements have more in common with the legislators of tin-pot dictatorships with democratic veneers than those representing a robust democracy and its part of a pattern of intolerant, extremist rhetoric unbecoming of a United States Representative.

We need a representative who understands and observes the basic polity of the land, not one that promotes the basest acrimonious politicization she espouses and simultaneously decries.  Claudia Tenney has repeatedly shown she doesn’t represent the views of the 22nd District and she’s can’t clear the low bar of following civil government norms in Congress.

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Tenney and Trolls — “School Shooters Are Dems”

A fundamental principle of good governance is fact-based policy.  The enemies of democracy know this and have undermined governance in western democracies through misinformation campaigns to erode the public’s confidence in government.   Those misinformation campaigns, led by Russia and embraced by too many Americans is rightly called “Fake News”, though that moniker has been appropriated by those same “Fake News” sources to undermine confidence in legitimate news sources conveying actual facts.

This week, in light of  yet another mass school shooting, “fake news” purveyors again took to Twitter and Facebook to spread divisiveness and disinformation, with claims that school shooting survivors are “crisis actors” and calls for students and teachers to carry concealed weapons in schools.   Continue reading

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Remove Lead from Oneida School Water

There is lead in the Oneida school district’s water supply, in spite of what you’ve heard from the school district recently.

Lead in Oneida Water

Lead is cumulative neurotoxin, which is particularly harmful to young children.  The EPA declares that the safe level of Lead in drinking water is 0 parts per billion (ppb).  Lead is impossible to detect shortly after exposure, but causes lifelong mental degradation and behavioral problems.  There is no cure for lead poisoning.

The current superintendent of the Oneida School District, Mary-Margaret Zehr said during her public interview last spring that the first responsibility of the school system is the safety of our children.

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Oneida School Board Meeting August 2016

I attended the Oneida School Board meeting tonight.  I came at 7pm, but the meeting had started at 6, and because of the web site update I hadn’t seen the change.  As is often the case, I was the only person not associated with the District at the meeting.  There were several interesting things at the meeting.  Here are my observations: Continue reading

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