What the New York Times Got Wrong |
This past week, the New York Times published a lengthy profile of Russell Vought, the White House budget director who is the lead commander in Trump’s crusade to destroy the federal government. As the piece notes, Vought, a far-right policy maven, for years has plotted how Trump and the GOP can destroy the regulatory powers of federal agencies so corporations can run wild and the rest of us must live at their mercy, with fewer environmental safeguards and consumer, workplace, and economic protections. Yet in all the thousands of words devoted to this MAGA strategist, the newspaper could not mention a key fact: Vought is a Christian nationalist.
The article points out that Vought, an architect of Project 2025, attended a Christian college, regularly quotes the Bible, never curses (gee whiz!), leads adult Bible study classes at his Baptist church, and, according to his pals, “is deeply driven by his faith.” But it omits an important piece: that faith itself.
Last summer two reporters for a British journalism nonprofit who were posing as relatives of a wealthy conservative donor secretly recorded a conversation with Vought. They published a video of the meeting, and CNN reported on their encounter with Vought: In the conservative movement, “we’ve been too focused on religious liberty, which we all support, but we’ve lacked the ability to argue we are a Christian nation,” Vought argued—an idea he’s also talked about publicly. “Our laws are built on the Judeo-Christian worldview value system.” He said that conservatives should push to have debates over whether to allow mosques to be built in America’s downtowns, and whether Christian immigrants should be prioritized over those of other faiths—ideas that run contrary to First Amendment protections.
“I want to make sure that we can say we are a Christian nation,” Vought added later. “And my viewpoint is mostly that I would probably be Christian nation-ism. That’s pretty close to Christian nationalism because I also believe in nationalism.”
The desire of one of the most powerful and influential officials in Trump’s administration to turn the United States into a “Christian nation” is a significant piece of the picture. Much more so than the fact Vought leads Bible study classes. |
Dumbass Comment of the Week |
Last week’s winner—a fella named Donald Trump—could probably collect the trophy every week, including this one. A few days ago, he referred to the January 6 riot he incited as the “January 6th Hoax.” |
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Yes, every misdeed or illegal act Trump commits is a hoax. The Russia hoax. The impeachment hoax. The Covid hoax. The stolen classified documents hoax. The tax fraud hoax. The second impeachment hoax. The porn-star payoff hoax. The 2020 election hoax. The Epstein hoax. Doesn’t his base ever wonder about all these hoaxes? It’s hard to believe the Deep State, as diabolical as it is, could orchestrate so many hoaxes. I guess it never sleeps. So now there’s also the 1/6 hoax—whatever it might be.
In that social media post, Trump took a recently revealed fact—that 274 FBI agents were at the Capitol during the January 6 assault—and tried to spin it into yet another conspiracy theory. But the agents there, according to FBI Director Kash Patel, had been quickly dispatched to the scene after Trump’s brownshirts had begun to attack Congress so they could try to stop this domestic terrorism. They were not part of any false flag plot. They were attempting to end the violence Trump sparked with his lies.
Trump was peddling bunk. So naturally, House Speaker Mike Johnson had to dish out the same swill: |
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These days, it often seems that Trump administration pays more attention to trolling than governing. The social media feeds of several federal agencies have turned into cesspools, including the one for the Department of Homeland Security, which recently put out this message stating communists and terrorists would be denied entry to the United States. On that list, too, is “Globalist.” |
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How might theses shitposters define “globalist?” I bet they can’t. But that’s not the point. The word has a long history as a coded term for Jews used by antisemites. Here’s what the American Jewish Committee has to say about that:
Much like dual loyalty, globalist is used to promote the antisemitic conspiracy that Jewish people do not have allegiance to their countries of origin, like the United States, but to some worldwide order—like a global economy or international political system—that will enhance their control over the world’s banks, governments, and media. The idea of a Jewish globalist was embedded in the core ideology of Nazism. Hitler often portrayed Jews as “international elements” who “conduct their business everywhere,” posing a threat to all people who are “bounded to their soil, to the Fatherland.”
Today, globalist is a coded word for Jews who are seen as international elites conspiring to weaken or dismantle “Western” society using their international connections and control over big corporations—all echoing the destructive theory that Jews hold greed and tribe above country. The DHS is in very fine company, eh?
Vice President JD Vance was back in contention with a mean-spirited remark that was even outrageous for him: If you're an American citizen and you've been to the hospital in the last few years, you've probably noticed that wait times are especially large & very often somebody who's there in the ER waiting is an illegal alien. Very often a person who can’t even speak English. Why do those people get healthcare benefits at hospitals paid for by American citizens?
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So when a guy who’s helping to renovate your house falls off the roof and breaks a limb, you don't want him getting any services from a hospital, right? That's exactly what Jesus would say.
Stephen Miller appears to be going apeshit more often than usual these days—or, at least, getting much louder. On Fox News, he exclaimed, "They say they’re trying to kill the fascists, they’re trying to stop the fascists. This is deliberate. President Trump is saying that we as a nation are not going to tolerate it anymore and the joint terrorism task force at the FBI is going to find these terrorists and we're going to put them behind bars." |
Picking up on this point. Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.), suggested that Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.) ought to be arrested for domestic terrorism because he referred to Miller as a “fascist.” |
Well, let’s go to the videotape—or the past social media posts of Miller: |
I suppose Van Orden will now have to recommend Miller be apprehended and charged with domestic terrorism. Maybe Miller will turn himself in.
For the winner this week, the judges landed on a comment that showed a record-setting degree of obliviousness. Former Republican Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona was irked by Trump posting a doctored photo of Rep. Hakeem Jeffries and Sen. Chuck Schumer, in which a handlebar moustache and sombrero were added to Jeffries. “C’mon, fellow Republicans, we’re better than this,” Flake bemoaned. |
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Did Flake just emerge from a coma? Senator, your g-ddamn party for nearly 10 years has been supporting a lying rogue who tried to overturn an election and incited insurrectionists to subvert the republic and who’s currently creating a secret police force, destroying America’s scientific research infrastructure, threatening free speech and democracy, exacerbating the climate crisis, and wrecking the economy. But you’re upset about a juvenile and no-class tweet? The judges are sending the trophy to Flake this week with a big bottle of smelling salts.
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