Mme. Defarge
Mme. Defarge's JournalTrump's Behavior on Jan. 6, Explained by Expert on Fascism
"But coups can take months or years to plan and this was a multi-pronged attempt to overthrow our democracy. It's worth reviewing that he tried so many things simultaneously. He had General Michael Flynn trying to have martial law or military intervention and he tried the trickery that happened with the Georgia Secretary of State. And when none of that worked, he went nuclear and did what autocrats have done in the past and used violence, summoned the people there to right this monstrous wrong on his behalf," she said.
Ben-Ghiat, a professor of Italian and history at New York University, is an expert on the "strongman", a figure that's central to her latest book "StrongmenMussolini to the present", which explores how illiberal leaders "use corruption, violence, propaganda, and machismo to stay in power." Donald Trump is in it, together with Russia's Vladimir Putin, Chile's Augusto Pinochet, Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, and Italy's Silvio Berlusconi.
"It's interesting, what came out recently, is Trump was trying to get to the Capitol on Jan. 6. He couldn't get there," Ben-Ghiat explained, talking to CNN's Jim Acosta.
"This is consistent, if you're having a coup and summoned everybody and you expect to be anointed as the head of a new illegitimate government, you have to be there. There's a phase in coups. They're violent, quick, and then you have the pronouncement of the new order. That's why he was trying to get there."
https://www.newsweek.com/trump-behavior-jan-6-explained-expert-fascism-1714990
Intentional or not, the ruling today is
taking the spotlight away from the latest January 6th committee revelations and the existential threat to the rule of law and to government of the people, by the people and for the people that such treason unambiguously implies.
Portland is still putting a Bird on it!
Rachael Townsend spotted the handmade sign, stapled to a telephone pole, while on a walk with her mom near Scott Elementary School.
Are you tired of Tinder? it asked. Want to meet a local? My boredom can benefit you! Let me interview you and potentially find you a perfect match!
The sign made Townsend laugh.
I just thought, Thats hilarious Im going to give it a shot, the 37-year-old massage therapist recalled.
Townsend rarely used dating apps like Tinder, finding them too anxiety-producing. I didnt feel like this was the way I was going to meet somebody.
So, following the signs instructions, she texted Match to the phone number listed.
A reply quickly arrived, assuring her, This is no joke. Im a real person.
It was January 2021, and though Townsend didnt know it, she was getting in on the ground floor of a unique Portland experiment.
Not long after that text exchange, she found herself bundled up and wearing a mask on a fold-out chair in a snow-clogged driveway. Opposite her was Autum Bird, a 33-year-old local barber. Bird, a laptop on her knees, peppered her with questions:
https://www.oregonlive.com/history/2022/06/having-trouble-finding-a-meaningful-relationship-in-portland-put-autum-bird-on-it.html
Asking for advice.
As a mystery writer wannabe - I have completed two manuscripts and have a story concept for a third novel in a series - I am really struggling with the whole butt-in-chair routine given my sense of despair and loss of bearings in the midst of our current political, social, physical and environmental states if chaos. Since its not how I make a living this is not an urgent problem for me, but if there was a way for me to find my way back to focusing on something positive - like good, old fashioned murder, mayhem, truth and justice - my waking hours would be much better spent than with my current pattern of worrying and doomscrolling. So please weigh in on how youre managing to cope and stay creative and productive in the midst of so much overall misery and uncertainty.
For Moi, recreational writing is a lot cheaper than knitting.
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