Archive for the ‘Progressives’ Category

Douglas Rooks: On economic issues, progressives are missing in … – Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel

By most measures, a new progressive movement in Maine ought to be taking hold.

Democrats control the Blaine House, the Senate by a robust margin and the House by a comfortable one as they have now for three legislative terms running. The LePage years of acrimonious divided government are fading into the past.

Yet progressivism is nowhere to be seen as the Legislature hones in on adjournment a month hence.

Start with the basics. Maine has the opportunity to help adopt a fundamental voting reform: electing the president by popular vote. Yes, it can be done.

Its called the National Popular Vote Compact (NPVC), and its already passed in all other states with durable Democratic trifectas. Imagine: Americans get to elect the president on equal terms.

No more red states and blue states on election night. No more swing states. No more Bush v. Gore decisions, with the Supreme Court installing a president without counting all the votes.

Youd think Maine Democrats would jump at the chance to avoid these undemocratic outcomes. Had the NPVC been in place, George H.W. Bush in 1988 would have been the last Republican to win a first term.

But you would be wrong. In 2019, the Senate passed the bill but the House rejected it. In the 2021-22 session, it never got out of committee. And this year L.D. 1578 has not even been scheduled for public hearing as of this writing.

Somehow, Maine Democrats do not favor a democratic outcome for the most important vote any of us cast.

It goes on from there. We know all about Democratic stances on abortion rights, on racial prejudice, on religious bigotry, on rights for stigmatized and historically oppressed groups, and these are honorable, highly defensible positions.

But where are the voices and the bills on core economic issues that have always provided the backbone for progressive movements going back to the 19th century?

The standard is Franklin Roosevelts New Deal, greatly amplified by the Congressional New Dealers who pushed the agenda beyond Roosevelts own inclinations.

Labor, which had virtually no legal protection at state or federal levels, suddenly was free to organize and win contracts under the Wagner Act, followed by minimum wage laws incorporating time-and-a-half for overtime.

For the next quarter century, the distribution of wealth and income became dramatically more equal progressives would say more fair as wages rose, one job could support a family of four, and many more Americans went to college.

During World War II, to pay for the immense expenditures involved, federal income taxes became steeply progressive, with the top rate exceeding 90%. It was patriotic to pay taxes.

Then it all went into reverse. In the 1970s, Republicans began packing the judiciary, winning a majority of the Supreme Court and tilting decisions in favor of business. The Reagan revolution gutted the progressive income tax, and business tax preferences bloomed, especially at the state level.

Were now faced with a situation where the working poor pay a higher proportion of their incomes than the super-rich; as Warren Buffett memorably put it, his secretary pays more than he does.

Elizabeth Warren, and to a lesser extent Bernie Sanders, emphasized these issues during the 2020 presidential campaign, but despite other legislative accomplishments, President Biden has so far succeeded only in installing a corporate minimum tax though even that wasnt easy.

As a result, we face a future in which generational wealth continues to compound, while millions of people will depend on government aid simply to eat, go the doctor, and keep a roof over their heads.

Maine lawmakers dont have a Senate filibuster or national disinformation campaigns preventing them from acting, yet few progressive initiatives have emerged here either.

A modest bill last session to allow farm workers to organize was derided as a threat to family farms. You will hunt long and hard among the dozens of bills the Taxation Committee hears proposing yet more tax exemptions to find anything modifying the essentially flat income tax Maine now has after years of chipping away.

The national minimum wage remains $7.25, which brings in a weekly paycheck of $290 in many red states. Why this isnt a scandal, or at least front-page news, is hard to understand.

Individual rights are important, but politics at its core revolves around who pays and who benefits, who holds economic power and who is denied it.

The vast distance weve drifted from New Deal economic principles and toward a winner take all world is clear enough. Whats still unclear is whether a new progressive movement can craft a meaningful response, in Maine and the nation.

Previous

Next

View original post here:
Douglas Rooks: On economic issues, progressives are missing in ... - Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel

Maine Media, Progressives Get Migrant Crisis Wrong – The Maine Wire

The editorial writers for the Portland Press Herald have never been known for having original ideas or coherent policy recommendations.

But an editorial the newspaper printed last week is so detached from the situation on the ground, so devoid of common sense, so infantile in its understanding of how government operates that it leads one to question whether the authors live in an alternate reality.

Ive seen higher quality thinking from high schoolers even ones from Maine public schools.

Those few septuagenarians who still subscribe to the paper will tuck it next to the fireplace along with the kindling.

But the virtue-signaling drivel over Maines migrant crisis and the General Assistance welfare program deserves a response.

First, we should clean up a falsehood the Press Heralds editorial advances concerning migrants eligibility to work in Maine.

And since asylum seekers began arriving in large numbers in 2019, [General Assistance has] been one of the only ways to keep [migrants] afloat while the federal government refuses to let them work.

The vast majority of asylum seekers currently in Maine are eligible for work right now because theyve been here longer than six months. Legitimate asylum-seekers in most cases are eligible to receive work authorization six-months after theyve filed a claim for asylum with federal immigration authorities.

New arrivals may not immediately be eligible to work due to the federal rules, but thats hardly the limiting factor on an individuals employment when they dont speak English, have no transportation, and live in the Portland Expo with hundreds of strangers. In short, that federal rule is not the reason migrants are having a tough go.

The idea that the migrants would be entirely self-sufficient were it not for federal rules designed to discourage illegal economic migration is a fiction. Current efforts at the state and federal levels to allow migrants to work immediately after filing asylum claims will apply to such a small population of people as to be almost meaningless, apart from the further incentive this would create for migrants to come to the U.S. and Maine looking for economic opportunity.

On the migrant crisis, the Press Herald at least recognizes that Portlands generous benefits serve as a magnet for migrants: The citys size and level of services mean it attracts a lot of vulnerable folks from other communities, in addition to asylum seekers.

Its refreshing to see progressives finally admitting that migrants are attracted to Maine because of benefits. Recognizing that Portland is attracting migrants and thereby creating a humanitarian crisis, a normal thinking person might say: Well, how might we stop attracting the migrants that are overrunning our social services?

But the newspapers editors are unable to fathom the idea that true humanitarianism might in some cases mean turning away economic migrants, discouraging them from coming to Maine, and ending the benefit programs that are leading them here. So they reach for the only policy tool they can ever imagine: more spending and more taxing.

Without more state help, these communities will be forced to raise property taxes on residents already stressed by rising costs, or cut back on services that are both necessary and already limited.

As suggested in legislation now before lawmakers, Maine should increase the reimbursement rate for General Assistance to 90%, where it was prior to 2015.

Kudos to the Maine Municipal Association for getting their talking points regurgitated. But where exactly do the Press Herald editorial writers think state help comes from? Its correct that property taxes are going up to accommodate the strain on General Assistance welfare budgets and local schools, but the state help ultimately comes from taxpayers working taxpayers.

How exactly does it solve any of the migrant-related problems to simply shift the manner in which Mainers are paying for it all?

The Herald doesnt say.

Such a policy would be insignificant in the grand scheme of things, even if it makes it a little easier to write a budget at Portland City Hall. Its just rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic. Again, where do they think state reimbursement money comes from? Do the brilliant minds inveighing against actual reforms think that have the state pay more is a serious policy pronouncement?

Back to the Herald:

A series of bills from Sen. Eric Brakey, an Auburn Republican, aim to reduce General Assistance costs by making fewer people eligible through time limits and residency and work requirements. None of the bills have a chance at passing in the Democrat-led Legislature, and thats a good thing. Brakeys proposals would only leave more Mainers without the resources to get by.

Sen. Brakey is one of the few lawmakers who has proposed legislation that would actually reduce the magnetic incentives policymakers have created that draw asylum seekers to Maine in the first place. He has an excellent bill that would disallow economic migrants from enrolling in General Assistance for a period of six months. If you dont think migrants chase benefits, talk to the City of Sanford. They were overwhelmed last week when more than 100 migrants showed up at City Hall in response to a rumor that the benefits were better in Sanford than Portland.

Brakeys other welfare reforms come at a time when its never been easier to get entry level work in Maine. The only Mainers who would be left without the resources to get by under tighter General Assistance rules are those who choose not to work. By removing disincentives to work and become self-sufficient, Brakeys policy is actually more humane than what Maine is currently doing. And by removing part of the draw for migrants to continue flooding Maine, Brakeys proposal would protect scarce resources, including housing, for Maine residents and those migrants who are already here.

The Portland-area progressives believe this is heartless, cruel. As opposed to their current big-hearted policy of having thousands of foreign migrants living on top of each other at the Portland Expo and other shelters while Maine residents sleep in tents next to Trader Joes. Theres no greater lie in Maine politics right now than the claim that progressive policies are humanitarian. It is left-wing policies that have created the boiling homelessness crisis in southern Maine. Sadly, they lack the imagination to come up with real solutions.

The strain on General Assistance shows why we need a formal statewide program for coordinating services for the influx of asylum seekers. It shows we desperately need more affordable housing.

Here the writers have reversed cause and effect. The strain on General Assistance is just a symptom of a migrant crisis fueled by Maines current policies. The housing crisis is a symptom of a migrant crisis fueled by Maines current policies. Those policies are, by and large, the policies of open borders and a generous welfare state.

Consider this: the typical path for migrants begins in Brazil. From there, they travel through Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Mexico before crossing into the United States.

If they are truly seeking asylum from persecution in Angola or the Democratic Republic of Congo, why dont they request asylum in those countries? Presumably whatever tyrannical force bent on genocide that caused them to flee their native country did not follow them into Brazil, or Guatemala, or Panama. Is there something those countries are or arent doing that make them less desirable locations for New Brazilians, New Guatemalans, or New Panamanians? Hmm

After entering the U.S., often illegally, though the line between illegal and legal immigration is so blurry under the Biden Administration as to be almost meaningless, they skip 50 other jurisdictions in America. The migrants could find a new home in dozens of other states with better weather, but they instead come to Maine. Why is that? Is there something those states are or arent doing that make them less desirable locations than frigid Maine?

The problem were now encountering is that unlimited immigration and unlimited welfare cannot coexist permanently. Eventually, something has to give.

None of this is the fault of the migrants. They are simply rational actors responding to the economic incentives Maines politicians have created. Those migrants who are already in Maine must be cared for like any other vulnerable Mainer. But if Maines policy makers dont change the policies that have created this crisis, that have spawned this disorderly migrant rush into Maine, then well continue to deal with the consequences. The people who will suffer the most under the status quo wont be the wealthy white liberals in southern Maine who voted for these policies; it will be poor Mainers and the migrants themselves.

Continued here:
Maine Media, Progressives Get Migrant Crisis Wrong - The Maine Wire

Chicago Tonight | Spotlight Politics: Progressives Push Tax Increase … – PBS

>>> ALLIES DROP A $12 BILLION FINANCIAL PROPOSAL TO ENCOURAGE HIM TO RAISE TAXES ON BOTH THE WEALTHY AND COMPANIES DOING BUSINESS IN CHICAGO.

ALL OF THAT AND MUCH MORE IN TONIGHT'S EDITION IN SPOTLIGHT POLITICS.

JOINING US NOW IS THE SPOTLIGHT POLITICS TEAM.

SO PROGRESSIVE NONPROFIT.

DEDICATED TO REDUCING THE POWER OF BIG CORPORATIONS WHOSE LEADERS BACKED BRANDON JOHNSON FOR MAYOR, ROLLED OUT A $12 BILLION PROPOSAL, INCLUDING ENACTING INCOME TAX.

AND CUTS IN SPENDING.

HEATHER, TELL US ABOUT WHAT IS BEHIND THIS PACKAGE OR WHAT'S IN THIS PACKAGE?

AND ISN'T SOMEONE FROM JOHNSON'S TEAM BEHIND IT?

>> THIS IS -- AND ITS COAUTHOR IS ON THIS.

HE AUTHORED THIS REPORT AS YOU SAID, WHICH WOULD RAISE A WHOLE BUNCH OF TAXES.

TO BASICALLY REINVEST IN CHICAGO'S SAFETY NETWORK.

SO THE GOAL OF THIS REPORT AND WHAT WE'VE HEARD FROM MAYOR JOHNSON IS THE SAME.

BUT THERE ARE VERY DIFFERENT APPROACHES THAT WE'VE HEARD FROM THE MAYOR DURING THE CAMPAIGN.

HIS TAX PROPOSED $800 MILLION IN NEW TAXES.

NOWHERE NEAR THE $8 BILLION THIS PLAN PROPOSES.

THE OTHER $5 BILLION IN SAVINGS WOULD COME FROM CUTS TO THE POLICE DEPARTMENT AGAIN THAT THE MAYOR HAS NOT ENDORSED AND CHANGES TO HOW THE CITY DEALS WITH ITS FINANCIAL SERVICES BY CREATING A PUBLIC THING.

THIS IS ESSENTIALLY PUTTING MAYOR JOHNSON ON NOTICE THAT THE PROGRESSIVE PEOPLE, THRILLED THOUGH THEY MAY BE TO BE IN OFFICE, THEY WILL BE MAKING SURE HE KEEPS HIS PROMISES.

LORI LIGHTFOOT DROPPED TO THE CENTER DROPPING A WHOLE HOST OF PROPOSALS, AND THAT HAS SORT OF SCARRED THE COMMUNITY.

>> ISN'T THAT GOING TO BE AN INTERESTING DYNAMIC TO WATCH?

FIRST TIME, ORGANIZERS HAVE ONE OF THEIR OWN FOR MAYOR.

HOW MUCH RUNWAY ARE THEY GOING TO GIVE TO ACCOMPLISH GOALS.

MANY OF THESE THINGS REQUIRE STATE APPROVAL.

GOVERNOR PRITZKER ON A TAX.

MANY OF THESE THINGS WILL BE DIFFICULT IF NOT IMPOSSIBLE TO DO.

THEN WHAT HAPPENS?

WHEN DOES THE PROGRESSIVE COMMUNITY GET UPSET WITH ONE OF THEIR OWN SAYING THIS IS OUR TIME AND YOU'RE NOT DOING ENOUGH.

>> WHAT KIND OF OPPOSITION DO WEALTH AND INCOME TAXES FACE?

>> I THINK THEY FACE A WHOLE LOT OF OPPOSITION HERE IN SPRINGFIELD.

THERE ALREADY HAS BEEN VERY CLEARLY NO APPETITE FOR A FINANCIAL TRANSACTION TAX.

PRITZKER WAS CLEAR ABOUT THAT.

HIS ONE REAL PUBLIC MEETING WITH MAYOR JOHNSON.

THEN YOU HAVE PERHAPS SOME OF THIS RUNNING COUNTER TO REQUIREMENTS THAT TAXES ARE FLAT.

YOU'LL MAYBE RECALL THAT THERE WAS A BALLOT INITIATIVE THAT GAVE VOTERS THE OPPORTUNITY TO CAST THAT ASIDE, SO THERE COULD BE A GRADUATED INCOME TAX THAT WOULD ALLOW THE WEALTHY TO PAY MORE.

VOTERS REJECTED IT.

SO ANYTHING THAT WOULD BE SEEN AS A TAX INCREASE IS SOMETHING THAT SPRINGFIELD, THEY'VE GOT THEIR OWN ELECTION.

THEY'RE NOT GOING TO WANT BACK.

PARTICULARLY, EVEN THOUGH THEY WANT TO HELP THE MAYOR.

THEY'RE A HANDFUL.

BUT BY AND LARGE; >> THE PROPOSED CUT HAS REALLY BAD TIMING, THE DAY THAT THE POLICE DEPARTMENT LAYS TO REST ONE OF THEIR OWN.

>> PROBABLY.

IT DOESN'T SEEM LIKE THEY WERE THINKING ABOUT THAT OR WHAT WAS GOING TO DOMINATE THE NEWS CYCLE TODAY.

BUT BRANDON JOHNSON, AS YOU MENTIONED, WAS THERE, AT THE FUNERAL, GIVING VERY GENEROUS WORDS ABOUT ARIANA'S LIFE, AND TALKING ABOUT HOW SHE WAS THE EXEMPLARY OF PUBLIC SERVICE.

SO I DON'T KNOW IF JOHNSON AS MAYOR IS GOING TO LINE UP WITH SOME OF WHAT THESE PROGRESSIVE GROUPS ARE ASKING FOR, IN TERMS OF CUTTING FUNDING FOR THE POLICE.

>> SO WHAT THIS PROPOSAL WOULD DO WOULD ESSENTIALLY ELIMINATE A THOUSAND VACANCIES, AND TAKE THAT $100 MILLION AND MOVE IT INTO THE SOCIAL SAFETY NET.

JOHNSON HAS SAID THAT IS A NONSTARTER.

BUT HE DOES WANT TO SORT OF REDIRECT $150 MILLION WITHIN THE POLICE DEPARTMENT AND BEEF UP EFFORTS TO COMPLY WITH THE CONSENT DECREE.

THIS IS A CONCESSION OF WHAT IS NOT GOING TO BE DONE BUT HOW TO DO IT.

AND TO WHAT EXTENT IT IS PHYSICALLY AND POLITICALLY POSSIBLE.

>> LET'S TALK ABOUT THAT.

THEY SPOKE AT OFFICER PRESTON'S FUNERAL.

>> ARIANA CHOSE TO CHANGE THE WORLD.

FOR WEARING THE BADGE AND PROTECTING AND SERVING HER BELOVED CITY.

I WILL SPEND TIME MAKING SURE THAT MY BLACK DAUGHTER UNDERSTANDS THERE'S A LIFE THERE OF A LIFE WELL LIVED.

>> I'M SO GLAD WE COME FROM A TRADITION WHERE WE CAN GRIEVE AND CELEBRATE AT THE SAME TIME.

>> HEATHER, SURPRISING THEY BOTH SPOKE?

>> IT'S A LITTLE SURPRISING.

TYPICALLY, WHEN A MAYOR LEAVES OFFICE, THEY TYPICALLY GO INTO THE SHADOWS.

WE HAVE HEARD A LITTLE FROM RAHM EMANUEL.

BUT IT IS A RARE LOOK WITH MAYOR LIGHTFOOT TALKING ABOUT HER LIFE.

AND SHE WAS MAYOR AS ARIANA PRESTON WAS SERVING AS POLICE OFFICER, SO PERHAPS IT'S FITTING.

>> THE TEARS THAT FAMILY SHED ON BOTH ENDS OF THE LAW ARE THE SAME, WHEN PEOPLE DIE.

WHAT DO YOU THINK JOHNSON WAS TRYING TO TELEGRAPH, ESPECIALLY THE FAMILY OF SALEDO?

>> I THINK IT HIT A NERVE.

FOR SOME OF THE -- FOR LACK OF BETTER PHRASE, BLUE LIVES MATTER.

ONE HOURS, PUT OUT A TWEET, CONDEMNING THIS.

AND MY IMMEDIATE REACTION WAS, WHAT A SHORT HONEYMOON HERE.

BUT HE WENT ON TO PAY TRIBUTE TO ARIANA PRESTON.

I DON'T THINK HE WAS SAYING ONE LIFE AND THED WERE EQUALLY LIVED.

HE WAS SAYING THE SITUATION IS TRAGIC.

A 13-YEAR-OLD BOY GETSUT CAUP IN THE SITUATION.

AND IF YOU'RE A PARENT.

YOU'RE SAD, EQUALLY, THAT THAT WAS YOUR KID.

AND THE FACT THAT BOTH OF THESE SHOOTINGS HAPPENED, IT IS EMBLEMATIC OF THE ONGOING TRAGEDY OF GUN VIOLENCE ON BOTH SIDES.

I THINK THAT'S WHAT HE WAS GETTING AT.

AND WHEN I HEARD IT, I DIDN'T REALLY HEAR THINGS THAT SOUNDED CONTROVERSIAL TO ME.

BUT CLEARLY, IT STRUCK A NERVE.

>> SO THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES TODAY RULED ILLINOIS'S ASSAULT WEAPONS BAN CAN GO THROUGH WHILE LAWSUITS ARE WINDING THEIR WAY THROUGH THE COURTS.

AND THEY HEARD CASE YESTERDAY.

JUST YESTERDAY, AMANDA, VARIOUS COURTS ARE HEARING.

WHERE DOES THIS LAW STAND?

>> SO WE WILL BE WAITING TO SEE WHETHER GOING FORWARD, THE U.S. SUPREME COURT TAKES FURTHER ACTION.

THAT DEPENDS ON THE ACTION FIRST OF A U.S. APPEALS COURT.

SO YOU HAVE A WHOLE LOT OF LAWSUITS AS IT STANDS NOW.

NO, YOU CANNOT BUY WEAPONS THAT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY DEEMED BY LAW TO BE ASSAULT GRADE.

CAN'T BUY THEM IN ILLINOIS.

IF YOU PREVIOUSLY HAD THEM, YOU CAN HOLD ON TO THEM, BUT YOU MUST REGISTER WITH THE STATE BEFORE 2023 IS DONE.

WE'RE GOING TO BE WATCHING A WHOLE LOT OF LEGAL ACTION TO WAIT AND SEE.

THE WORD YOU GOT FROM THE U.S. SUPREME COURT, WASN'T REALLY MUCH.

ALL IT IS JUST THAT.

WHILE THESE FEDERAL CASES ARE

The rest is here:
Chicago Tonight | Spotlight Politics: Progressives Push Tax Increase ... - PBS

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a Lying Crank Posing as a Progressive … – Current Affairs

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is running for president in the Democratic primary against Joe Biden, and some polling suggests that Kennedy is receiving unexpectedly high support, with nearly 20 percent of the Democratic electorate supporting him. At this early stage, its difficult to know what it means for voters to select RFK Jr. in an opinion poll. They may not know much about him beyond the fact he has an extremely presidential-sounding name. (It would be useful to see the polls done without the F. and the Jr. to see if it makes a difference.) As Jim Newell of Slate notes, its probably also got something to do with the fact that Kennedy is one of the only warm bodies who happens to be giving it a go against a president who a supermajority of Americans believe should not run for president again.

Certainly, its not surprising to see that a challenger to Biden would appeal to voters. While elected Democrats have almost uniformly endorsed Bidens reelection bid (even Bernie Sanders has already endorsed Biden), the data suggests that most of the electorate isnt on board. When asked, they overwhelmingly say they want someone else instead of Biden. The numbers are bad. Some polls show that nearly 60 percent of Democrats want someone else. People are clearly hungry for an alternative. And Kennedy is, technically, an alternative.

It remains to be seen whether Kennedys support will increase or plummet as Democratic voters find out more about him. Kennedys medical and public health views (antivax, antimask) conflict strongly with the opinions of the majority of Democrats, and someone who issues Trumpian rants against lockdown liberalism may have chosen the wrong party primary to run in. On the other hand, Kennedy is casting himself as an independent thinker who challenges party orthodoxy, and claims to be anti-corporate, pro-environment, and anti-war. The strong showings of Bernie Sanders in 2016 and 2020 show that a substantial number of Democratic primary voters do want a challenge to the party leadership, and Kennedys public statements are full of the kind of populist progressive rhetoric that could strike a chord with those (the majority of the party, remember) who say they dont want Biden.

But we have to hope that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.s campaign doesnt take off. While he began his career as an environmental attorney, Kennedys turn toward anti-vaccine conspiracy theories has meant he shouldnt be anywhere near an office where hell be entrusted with safeguarding public health. And yet because the Democratic Party has failed so badly to satisfy the basic demands of working people for social democratic policies, theres a real risk that Kennedy may outperform expectations. Any success he has is an indictment of a party that has made him one of the few options left to anyone who doesnt want another four years of Joe Biden.

Lets establish at the outset that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is someone who lies constantly in ways that seriously endanger the public. In fact, his lies have probably directly caused people to get sick, and possibly die.

To those who accept the scientific consensus around the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines, someone like Kennedy can appear to be a mere nut or crank. But its important to understand that anti-vaxxers like Kennedy arent just crazy. Theyre skilled manipulators of statistics who are great at fooling people using pseudoscience. Waving them away as fringe is ill-advised, because it underestimates the power of their appeal.

Kennedy does not present himself as a kook who doesnt believe in inoculating yourself against deadly diseases. He presents himself as a principled liberal, a believer in truth and rationality who simply thinks that the Democratic Party has betrayed the legacy of JFK and RFK Sr. Take Kennedys 2022 book A Letter to Liberals: Censorship and COVID: An Attack on Science and American Ideals. He claims that Democrats were once the party of intellectual curiosity, critical thinking, and faith in scientific and liberal empiricism. (One might point out that this has never, in fact, been true.) He says that once upon a time, liberals understood the Enlightenment principle that dogmas should be questioned, but now so many of todays Lockdown Liberals refuse to read or debate the science that they believe supports the governments COVID countermeasures. Kennedy says that he simply wants an open debate, in the spirit of free scientific inquiry. Kennedy then presents a wealth of statistics, charts, and citations to journal articles, purporting to show that the supposed consensus in favor of COVID vaccinations (as well as other public health measures like wearing masks and the initial lockdowns) is in fact mere propaganda. Kennedy pleads with his reader to simply maintain an open mind and listen to the research and evidence that confirms his claims about vaccines. To do otherwise would be to subscribe to an authoritarian theology that is not open to questioning.1

Anyone who simply dismisses Kennedy without addressing his evidence, then, will confirm the point he is making: we are afraid of the truth. The best way to respond, then, is to call his bluff and look (briefly) at the arguments he makes. When we do, we can see just how deceptive, bogus, and easily refuted they are.To see the Kennedy method at work, lets start with a claim about autism that he made in a recent interview. Kennedy thinks autism can be caused by vaccination, but pay attention to how he sets up the argument:

Why is it that in my generation, Im 69, the rate of autism is 1 in 10,000, while in my kids generation its 1 in 34? Now, I would argue that a lot of that is from the vaccine schedule, which changed in 1989. But what nobody can argue about is that it has to be an environmental exposure of some kind.

The vaccines cause autism hypothesis has been disproved, of course. But lets also consider Kennedys claim about what nobody can argue with. He says that if autism rates are different in older people than in younger people, the explanation has to be an environmental exposure of some kind. Thats obviously not the case. (Research indicates that theres a genetic component to autism.) It could be, and almost certainly is, that autism was overlooked in those of Kennedys generation, and there are a lot of people who would have been diagnosed with autism if they had been born forty years later. But Kennedy moves our attention away from the possible explanations of a fact that are non-sinister, trying to convince people that it would be irrational to entertain theories other than his own.

This is a trivial example compared to some of Kennedys more egregious whoppers. In his Letter to Liberals, Kennedy says there are mountainous archives of peer-reviewed science supporting the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19. This is entirely false. A Cochrane meta-analysis of the high-quality studies on hydroxychloroquine found that the drug did not work and in fact caused more unwanted effects than a placebo treatment, recommending that no further trials of hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine for treatment should be carried out. Ivermectin, too, is almost certainly useless. As epidemiologist Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz, summarizing the research, says, there does not appear to be much doubt that ivermectin is extremely unlikely to have any benefit in the treatment of COVID-19. In fact, there is evidence that ivermectin at the doses used in COVID studies might be harmful.2 Yet Kennedy repeats myths that Other nations like [Japan and Singapore] all ended their pandemics after providing their citizens with ivermectin and/or hydroxychloroquine (or chloroquine). Kennedy claims that [T]he Indian state of Uttar Pradesh (estimated pop. 235 million) effectively abolished the pandemic overnight by scuttling Dr. Faucis protocols and distributing ivermectin and other treatment to its citizens. In fact, as Meyerowitz-Katz explains in an analysis of the Uttar Pradesh case, its hard to know exactly what did work, but one thing we can be quite certain of is that ivermectin didnt. Yet Kennedy asks the question: Why were the lowest COVID death rates in countries and states that relied on therapeutic drugs like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine[?] The answer is: they werent.

Kennedy has spread similar nonsense about masks. He says in his Letter to Liberals that masking showed a highly significant correlation with increased risk of COVID death, and told Tablet magazine that there is just no evidence that [masks] make any difference, explaining:

The Cochrane collaboration, Cochrane Library, which is the premier authority for scientific clinical reviews,3 came out this week and said that masks, both the masks, the N95 and the regular surgical masks, are useless. And we looked at the studies, the existing literature, at the very beginning, and we collected it all in one place and saw the same thing. What Tony Fauci said originally was true: Masks dont work against respiratory viruses during a pandemicIt was an exercise not in public health, but in control.

Many people, particularly in the media, misrepresented the findings of the Cochrane review. In fact, the studys lead author, Oxfords Tom Jefferson, misleadingly suggested to the press that the study showed that even N95 masks did nothing to stop the spread of COVID-19. Given how many conspiratorial types like Kennedy (an exercise in control) are eager to latch on to any evidence that masks dont work, Jeffersons messaging was grossly irresponsible. Furthermore, Cochrane recently released a correction noting that the analysis had been widely misinterpreted and that the analysis was inconclusive to determine whether interventions to promote mask wearing help to slow the spread of respiratory viruses. As Meyerowitz-Katz explains, Cochranes study did not show that masks dont work. In fact, they showed that mask mandates dont necessarily do much if people dont comply with them:

What most of these masking studies show is that people dont love wearing masks, and will often not wear them correctly, will wear ineffective masks, or only wear them some of the time that theyre told to. This is not at all surprising people are, after all, not perfect even when it comes to medications that they have to take to stay alive but it does mean that when we are looking at the real world we arent testing whether masks work [to block respiratory particles], were testing whether the tools we use to promote mask usage have an impact on infectious disease.

Kennedy, then, repeats the incredibly dangerous falsehood that masks dont work against respiratory viruses during a pandemic, and he insists that hes backed in this conclusion by the premier authority in medical science. In other words, hes telling people lies that will endanger their health. Just to be clear, evidence shows that masks do block respiratory particles, and consistently wearing a mask, preferably a high-quality, well-fitting one, provides protection against the coronavirus.

Kennedys Letter to Liberals is full of other totally erroneous statements, like the most reliable data suggest that COVID vaccines do not lower risk of death and hospitalization. Again, this is contradicted by what Kennedy calls the premier authority for scientific clinical reviews, whose conclusion is that (depending on which vaccine were talking about) vaccines are highly effective or probably highly effective in preventing SARSCoV2 infection, symptomatic COVID19 and severe or critical COVID19. Instead of diving into the mainstream research, Kennedy relies on his audience having a limited understanding of basic statistics, by citing such information as the now-undeniable fact, summarized in the February issue of the European Journal of Epidemiology, that Countries with a higher percentage of population fully vaccinated have higher COVID-19 cases per 1 million people. (As proof that vaccines are ineffective against COVID, this is like saying that because countries with more seawalls also have more tidal waves, seawalls are clearly ineffective against tidal waves.) Kennedy even goes so far as to suggest that the vaccinated are actually more susceptible to COVID, repeating an erroneous claim that antivaxxers have spread across social media.

But the fact that Kennedy is completely wrong doesnt mean it will be obvious that hes wrong, especially to those with limited statistical training. For example, Kennedy cites data supposedly showing that the vaccinated were more likely to die from COVID than the unvaccinated. The data doesnt show that, but importantly, it can look like it does, because of the phenomenon known as Simpsons paradox. (Its easy to see how an illusion can be created. If we have data showing that vaccinated people have higher death rates, but then we learn that the vaccinated are likely to be older, and older people are much more likely to die of COVID, we can see how we cant draw any conclusion about vaccine efficacy from the bare fact that the vaccinated population has a higher death rate.) Kennedy, like other antivaxxers, is good at presenting pseudoscience, and pseudoscience is effective because its pseudoit looks like science, and non-experts find it hard to differentiate between it and the real thing. But given that Kennedys promotion of deadly lies is so easily proven, and promoting deadly lies should be disqualifying from public office, its pretty easy to see that Kennedy is not someone you want to be your president.

As we have seen, it is easy to establish that Kennedy misrepresents scientific research in ways that endanger public health. His Letter to Liberals poses as a call for open debate in the spirit of the Enlightenment but then pushes a discredited conspiracy theory that pharmaceutical companies conspired with politicians to suppress effective COVID-19 cures in order to profit off vaccines that at best are ineffective and at worse cause mass death.

But as we know, the fact that someone spouts easily-disproved nonsense is no guarantee that they will not attain a huge following. Kennedys book The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health reportedly sold a million copies and stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for 17 weeks. (It comes with blurbs from Tucker Carlson, Naomi Wolf, Oliver Stone, and even the pro-vaccination Alan Dershowitz.)

We cannot count on the media to successfully expose Kennedys lies. True adversarial journalism is virtually nonexistent these days. (Tablets recent interview with Kennedy asked such hard-hitting questions as How [did] you acquire your first pigeon? and Does it hurt you when you are painted as a nut?) What the media is far more likely to do is ignore him, but Kennedy will use this to advance his claim that he is censored because his heterodox opinions challenge the Establishment, who fear a genuine debate. Kennedy is clearly trying to run as an outsider, claiming to be taking back control of the party so that it serves the interests of voters rather than elites. As he says:

The Biden administration is riddled with Neocons, war hawks, Wall Street people, and former corporate lobbyists. Thats what the party elite has become. But I know the rank-and-fileand the American people as a wholedont share their priorities. Its time to return our party and our nation to the people. #Kennedy24

The trouble, of course, is that hes right. The Biden administration is riddled with precisely these people, and the American people dont share their priorities. When Kennedy says that both political parties are the war party, a lot of independent-leaning Democratic voters will nod along.

Kennedy clearly knows how to speak the language of the populist outsider. He has quoted Noam Chomsky, praised Chris Hedges criticism of the military-industrial complex, and calls Bernie Sanders Capitol Hills most formidable critic of pharma corruption and regulatory capture. He has even started to mimic Sanders language of class antagonism. Recently, he went on Tucker Carlson and said that, Theres a cushy socialism for the rich and this kind of brutal, merciless capitalism for the poor. It keeps us in a state of war it bails out banks.

Kennedy has long posed as a champion of the interests of the vulnerable. His nonprofit, Childrens Health Defense, brands itself as, well, defending childrens health, but is in fact a veritable antivaccine and health freedom disinformation media empire (CHDs website says that Kennedy is on leave from the organization). They produce news, books, and film, and fund litigation. They feature the following sections on their website: Big Pharma, Big Energy, Big Food, Big Tech, Big Chemical. True to faux-populist form, though, Kennedy is actually part of the big money problem he rails against. As Walker Bragman recently reported, CHD is a dark money group that has not revealed its top donors even as its revenue has balloon[ed] since the pandemic started.

And yet, its also important to understand why Kennedys shtick generally, and anti-vaccine conspiracy theories specifically, resonate with people despite the lack of evidence. As Lauren Fadiman has written for this magazine, our for-profit healthcare system generates a rational mistrust of medicine and public health. People think they cant trust insurance companies or pharmaceutical companies, and theyre right. But this means that it doesnt take much evidence to convince them that Big Pharma is controlling the government and doing things that hurt themlike lying to them about the efficacy of vaccines. Kennedy, for instance, uses peoples (justified) distrust of the pharmaceutical industry as a way of side-stepping the need for evidence of his claims:

Everybody knows big pharma is crooked. So if youre a Democrat and a liberal, you have to say yes, they are crooked in every aspect of their businessexcept for vaccines. I think the three big pharma companies have paid $35 billion in criminal penalties and civil damages over the last decade or so. So theyre chronic felons. Why do you think that just with this one product they found Jesus and they are going to behave?

When Kennedy says that Bill Gates is plotting to implant tracking chips in people, plenty of us will see right away that hes delusional. But Kennedy can be clever. The Letter to Liberals is filled with statistics, footnotes, and charts, and he tells people that the true facts have been kept from their knowledge by nefarious actors like pharmaceutical companies, Bill Gates, and Anthony Fauci. Because Bill Gates is a nefarious actor, and so are pharmaceutical companies, and Fauci has been misleading, arrogant, and self-contradictory, people may be more likely to be receptive when he says that he has data showing that the vaccines and the masks were a Big Pharma/Fauci conspiracy. Failures of public health messaging open the door for someone like Kennedy.

People might also be willing to overlook Kennedys crankish healthcare views, especially if he emphasizes the anti-war and anti-corporate parts of his platform. After all, the public is not, at least in polling, saying that it is particularly concerned with Big Pharma Poisoning Our Kids With Vaccines as a pressing policy concern. According to recent Pew polling, the top four policy concerns for Americans have to do with the economy, reducing healthcare costs, defending against terrorism, and reducing the influence of money in politics. In this sense, Kennedys main obsession with vaccines is probably about as important to people as it is scientifically accuratewhich is to say, not very.4 But it would be a mistake for people to disregard all his lies and horrible messaging on issues critical to public health. It speaks to a lack of fitness to be in public office.5

Kennedy can and will present himself as a unity candidate to heal a polarized country. His campaign website says that he has clear positions on most of todays divisive trigger issues like abortion, guns, and immigrationwhat are those positions? The website doesnt say. But he knows that both sides have legitimate concerns and legitimate moral positions. Kennedy promises to lead us toward a grand national reconciliation. Will it work? Lets hope not. While Kennedy may sound appealing when denouncing corporate dominance or calling for reining in the military-industrial complex, this both sides have legitimate points rhetoric suggests he might govern as both a disappointing centrist and an antivaxxer, which would be the worst of two awful worlds.

The case against Kennedy is easy enough to make. But theres an obvious response: As bad as he is, is he actually worse than Joe Biden? On public health, yes, clearly he is. But thats one issue. What about climate change? Foreign policy? Corporate power? While Kennedys environmental and anti-imperialist credentials may not be as strong as hed like leftists to believe, he actually makes a lot of sense on these issues (and more sense than Joe Biden). If we think, for instance, that hes right about putting companies out of business if they push climate denial, or about the existential necessity of avoiding escalation in Ukraine, or his promise to dismantle the surveillance state, or that the migrants at the border are facing a humanitarian crisis due to years of misguided foreign policies, could these outweigh his hideously irresponsible vaccination rhetoric? After all, the whole reason progressives were supposed to vote for Joe Biden over Donald Trump was that Biden was the lesser evil, even if many of Bidens policy positions were terrible.

Could Kennedy, then, still be the lesser evil? Is it worse to push anti-vaccine conspiracies than to approve new fossil fuel projects at a time when its clear this will lead to planetary destruction? Is it worse than breaking strikes and escalating tensions with nuclear-armed powers? In another pandemic, Kennedy would clearly be one of the worst possible people to have in the executive branch. But if ones concern is reining in the military-industrial complex, wouldnt he actually be better than Biden? Consider this, from his website:

As President, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. will start the process of unwinding empire. We will bring the troops home. We will stop racking up unpayable debt to fight one war after another. The military will return to its proper role of defending our country. We will end the proxy wars, bombing campaigns, covert operations, coups, paramilitaries, and everything else that has become so normal most people dont know its happening. But it is happening, a constant drain on our strength. Its time to come home and restore this country.

If someone thinks the continuation of American empire endangers the future of the planet, might they not be willing to suspend their disapproval of his stance on COVID vaccines?

On the other hand, we need to remember that all this anti-empire and pro-civil liberties sentiment sounds great, but its like a broken clock being wrong twice a day. Ultimately, we can wrack our brains trying to tally up the good and the bad for each candidate to make some kind of calculation as to who is the lesser evil. Or we could just take a few seconds to remember that Kennedy has made it his lifes work for the last couple of decades to spread lies and undermine scientific truth. (Biden is a liar, too, of course, and we can see that he hasnt kept his campaign promises.) He really is a professional liar. Why should we fixate on the parts of his campaign we might happen to agree with and assume he will do those things? The danger of Kennedy is that he uses populist rhetoric to make people think he will change things. But thinking Kennedy will shake things up in a good way is probably as misguided as thinking that Donald Trump would drain the swamp or give us a good healthcare planthings he promised but failed to deliver on. Consider Kennedys recent response to a question about his record on vaccines. The reporter asked him if he went too far at any stage.

Heres what I would say: show me where I got it wrong. Show me one fact that Ive said in all of my social media postings that was factually erroneous. If you show me that, Ill fix it, Ill change it. And if its appropriate, Ill apologize for it. But, thats not whats happened.

The question, to begin with, was far too gentle considering Kennedys 2005 Rolling Stone-Salon article, Deadly Immunity, in which he claimed that thimerosal in vaccines caused autism, was retracted due to misquotations and factual inaccuracies. Salon has even admitted that keeping the corrected story online constitutes a disservice to the public, so they have taken it down. And in a recent interview with progressive commentator Krystal Ball, who was very kind to Kennedy, saying she likes a lot of what he says but that she is concerned about his antivaccine advocacy and wonders how hes going to win over skeptical voters, he chose to answer her with more of the same, Show me where I got it wrong.6 Kennedys responses here show that he refuses to acknowledge he was wrong in a pretty big way. As we live through the fourth year of a public health crisis and also a cost-of-living crisis, its hard to see how this is the kind of leader we need right nowor ever.

Lesser evilism is not only wrong because it distracts from the overall problems with Kennedy as a candidate but also distracts from the rest of his policy agendato the extent that he has one.

Whats most concerning is that his policy agenda on his campaign website lacks mention of the most basic (and popular) progressive policies around healthcare, climate, wages, and taxes. Our colleague Briahna Joy Gray, who has spoken positively about the energy around Kennedys campaign, pointed out on a recent Bad Faith Podcast Callin that some excitement for Kennedy among leftists seems to ignore the fact that he essentially has no healthcare or specific social welfare policies. It is very weird to me that no one seems to care that this man has no healthcare platform! she said. Shes right.

Healthcare isnt even listed as a distinct policy priority! No mention, either, of Medicare for All. But part of his revitalization plan is to include low-cost alternative and holistic therapies that have been marginalized in a pharma-dominated system. Great. Now we can replace Big Pharma with another Big Multi-Billion Dollar Alternative Health Industry. Remember, though: the fundamental problem with American healthcare is not a lack of access to alternative therapies or natural supplements or holistic therapies. Its the profit motive of the pharmaceutical, health insurance, and other related industries that cause public mistrust, drive up costs (often through administrative bloat), limit access to care, and cause unnecessary deathsthat and the countrys fundamental lack of commitment to the social determinants of health. Millions of people with diabetes cannot afford insulin, people who need organ transplants are denied by insurance companies, and millions cant get basic primary care. Kennedys desire to move to a wellness society from a sick care system sounds good until you realize that wellness is about self-care and consumption, not about the structural changes that would truly make people healthy.

When asked by Ball about whether he would consider nationalizing the pharmaceutical industry, Kennedy didnt hesitate to say no. When Ball pressed him further about the profit motive ultimately being at the root of the problem with that industry (and others), he responded that the profit motive is human nature. In other words, its something we cant do anything about.

When asked by Ball if he supports Medicare for All, Kennedy said (unexcitedly while shrugging) that he would like a single-payer system to be available to everyone, along with private plans, but that single payer was not politically realistic. This certainly ought to concern anyone who wants a president who not only supports M4A but is willing to fight for it. It sounds like single payer is simply not an issue that Kennedy is very invested in (probably because he knows it would undercut the for-profit health insurance industry, and, after all, the profit motive is just human nature).

The bottom line here is that any credible progressive candidate who wishes to run in opposition to Republicans (during a pandemic, no less) simply needs to support Medicare for All. (This is not an argument to push this particularly bad candidate to the left. Its an argument against this particular candidate.) And its concerning that a candidate who is running such an Anti-Corporate and Anti-Pharma campaign wont even consider nationalizing the industry.

Moving to climate, then, we shouldnt be too surprised that Kennedys stance here is downright awful. He clearly lacks an appropriate commitment to addressing the climate emergency. On his campaign website, theres no mention of a Green New Deal or concrete plan to do what is necessary to rapidly transition away from fossil fuels to address global warming. Kennedy says he will detoxify the land and protect natural areas, and this is unobjectionable. But when a Breitbart radio host recently asked him about climate, his first response was that the crisis was being used as an excuse to impose social controls and political controls and geoengineering on society. Just a few months ago, Kennedy tweeted a CHD article (Must Read!) which claimed that a government declaration of a climate emergency (an important thing, one would think, assuming it had substantive policy implications) would be a gateway to authoritarianism. When Ball asked him whether he thought the crisis was existential, he said yes but that he doesnt insist that others believe that. He then repeated the line about climate (and COVID) being gateways to totalitarianism.

It gets worse. He told the Breitbart host the following in a recent interview:

I dont believe in these top-down mandates [such as geoengineering]. Ive said from the beginning [that] the solution to environmental problemsnot just climate but all environmental problemsis free market capitalism. We have corporate crony capitalism. A true free market promotes efficiency, and efficiency means the elimination of waste. And pollution is waste. A true free market would require us to properly value our natural resources. Its the undervaluation of those resources that caused us to use them wastefully.

Kennedys solution to corporate polluters (and climate), then, is the discipline of the free market. Now, not only is so-called green capitalism not going to solve the climate crisis, but Kennedys persistent paranoia7 about something sinister lurking behind large-scale societal efforts to address climate seems fairly incompatible with efforts to address climate in a meaningful way and with the general policies of social uplift that progressives support. That, combined with his delusional faith in the free market, ought to be the final nail in the coffin of his candidacy for anyone who is even the slightest bit serious about addressing the existential issue of climate.

On economic issues, his website says nothing about raising the minimum wage or taxing the rich (though he does support deregulating cryptocurrency and made his campaign debut at a Bitcoin conference). He does, of note, want to restore integrity to government by opening institutions to real citizen involvement and to clean house of the influence of the corporations that he says have captured major government institutions like the CDC, NIH, FDA, USDA, SEC, and the EPA. He recently tweeted, for instance, the following: Id like to put some former prisoners in the Bureau of Prisons. Id like to put a few homeless people in HUD. The DOD needs a few peace activists. This sounds like nothing more than standard liberal inclusion politics, not fundamental change. And surely any program of rehabilitating our government and getting money out of politics (which Kennedy says he also wants to do) must involve taxing corporations as well as taxing billionaires out of existence. So is he going to do those things or adequately fund the IRS to deal with rampant tax evasion? We have our doubts.

As for criminal punishment, which is buried in his civil liberties section, Kennedy plans to make prisons more rehabilitative and to transform the police instead of defunding them. No details on how. Also not terribly exciting for anyone who wants radical change in these areas, but it may sound perfectly acceptable to liberals who dont want to vote for someone who seems too soft on crime. (But we agree with him about ending the War on Drugs and the school-to-prison pipeline.)

Whats his agenda for racial justice? We cant know for sure, but in his campaign website video, he says he wants to confront the darker parts of our history such as the genocide, the racism, but not in a way that would shame or blame or punish but in a spirit of kindness. Well, that sounds about as ineffective as it sounds vague (what about reparations?). For other clues, we might look to CHDs 2021 film Medical Racism: The New Apartheid, which targeted Black Americans with antivaccine propaganda by using actual past atrocities (Tuskegee and so forth) as context. Experts who were interviewed in the film have said that they feel they were used and misled as to what the film was about. If thats any indication of Kennedys leanings on the issue, he might not have an agenda for racial justice that goes beyond conspiracy theories about government using vaccines as genocide against people of color. It goes without saying that it is truly despicable to target with disinformation a medically vulnerable minority group that has experienced disproportionate death from COVID and real harm from unethical medical experimentation and systemic racism in healthcare.

Another important point for progressives is that its not clear whether Kennedy the Populist has sworn off corporate PAC money. His website donation page notes, We dont have the mainstream media, the big corporations, or the Party establishment on our side. But we have you. But there is no mention of a pledge not to take corporate PAC money. A search of his tweets also yielded no results on the subject.

On his campaign website, Kennedy has a short video about his run. He nostalgically recalls that his father and uncle had high hopes for the country: racial harmony and prosperity for all, peace, and honest government. But their lives were cut short and America took a different path. This implies that if only they had been around, things could have been different. Leaning a bit on the fairy tale romanticism of the Camelot JFK administration, as well as portraying himself as just a sincere adult-in-the-room liberal, Kennedy wants us to think that he can finish the job as a member of this political dynasty. Its interesting that Kennedy uses his deceased family members to try to establish credibility. Some of his living family members have gone on the record to denounce his dangerous misinformation crusade against vaccines (and others reportedly see him as a disgrace in private). In the video, Kennedy warns about alchemies of demagoguery that are threatening our country. The truth, though, is that he is a demagogue.

Ultimately, its only because Biden and the Democrats have been so disappointing that someone like Kennedy, an abysmal candidate and totally untrustworthy person, can be attracting any support at all. Its depressing that its even possible to ask whether Biden is better or worse than Kennedy.

In a way, we are in a similar situation to 2016, when, as Chris Hedges put it, our failed democracy vomited up a con artist who was a creation of the mass media. Speaking of this con artist, Kennedy said on the Breitbart radio interview that he admired Trump for speaking out against the establishment during the early days of COVID and seemed to lament that Trump didnt have the fortitude or other traits it would take to really be effective as a leader to do battle with his own bureaucracy. Kennedy seemed to be implying that hed like to be a more effective Trump, which should terrify us.

Kennedy will continue to sell himself as a brave alternative to the status quo. But this man peddles lies and capitalizes on the publics hatred of corporate greed and government corruption. Like the con artist of 2016, this man is not to be trusted.

If the Democrats had a crop of candidates that people would be genuinely enthusiastic about voting for, Kennedy wouldnt get a second look from anyone. But then they wouldnt be the contemporary Democratic Party, and we wouldnt be facing another demagogue vying for power.

Update May 19, 2023: The article was updated to include Kennedys interview responses about his views on Medicare for All, whether he would consider nationalizing the pharmaceutical industry, and his view on the existential threat of climate.

See the article here:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a Lying Crank Posing as a Progressive ... - Current Affairs

The progressive revolution’s continued control of the ecclesial … – Catholic World Report

(Image: Sean Ang/Unsplash.com)

Vatican II was unique in the history of councils insofar as the crisis it was called to address was not a specific and well-defined theological heresy. Rather, it was called to address the crisis presented by modernity to the credibility of the entire Christian narrative tout court. The secular world looked at the Christ of the Church like an ancient palimpsest, in which an original manuscript had been written over with the layering of something new. In this case the claim was made that the historical Jesus had been glossed over and hidden away as the Church painted something new, which was a distorted image of Jesus as the divine guarantor of the Churchs power over even mundane terrestrial affairs.

Therefore, the challenge of modernity to the Churchs faith went far beyond this or that specific doctrine. It was instead a radical rejection of the very core of the Churchs narrative of who Jesus of Nazareth was and is and, therefore, of the very core of who God isif He even isand of what the Church is.

Therefore, and considering this totalizing challenge, Pope John XXIII, in calling the Council, did not task it with updating any particular doctrine in the light of specific theological challenges. Instead, he called on the Council to re-interrogate the entirety of the deposit of the faith and to propose that deposit in a new form, stripped of turgid baroque ecclesiastical language, and in a manner more Christological and evangelical.

To my knowledge, such a project had never before been attempted by the Church. And it does not take a great deal of perspicacity to see that the risks and potential rewards in such an endeavor were huge. Succeed and the Church might just yet reinvigorate her credibility as an authentic interpreter of who Jesus was; fail and the entire ecclesial edifice might collapse into a ragtag flotilla of lost refugees in uncharted waters. In many ways, therefore, Pope Johns mandate was the equivalent of a high-stakes gambler going all in with a poker hand that was not a slam dunk.

Pursuing this agenda, the dominant conciliar theology, in my view, was the Christocentric, theological anthropology of the ressourcement school, exemplified in Henri de Lubacs masterful book The Drama of Atheist Humanism, which found expression in the famous line in Gaudium et Spes 22: In reality it is only in the mystery of the Word made flesh that the mystery of man truly becomes clear.

The reinterpretive goal of the Council (and the linchpin as well of the entire pontificate of Pope John Paul II) was the trumping of modern secularisms co-optation of the mantle of true freedom and of a true humanism, by presenting to the world a deeper concept of freedom, grounded in a far more expansive and dignified Christocentric anthropology. It was no accident that Pope John Pauls first encyclical, Redemptor Hominis, was precisely an articulation of this expansive theological anthropology. And this more expansive view included a deeper and more authentic existentialism that emphasizes the natural human thirst for Godeven as modernity seeks to explain this thirst away as the epiphenomenal flotsam and jetsam of our neurochemistry.

Like all great and truly consequential ecumenical councils, it is taking time for this essentially ressourcement theological project of Vatican II to take root. One huge reason for this is that the very essence of the Council was an attempt at an interpretive theological retrieval of Jesus Christ as the Revelation of God. But this exercise in theological retrieval opened the door to a flood of alternative theological proposalse.g. transcendentalist, liberationist, feminist, and political theologies, et alwhich were far less traditional and far more accommodating to modernity than the ressourcement theology of the Council and its Christocentric project.

This brings us to where we are now as a Church. Ever since 1962, and in light of the Councils interpretive theological project, the dominating and overriding issue has been, Who is in control of the narrative of modern Catholicism? Who is in control of this project of theological reinterpretation?

Sadly, Vatican II failed to truly energize the Church. It led instead, and despite what it actually said, to all kinds of gnarled secular vines choking everything holy within the Church, mainly because, in the immediate aftermath of the Council, it was the progressive wing of the Church that succeeded in controlling the narrative of what the Council was all about. They had the advantage of a compliant and enthusiastic secular media world, the support of a Catholic theological guild seeking secular praise and approval as real members of the academic elite (thanks for nothing, Father Hesburgh!), and average Catholics of the post-war era eager to embrace and enter the new economic and political order of the liberal West as fully mainstreamed moderns.

It seemed, for a time, that the ressourcement camp had regained the upper hand in the pontificates of John Paul and Benedict. But their efforts were undermined and their success only partial, since the theological guild remained mostly in the hands of the progressives (with some noteworthy exceptions). Furthermore, many priests and prelates continued to drift with the current mood of our cultural social contract. The strategy of the progressives was to lay low, say the right things, and bide their time until the reins of Roman power were in the hands of a different pope.

If you were in the Catholic academy during this time, as I was, you heard this sentiment expressed in a thousand different ways but always with the same inflection: The conciliar project of modernization has been interrupted by reactionary popes stuck in the past, but the curve of history is on our side and our day will come.

In other words, the burning question of who controls the modern narrative of Catholicismwhich is the ecclesial issue of the past sixty yearsnever went away, despite popes John Paul and Benedict. What we are witnessing in the current torments within the Church is a struggle over irreducible, and therefore intractable, debates rooted in irreconcilable theological first principles. What we are witnessing is nothing short of a wholesale recrudescence of old guard, post-Vatican II progressivism, now linked to ever more transgressive attempts at revision, with a special focus on moral theology in particular. In 1968 it was Humanae Vitae and contraception; today it is LGBTQ everything, but the overall project is the same: The Church must change her moral theology, with an eye toward baptizing the sexual revolution, or it will perish.

And that brings me to the current pontificate. It is, in my view, best read as an attempt to revive a version of the controlling narrative of the Council as an aggiornamento of openness to modern Liberalism and not the aggiornamento of a prophetic engagement and critique. Seen in this light, Pope Francis is a useful tool for the progressives in that bigger project, regardless of his stated faithfulness to the Tradition. He is useful so long as papal authority is required in order to undermine or even destroy episcopal authority. This explains why, in the midst of all of this hoopla over a more synodal and less Roman Church, we see the contradiction of an increasing centralization of power in Rome as the progressives gradually gain control of the various Vatican dicasteries.

For example, we see the authority of the local bishop taken away when it comes to allowing for the Old Mass in Traditionis Custodes and its follow-up-up dubia, where Rome asserts authority even over the minutiae of what can and cannot be published about the Old Mass in parish bulletins. There is now a new Roman office for adjudicating the validity of various alleged supernatural phenomena such as Marian apparitions, which has been traditionally the provenance of the local bishop. And to cite one more example, among many possible candidates, there is the paradoxical spectacle of Rome micromanaging the machinations of the synodal process in order to insure, via the use of Roman authority, that all of our listening is properly curated.

Dont get me wrong. I am not saying that this is the agenda of Pope Francis. His words and official teachings show no evidence of this kind of institutional self-immolation where centralized authority is invoked in order to destroy centralized authorityor even, as in the extreme case of the German synodal way, the destruction of episcopal authority as such. What is puzzling in the extreme is that Pope Francis, despite the sound theology in his words, has empowered the progressive wing of the Church in very significant ways through his various episcopal appointments.

The prelates, priests, and theologians that Pope Francis apparently prefers and thus promotes, are cut out of the cloth of modern, performative transgression. The subjective categories of human experience, described in terms of a deeply psychologistic and sociologistic register, are now the privileged loci for where Gods Revelation takes place. They are often even viewed as standing in tension with, if not in outright contradiction to, the traditional loci of Incarnation, Scripture, and Tradition. It is not the traditional concept of the third person of the Holy Trinity that is being developed here, but rather a witchs brew of Feuerbach, Freud, Kinsey, and pop psychology of the angel pin/dream catcher boutique shop variety. And this new Church on the move theology is the apotheosis of the modern, rootless, therapeutic self so ably described by Carl R. Trueman in The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self, and as such has the double distinction of being both false and boring.

But it is also propagandistic, since this Church on the move theology is almost always tendentious in its census-taking of opinions, the selectivity of which leaves the distinct impression that apparently only highly secularized people whose lives are a train wreck of constant anxiety, uncertainty, and undifferentiated anger, speak for the Holy Spirit.

Furthermore, this propaganda is emerging as an attempt at total narrative control via the redeployment of the slogans of the original failed Great Revolution back in the Sixties and Seventies. It also requires the airbrushing out of the enemies of the Great RevolutionPopes John Paul and Benedict, for instancebut in a manner that at least temporarily makes it seem that the Dear Leader, though surpassing them in his understanding of Vatican II, loved them very much.

An example of this airbrushing revisionism can be seen in some recent remarks from Cardinal Robert McElroy:

Pope Francis has made the pope and the papacy more immediate to people. It is not formal in the same way it had been before. Now, certainly Pope John Paul II had a wonderful way with people and engagement, but this is a different thing. This is speaking with groups, people, journalists, individuals, immediately, about the problems that exist in their lives and in the world and in the life of the Church. That sense of immediacy is a different kind of papacy. It is one of more direct encounter, person to person encounter, than it has been before.

I am so glad that a Cardinal of the Church finally had the nerve to point out that John Paul was still too formal in his dealing with people, and that he did not as a rule speak with personal immediacy to journalists and people about the problems in the world or in their personal lives. These words are so flamboyantly fallacious that they could only have been written by either an Apparatchik devoted to the methodology of the Big Lie (my vote) or someone who was in a coma during the 25 years of John Pauls pontificate. But it is necessary for the Great Revolution that the Dear Leader be shown in all respects superior, even to the point of not just a revision of history but a total rewriting of it altogether. That is not a tweaking of history. This is its destruction in the furtherance of the Revolution.

It is truly sad that the case of Vatican II and its narrative is being relitigated in this manner. The pontificates of John Paul and Benedict have given us a magisterially authoritative adjudication of the case. And if ecclesial sanity were in play then double jeopardy would apply and the case would be thrown out of court on those grounds. But there is a new chief justice on the bench, and he too wields the same judicial papal authority. So, here we are in court again.

But this is not good for the Church. Because a Church in a constant state of flux and suspension, a Church that is an endlessly open debating society, will eventually define itself into irrelevance.

If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.

Excerpt from:
The progressive revolution's continued control of the ecclesial ... - Catholic World Report