Westâs work at Uber and the Harris campaign illustrates his dedication to the people holding this worldview. He reduced his work in both places to simple games (find returns for Uber investors; raise more cash than the Republicans) where determining the âwinnerâ was a simple matter of counting the money.
In both cases it was critical to complete control of funding and the narratives used to describe the game. No one at Uber had any real-world business accomplishments and no one had any idea how the business model could ever produce sustainable profits, but since they controlled the $13 billion in external funding neither repeated scandals or $32 billion in losses could threaten their control. Anyone who attacked them (or pointed to the huge losses) was denigrated as a unrepentant unionist set on fighting the inevitable tide of technological progress.
Democratic Party insiders fiercely controlled funding even though they no longer had the ability to develop candidates who could win competitive elections or messages and policies with appeal outside elite/PMC circles. Worsening election results were blamed on to Russian interference and the failure of media companies to aggressively censor âmisinformationâ.
Uber subverted the idea that corporations served the larger economy through risky investments that produced meaningful productivity/efficiency advances whose value was demonstrated in competitive markets. It successfully convinced capital markets to ignore their total lack of competitiveness and profitability, and to only pay attention to their narratives about powerful technological innovation and Amazon-like growth potential.
California Party insiders abandoned the belief that Democrats should serve the concrete interests of a broad range of voters and needed to assemble a broad coalition of interests in order to win elections. The Harris campaign raised a billion dollars from companies and investors who were openly working to capture political processes so they could personally profit from market rigging and directly harm the many Democrats who benefitted from Biden Administration antitrust enforcement.
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The Harris-West decision to ignore elite/non-elite issues and center the campaign on fundraising also helped ensure that it would be impossible for the national Democratic Party to recover from a Trump victory and establish any meaningful opposition to Trump policies. Some billionaire/corporate donors might have had some preference for a Democratic win, believing that (as with Obama) a this would neutralize opposition to pro-oligarchic policies from the left and offered more stability than a Trump victory. But the interest of the donors who contributed $1.1 billion to Harris was always purely transactional and (as events have proven) they rapidly switched their allegiance to Trump. So the national Democrats have absolutely no one that can serve as a plausible opponent to any Trump policies, the Partyâs historic pro-working class branding has been destroyed, and the Party totally lacks the money and infrastructure needed to move forward.
United States (US)
Can Uber Ever Deliver? Part Thirty-Four â Tony Westâs Calamitous Legacy at Uber and with the Kamala Harris Campaign
in Naked CapitalismTesting Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens
for Cambridge University PressEach of four theoretical traditions in the study of American politicsâwhich can be characterized as theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy, Economic-Elite Domination, and two types of interest-group pluralism, Majoritarian Pluralism and Biased Pluralismâoffers different predictions about which sets of actors have how much influence over public policy: average citizens; economic elites; and organized interest groups, mass-based or business-oriented.
A great deal of empirical research speaks to the policy influence of one or another set of actors, but until recently it has not been possible to test these contrasting theoretical predictions against each other within a single statistical model. We report on an effort to do so, using a unique data set that includes measures of the key variables for 1,779 policy issues.
Multivariate analysis indicates that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence. The results provide substantial support for theories of Economic-Elite Domination and for theories of Biased Pluralism, but not for theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy or Majoritarian Pluralism.
The US Govt Spread Anti-Vaxx COVID Disinformation
for YouTubeNo way this could rebound in bad waysâŠ
Muskâs DOGE Brings in HR Consultant Focused on âNon-Wokeâ DEI 'Aligned With Our Faithâ
in 404 MediaAt the Napa Instituteâs conference panel on âPractical Steps for Dealing with DEI,â Holmes sat on a panel with former Trump administration official and current Heritage Foundation fellow Roger Severino.
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Holmes said on the panel that the âmainstream kind of leftist approach to DEI presents us with a lot to push back against.â
âIt is really inconsistent with our faith and I also think that this presents us with an opportunity to not only say why weâre against this, why weâre opposed to mainstream DEI initiatives, but itâs important for us to be part of the conservation and to use it to say what we are for and why we have a positive vision and positive solution of DEI in a way that is consistent with our values,â she said.
She said she advises employers to âmove away from defining diversity exclusively focused on employeesâ race, sex, or other protected category,â and to instead focus on âbringing together employees with diverse backgrounds, viewpoints, perspectives, and beliefs to achieve common workplace goals.â She said employers need to also be âreframing the term inclusion to incorporate that in a way thatâs more aligned with our faith.â
Trump Signs Order To Deport Foreign Students Who Support Palestinian Freedom
in HuffPostPresident Donald Trump signed an executive order on Wednesday that would cancel visas and deport international students who have expressed support for Palestinians â the administrationâs latest effort to both target immigrants and crack down on free speech, particularly on college campuses.
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âTo all the resident aliens who joined in the pro-jihadist protests, we put you on notice: come 2025, we will find you, and we will deport you,â states the order, first obtained by Reuters.
The president said that he would also cancel the visas of students he considers âHamas sympathizers,â describing college campuses as âinfested with radicalism.â
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Trumpâs executive order is pulled directly from the âProject Estherâ report created by the Heritage Foundation, the same group that put together the massive Project 2025 playbook. The former is also a blueprint for the Trump administration, focused on using the authority of the federal government to dismantle first the Palestine solidarity movement, and subsequently other progressive social movements.
Louisiana Indicts New York Abortion Provider, Arrests Mother
Dr. Maggie Carpenter was indicted today on charges of âcriminal abortion by means of abortion-inducing drugs,â a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. If Dr. Carpenterâs name sounds familiar, itâs because she was also recently targeted by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
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But Louisiana district attorney Tony Clayton didnât just bring charges against Carpenterâhe also arrested and indicted the patientâs mother, who obtained the pills. Clayton claims the woman coerced her daughter into having an abortion, but as the Louisiana Illuminator points out, âcoerced abortionâ was not cited in the indictment.
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This case really does have precisely what conservatives have been looking forâand everything Iâve warned about since Roe was overturned. I started raising the alarm over anti-abortion messaging around âcoercion,â for example, in 2023. Thatâs when the Charlotte Lozier Institute started to suggest Republicans use âcoercionâ in their policies and cases because âno one is openly in favor of coerced abortions.â The tactic has only grown since.
Similarly, Republicans have been especially eager to restrict teenagersâ access to abortion: Both Tennessee and Idaho passed laws recently that made it a crime to help a teen obtain an abortion in any way. And when three Republican AGs brought their most recent case against the FDA over mifepristone, they focused in on revoking access for teens, out of supposed fear for their âdeveloping reproductive systems.â
Finally, Republican AGs have been on the lookout for a case with an unsympathetic defendant. A mother who coerced her daughter into an abortion is a perfect victim for conservativesâ anti-abortion agenda. (Whether she actually coerced the teen or not.) We also saw this tactic in Idaho, when the state brought its first âabortion traffickingâ charges against a mother and son who had coerced the sonâs girlfriend into an out-of-state abortion.
In short: The Louisiana AG clearly thinks she has found a winner of a case that she can bring to the Supreme Court to target out-of-state abortion providers. And I think if we do a little bit of digging, weâll find that it isnât just Murrill behind this moveâbut a national anti-abortion strategy backed by extremist billionaire dollars.
The Chilling Line Trump Just Crossed On Transgender People
I have had the notable displeasure of witnessing the evolution of anti-trans bills and the relentless attacks on transgender rights over the past five years. For much of that time, Republicans, buoyed by anti-trans organizations funded by billionaires and amplified by media outlets like The New York Times, have operated under the guise that their efforts were not âanti-trans.â Instead, they claimed to be âjust asking questions,â âquestioning the science,â or âengaging in a debateâ about transgender peopleâas if these debates were somehow divorced from the rampant anti-trans animus that is undeniably pervasive in those circles.
They never truly were, of course, but to gain a foothold in American politics, they maintained a façade of concern for the welfare of transgender people. This is why, when reading the original Arkansas trans care ban, you wonât find overt charges that transgender people are lesser human beings who deserve to be erased in the purpose section. Instead, youâll encounter pseudo-scientific statements like âthe risks of gender transition procedures far outweigh any benefitsâ and âthe majority come to identify with their biological sex.â Both are demonstrably false, but carefully crafted to carry a veneer of scientific credibilityâproviding a shield against accusations that such bans are rooted in hatred toward transgender people.
That all changed yesterday. President Trump, in justifying his transgender military ban, leaned on a new argument for why such an action restricting the rights of transgender people was necessary: that transgender people are lesser human beings, dishonorable liars, and worse.
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This marks a chilling and undeniable shift. The attacks on transgender people are no longer cloaked in the faux respectability of âevidence,â âscience,â or âprotecting kids.â They never truly were, but now even the pretense has been abandoned. The thin veneer provided by New York Times op-eds, SEGMâs pseudo-scientific âreviews,â and the disingenuous claims of debate is no longer required. Instead, the justification is laid bare in black and white: transgender people are âdishonorable,â âliars,â âfalse.â The language is stark, deliberate, and unmistakableâit dehumanizes us. This is the very rhetoric historically used to justify atrocity.
Trumpâs Definitions of âMaleâ and âFemaleâ Are Nonsense Science With Staggering Ramifications
in Mother JonesSo how would anyone know whether an embryo belongs to a sex that produces eggs or sperm at conception?
Anti-abortion rhetoric defines conception as happening at fertilization. [The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the leading US authority on reproductive health, defines âconceptionâ as happening when a fertilized egg implants in the uterus.] Weâre not even a multicelled embryo yet at fertilization. At that moment, does an embryo have sexed chromosomes? Yes. Are they knowable with our current technology? No. In IVF, for people who do pre-implantation genetic testing, we typically wait until at least day three, if not day five, until the sex chromosomes are even measurable. And is it a point at which the embryo is even producing gametes? No. Thatâs still months away.
But the executive order says these definitions should be used to determine which sex marker should go on a passport or whether a prisoner should be incarcerated in a menâs or a womenâs prison.
This is whatâs so stupid about it, but also whatâs so dangerous. What is the enforcement plan? Are we going to test peopleâs gonads to see what type of gametes they produce? Because if the obsession is at the level of gametes, the tests are much more invasive than a sex chromosome test.
Nor will there be an actual way to logically enforce it, because itâs an illogical order. I think what will happen is it will be basically about punishing people in the worst way possible, treating people as poorly as possible, and creating as much discord and mayhem as possible.
This is mostly going to be around one sex category: the female sex category. They will only be doing this toward anybody who might fall into the woman category or might self-report as being in the woman category. I think Trump, in whatever terrible language is available to him, is trying to control women and control people he perceives to be in the woman category. A lot of this is keeping the category of women âpureââand also, obviously, about doing immense harm to trans people.
Thereâs also a very racial, white supremacist thing going on here with this âdefending women.â Itâs a very old ideaâit appears in travelogues, early writings of Europeans, as well as in the United States when they started encountering North American Indigenous folks, and the way that they thought about enslaved peoples. There was this belief that in the âlower races,â men and women were less different, and that in the âhigher races,â there were more differences between women and men. This was about saying men and women are differentiated, clear, nonoverlapping categories because that makes us a more evolved people.
Trump is sentencing 26 million people to death â and counting
in AlterNetThe Trump administration cruelly and abruptly stopped the distribution of live-saving antiretroviral drugs to almost 26 million people worldwide. The program, the Presidentâs Emergency Plan for AIDS ReliefâPEPFARâis the global health program started by Republican president George W. Bush in 2003. He celebrated the 20 year anniversary in 2023 at his presidential library.
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Without the drugs for any length of time, HIV will replicate inside the bodies of these HIV-infected people in poor countries across Africa, Asia and elsewhere, who have been living and thriving, as HIV has thankfully become a manageable illness because of the drugs. HIV will be able to transmit from them to othersâtransmission is suppressed while taking the drugsâand more powerful strains could emerge.
And they will develop full-blown AIDS, suffer immensely, and die.
Itâs as simple as that.
Letâs be clear, for Trump this is eugenics, killing off the non-white people in the âshitholeâ countries who he surely believes we shouldnât be spending money on.
Trump has promoted eugenicsâspouting off about âgood genesâ and âbad genesâ in talking about immigrants he wants to deport who he says are âpoisoning the bloodâ of Americansâand, according to his own nephew, said disabled people should âjust dieâ in the context of his nephewâs own son.
Violence in Blue
in GrantaThere is no national registry of civilians killed by police and corrections officers in the United States. Several states, including Texas, Connecticut and California, maintain complete records, but in most parts of the United States, local law enforcement chooses whether to report officer-involved homicides to the federal government. The lack of systematic data poses a challenge both for those who wish to hold police accountable for their actions and for those who want to propose reform measures to reduce police violence. How many killings are committed by police?
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We often use simple statistics that just count things, like how many widgets our factory shipped last year. But statistics is much more useful when it enables us to know something about uncertainty. If we have a measure that we know to be imprecise, how imprecise is it: wildly, or only slightly? If we have a measure that systematically undercounts something (statisticians would call this bias), is the undercount minimal, or is it severe? Can we correct the bias? These are the kinds of questions that statistics can answer.
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Using the correlations from these lists, we conclude that for the eight-year period included in the study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, it is likely that there were approximately 10,000 homicides committed by the police, that is, about 1,250 per year. Keep in mind that the Bureau of Justice Statistics report itself excludes many jurisdictions in the United States that openly refuse to share any data with the FBI. The true number of homicides committed by police is therefore even higher. Though not a true estimate, my best guess of the number of police homicides in the United States is about 1,500 per year.
As I said at the beginning of this article, the estimate of 1,500 police homicides per year would mean that eight to ten per cent of all American homicide victims are killed by the police. Of all American homicide victims killed by people they donât know, approximately one-third of them are victims of the police.
America is a land ruled by fear. We fear that our children will be abducted by strangers, that crazed gunmen will perpetrate mass killings in our schools and theaters, that terrorists will gun us down or blow up our buildings, and that serial killers will stalk us on dark streets. All of these risks are real, but they are minuscule in probability: taken together, these threats constitute less than three per cent of total annual homicides in the US. The numerically greater threat to our safety, and the largest single category of strangers who threaten us, are the people we have empowered to use deadly force to protect us from these less probable threats. The question for Americans is whether we will continue to tolerate police violence at this scale in return for protection against the quantitatively less likely threats.