Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Reparations, Bud Light, Tucker, And The 2020 End Of The World

Recall that after the 2020 election, I compared the Democrat situation to the problem of apocalyptic cultists who believed the world was about to end on a date certain. I said that if I knew the world was going to end, my reaction would be to run up my credit cards in the final month so that I could buy everything I wanted and enjoy it before the big asteroid hit the planet, but since the world would end on that date, I'd never have to pay anything back.

As I saw it then, the problem for the Democrats was that they'd won a narrow electoral victory in November, but they'd have to set the results in stone before another election took place in 2022 -- or in oher words, they were running up the credit cards with promises to pay the bills and assuming the world would end before they came due. The difficulty was the world didn't end, as it has always tended not to, and the 2022 election happened anyhow.

The Democrats lost in 2022 by less than some optimistic predictions, but they lost by enough that the bills still went out. One of the first 2020 charges that's had to be paid has been Gavin Newsom's promise of reparations for slavery in California, where there was never slavery. The California Reparations Task Force

The California Reparations Task Force is a non-regulatory state agency in California established by California Assembly Bill 3121 in 2020 to study and develop reparation proposals for African Americans, especially those who are descendants of persons enslaved in the United States. It was created to deal with systemic racism against African Americans resulting from slavery's enduring legacy.

This was done in the wake of the George Floyd riots that summer in order to appease the rioters on one hand, but on the other and more importantly to salve the consciences of the wealthy California one percent and the allied gentry in their affluent enclaves. Their problem was less to stop the riots, which went on notwithstanding, but more to assuage their own consciences, since riots in the ghettos and working class areas would never reach Marin County or the Hollywood Hills.

And this would work until the world didn't end and the bills came due, and the statements began to arrive in the mail this past weekend when, as I noted the other day, the Reparations Task Force issued its report and intimated without quite spelling things out that the total amount due would fall in the neighborhood of $800 billion in order to pay up to over $1 million to each eligible resident. Gov Newsom, whose idea was to run up the credit cards in the first place, has been quick to respond:

California Gov. Gavin Newsom declined to endorse the cash payments – which could reach as high as $1.2 million for a single recipient – recommended by his reparations task force, telling Fox News Digital that dealing with the legacy of slavery "is about much more than cash payments."

"The Reparations Task Force’s independent findings and recommendations are a milestone in our bipartisan effort to advance justice and promote healing. This has been an important process, and we should continue to work as a nation to reconcile our original sin of slavery and understand how that history has shaped our country," Newsom said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

In other words, even though we promised African-Americans reparations, we didn't mean it that way. We just meant we'd keep saying the same empty words, but nothing's really going to change. OK?

This goes back to what I've been saying all along, that the current political alignment is primarily an alliance between the Ivy League wealthy, the magagerial, academic, media, and bureaucratic gentry, and Marx's Lumpenproletariat, the petty criminal class, which has expanded somewhat to include the homeless and radical sexual deviants like transsexuals (whose interests are not the same as the traditionally same-sex attracted).

The problem for the wealthy and the gentry is that the Lumpenproletariat, as Marx understood, are not reliable allies, while the traditional New Deal alliance has lost groups like the working class and Catholics, who are politically reliable, or at least had been until the wealthy and the gentry reneged on their part of the deal. Meanwhile, the one percent and the gentry never intended to follow through more than they have with the lumpenproles, who for the moment have received leniency on petty crime, homelessness, and drug addiction, but will not receive any new money to subsidize them.

The Bud Light problem, as I see things, is simply another manifestation of the same dilemma for the wealthy and the allied gentry. The Bud Light marketing VP, Alissa Heinerscheid, a member of the Ivy League wealthy essentially masqueading as managerial gentry, implemented a policy of appeasing the extended Lumpenproletariat by handsomely paying and privileging Dylan Mulvaney, a member of the media gentry masquerading as a transsexual lumpenprole.

This patently phony srrangement collapsed just about instantly, beyond even the false dialectic behind it -- Mulvaney was doubly phony, since he was neither an actual woman nor, as commentators have begun to point out, an authentic transsexual. He was and is a professional actor, an entitled member of the media gentry who, seeing his age catch up with him in traditional roles, hoped to jumpstart his acting career as a transsexual, but his surgery will never go beyond his face.

This hasn't sold with anyone; the collapse of his career, Heinerscheid's, the Bud Light brand, and possibly Anheuser's corporate image, have all led to universal schadenfreude.

The same thing is taking place with Tucker Carlson. Again, I think it's a symptom of how the upper class and gentry, the Murdochs and the Fox executive suite, ran up charges expecting the world to end before they came due. On one hand, they created a monster in Tucker Carlson, who was able to supplant the aging and more corporate-correct anchors Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity with a younger look slightly more aligned with a new-generation working and middle class audience who, however, never quite trusted Fox.

Carlson is currently alleging through his attorneys that Fox berayed an implicit understanding that it would not terminate him as part of any Dominion settlement.

Carlson lawyer, Bryan Freedman, wrote to Fox News executives Viet Dinh and Irena Briganti that Fox News employees, including “Rupert Murdoch himself,” broke promises to Carlson “intentionally and with reckless disregard for the truth,” according to Axios.

. . . The letter also reportedly alleges the network broke promises not to settle with Dominion Voting Systems “in a way which would indicate wrongdoing” on the part of Carlson and not to take any actions in a settlement that would harm his reputation.

Two sources told Axios that Carlson was told by a member of the Fox News board that he was taken off the air as part of a Dominion settlement.

This is simply another example of the wealthy class -- the Murdochs -- and their allied gentry -- the Fox executive suite -- making credit card charges expecting the world to end before the bills arrive, though even here, things aren't what they seem. Carlson is also a member of a wealthy family who can afford a five-star lifestyle even without a job in the media gentry, while his hairpiece, for-the-camera cosmetics, and plastic surgery give a misleading impression of fresh-faced youth.

But for now, unlike Ms Heinerscheid, Gov Newsom, Bud Light, Anheuser, the Murdochs, and Fox, he's smart enough to be on the winning side of a battle of appearances -- in other words, appearing to be a reliable ally of the reliable alliance, the working and middle classes, who are currently quite upset with the range of betrayals they see from the wealthy and the gentry, who've foolishly aligned themselves with the least reliable factions anywhere, the Lumpenproletariat. This can't last.

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