Sunday, September 30, 2018

The Danger In Today's Excessive Focus On Representing Women & Racial Minorities In Entertainment To Build Self Esteem

I watch a lot of entertainment and entertainment industry video blogs nowadays, and I've been wondering if it may be possible to get at least one report in which someone isn't either praised or chastised for their decisions based solely on how many or few female and non-white characters and talent are created and hiredhired. I'm not opposed to diversity in and of itself, but the intensity of this whole issue of representation, if not the actual issue, is getting a bit ridiculous and looks like it could easily backfire and cause even more of the dreaded "divisiveness" everyone talks about... Because I guess it's a tragedy when people disagree nowadays, but I digress. Maybe nobody cares because I'm still a white male, but I've lived all of my life so far with noticeable joint dislocations and deformities as well as a tracheotomy in my neck (though I've met brave souls enduring far worse things), yet not once while growing up or for a majority of my adulthood did I ever think something like, "You know, I might have more self esteem and more easily relate to and empathize with these characters if they looked more and were visibly disabled or handicapped like me... especially the humans and aliens with superpowers that actually don't fully or accurately represent ANYONE on this Earth and in this reality."

Blatant discrimination is one thing and should NEVER be tolerated when and where it obviously exists.  Though not yet in the form of enforceable law, however, this subversive trend of what I can only describe for now as artistic and creative affirmative action is not only imposing and restrictive to and of creators, but I think that - in the case of young people, particularly - it's teaching them to tie too much of their self esteem and how much they may have to something that is otherwise of superficial value and is not only out of their control, but often presenting unrealistic representations, anyway! Furthermore, it risks making representation in Hollywood movies and television shows an unofficial replacement or substitute for the more meaningful and valuable love and encouragement that builds self esteem that is not so vulnerable to outside forces... Not unlike the way that television and video games have been alleged to have replaced parents and/or babysitters just to keep kids occupied and relatively quiet and safe. It's too easy and maybe even manipulative to come back and say something like, "But too many kids in minority, non-white communities lack that kind of support by no fault of their own because of poverty and broken families and communitiescommunities." Yet, even if true for now, simply accepting this and even exploiting it as a perpetually divisive political weapon instead of offering more encouragement as well as possible incentive and accountability is, I think, devious as well as hypocritical.

Wonder Woman was created to be something of a feminist icon and, given the times surrounding the character's creation, it's understandable how even her fictitious existence might have inspired great confidence and even some much needed social change. The same could be said for great characters like Black Panther and the John Stewart Green Lantern. In today's world, however, diversity, tolerance, and equality of rights is not only encouraged, but mandated by law while ideas and the promotion of multiculturalism and globalism are (as far as I know) even baked into a good deal of at least public school curriculums from start to finish. Thus, when I read that the existence and emphasis upon fictional characters like the immortal goddess Wonder Woman, who is raised on a hidden island of only women, and a lot of the more powerful and extraterrestrial characters in the STAR WARS universe are so socially important, I worry that the goal is no longer EQUAL treatment, but perhaps what some seem to believe is and see as a statistically and historically justified policy of special treatment and even privilege. If so, then how is that NOT ultimately divisive and even just a little vindictive? It's as if the underlying problem has become more valuable to certain groups than a solution that truly, literally levels the proverbial playing ground even while the latter is still what is most often, yet perhaps disingenuously called for and demanded.

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Timing And Treatment of Kavenaugh Accusations Purely Political - Liberals Should Be Concerned About Precedents Potentially Set By This & Me-Too Movement

Even if everything that Professor Ford has said about current SCOTUS candidate Judge Brett Kavenaugh is true about what he supposedly did to her and even about his alleged preference for female employees/assistants, etc. looking a certain way, should it really be enough to derail the confirmation of a guy who's been vetted over and over and over again for other jobs as a judge? And, to be fair, Kavenaugh didn't nominate himself and he certainly didn't declare Donald Trump President... and yet, that's what this is really about to a large degree.  It's punishing Judge Brett Kavenaugh for the election and the misdeeds of President Donald J. Trump and anyone unfortunate enough to be declared guilty by association just because they happen to work in his cabinet or something. For the record, though, I'd like to think this would be my stance if the nominee were that of a Democrat President's because none of this seems fair.

Even if you accept that it occurred and that there are sound psychological reasons behind Ms. Ford's delay in talking about it publicly or otherwise, there's still the fact that - as far as I know - Diane Feinstein and maybe some others have been sitting on this since July, which I think should have been more than enough time to not only bring it up, but investigate it as much as is possible... which, at best, is only going to result in an even bigger he-said/she-said scenario because it's not as if there's a rape kit to process or fresh wounds to photograph. Also, this supposedly happened when BOTH of these people were teenagers. Never mind that teenagers do dumb things all the time, especially when it comes to exploring their sexuality - regardless of whether or not the actual acts are more or less harmful. Hypothetically speaking, could Kavenaugh be prosecuted as an adult for something he did as a teenager? And if so, is that what we've been reduced to? Prosecuting SUCCESSFUL and probably MODERATELY WEALTHY, MIDDLE-AGED WHITE MEN - like pretty much all but one of the men that have been publicly taken down since the Me-Too Movement began... because I guess younger, more attractive, less wealthy men with jobs in the spotlight never do anything wrong unless their name happens to be Brett Kavenaugh - with or, as seems to be the case more often than not, WITHOUT proof or even the existence of it in some cases?

This isn't feminism or fairness or equality. This is entitlement of the worst kind, and it could potentially set a terrible legal precedent in which a member of one sex can accuse someone of the opposite sex of everything from sexual assault to "inappropriate behavior," under any circumstances and at any time, and not only see the accused lose their livelihoods and their reputations, but possibly their freedoms and status as an officially innocent and law-abiding member of society. In other words, it's saying that because women have supposedly been so oppressed and mistreated by men in the workplace for so long, a court of law should now elevate THEIR words and reputations over men's on the basis of gender not only believing any and all accusations of sexual misconduct against any and all men, but essentially being willing to prosecute and punish them without what would otherwise be considered sufficient or credible evidence and/or corroborating testimony. If people think this is going to improve male-female relationships in the workplace, theyr'e liable to be in for a rude awakening.

As for Kavenaugh, I don't believe for a second that this is about anything other than politics. Again, even if it happened as Ford claims and it's understandable that she didn't speak about it immediately, the fact that she not only waited over 35 years, but chose to speak up when Kavenaugh just happened to not only be a nominee for a position on the Supreme Court, but THE nominee that could decidedly tip the court to the political right for DECADES to come, is far more compelling than any commentator's psychobabble on the Chris Cuomo Show. If it weren't for Trump's horrendous personal history, I don't think the Republicans would even be allowing a hearing on this, and the fact that someone like Finestein sat on this for so long suggests to me that even most Democrats - whether they believe Ford or not - do not believe this is great ammo to use against Judge Kavenaugh.  In any case, it's hypocrisy of the highest order.  Franklin Roosevelt, John Kennedy, Bill Clinton... all Democrat Presidents AND philandering womanizers.  Ted Kennedy left a woman to die at the bottom of a lake or some other body of water after crashing the car they were in and wound up becoming the Lion of the Senate! When Democrats are in power or accused, this kind of thing is unfortunate, but ultimately irrelevant - the fodder of right-wing conspirators like the kind Hillary spoke of during the Ken Starr investigation.  In some instances, it's even turned out to be construed as almost endearing! When it's happening on the Republican side, though, it's more apocalyptic evidence of the male dominated society's "systematic" oppression of women everywhere.

Frankly, I don't want perfect judges that have never made mistakes and neither should anyone else. Why? Because they would probably be more inclined to see things as black and white. Of all people, liberal progressives - who have supposedly always defended the rights of the accused - should understand and take this into at least some consideration.

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Today's Panicky Fight Over Instances Of Alleged "Hate","Bigotry," And "Fascism" In Trump's America Is Becoming Almost As Dangerous As Its Target(s)

I'm just going to dive right into the pool of hypocrisy here and say that I'm tired of hearing people complain about "hate" and "divisiveness."

On a recent segment, CNN's Chris Cuomo got mad at Hispanic conservative Chris Cortes because Cortes accused him of defending Antifa in an earlier episode. Cuomo snidely denied it and accused the guy of not reading what Cuomo actually said, which - according to Cuomo - was simply that some violence is morally justified if it is against hatred and bigotry. "...In the eyes of good and evil," Cumo said on the earlier show, "here’s the argument: ...when someone comes to call out bigots and it gets hot, even physical, are they equally wrong as the bigot they are fighting? I argue, no. Fighting against hate matters.” Later in the segment and then on Twitter, he cited World War 2 and violent episodes in the Civil Rights Movement as examples of morally justified violence against hatred, even going so far as to Tweet a photo of the Normandy landing with the caption, "Anti-Fascists disrupting a large gathering of white supremacists."

Actually, the second world war and America's role, in particular, was more about defending sovereign nations from invasion by a common enemy than it was fighting white supremacy, and the gathering of Nazis where the landing took place wasn't large enough because the Allies had tricked them into believing the landing would take place somewhere else.  At any rate, so what if he didn't say the word Antifa while defending violence against bigots? He didn't have to because the whole thing was in the context of him expressing his opinion on a matter concerning... ANTIFA! The whole monologue was commentary on and/or spurred by a story about a gathering which Cuomo described as, "peppered in a crowd were members of Antifa, or Anti-Fascists..." In that context, if he's not defending Antifa, then who is he defending? Because I don't recall the names of any other groups that fight hatred and bigotry relevant to his segment.

Now, I'm not sure I totally disagree with Cuomo. Antifa often seems to incite its own violent episodes, but for better or worse, violence has long been an effective agent of good and necessary change in human history at both a national and local level. One could make the argument that the American Revolution was first incited by localized violence. What I disagree with is comparing what's going on today with the landing at Normandy or the Civil Rights Movement.

The Nazis VIOLENTLY invaded their neighbors in the name of Lebensraum and, eventually, enacted a very obvious and very horrendous plan to exterminate as many Jews and other undesirables (to the Nazis) as they could. At the height of the Civil Rights Movement, police were hosing down and beating black people simply for standing around where they weren't welcome. You could turn a corner in an otherwise nice little neighborhood and see a black man with a broken neck hanging from a tree. Children were being burned to death in church fires by white men that may or may not even stand trial and were just as likely to be exonerated by a "jury of their peers" because their peers were white. THAT is hate. THAT is justification for violence, in spite of another fact that Cuomo neglected to mention, which is that Martin Luther King - arguably the most celebrated and effective Civil Rights leader in American history - followed the example of Ghandi and others and insisted that there be NO  VIOLENCE in his marches and protests... even when it drew the ire of other civil rights groups and leaders like Malcolm X.

What we have today started as and, for the most part, still is a war of words that gets out of hand because at least TWO generations of people currently alive seem to equate hurt feelings with real, 100% unadulterated hate. Now, does that mean people should go around yelling racial epithets and other hateful slurs, etc? ABSOLUTELY NOT! But the European Jews in World War 2 and the blacks in 1960's Detroit, Birmingham, Chicago, and other cities across America were literally dreaming of a day in which the only things they had to put up with 99% of the time were the words of a few idiots and, yes, bigots, because humans are imperfect and will probably never fully purge some form of discrimination and hatred from their psyches. People like Cuomo and the Antifa punks think they're standing up for people's rights and nobly fighting to keep REAL Fascism from once again gaining a foothold, but by complaining so much about "divisiveness" and equating the Allies' fight at Normandy against the army of the violently racist Nazi Germanny with Antifa punks' attack on people in the street because they happen to be Republicans or Trump supporters is every bit as dangerous to our civil liberties as anything that President Trump and his supporters has said or ever will say outside of stated and enacted policy. Why?

Because it's setting a pattern AND PRECEDENT in which certain members of our society cannot say certain things or otherwise disagree with certain other members of our society without being guilty of "racism" and "hate," which - in some instances - the law already recognizes as criminal. In America, laws are meant to be made and unmade based upon the demands of the people. If enough people have decided that something should be illegal, then it becomes possible for government to make it so. That's why lobbyists exist. At this rate, within the next decade, people will or won't be allowed to say certain things to certain people based on things like their race and income while others will be forcefully protected and defended for the same reason. There are mild forms of this already on the books. THAT IS NOT EQUALITY. AT ALL.

And while I will always criticize Trump and others for dividing the GOP as a party into quarreling factions and bemoan the fact that members of different political parties no longer even have the same fundamental goals, the current complaints about divisiveness - which now come from both sides - are equally petty and dangerously myopic. We are a democratic republic. Being democratic means we can CHOOSE who we want to lead and how we want to be led, but if our choices are not sufficiently distinct and representative of people with distinctly different ideas and viewpoints, then why bother? If what I want is jelly and someone comes up and says, "Good news! You can choose between creamy and crunchy peanut butter," what's the point in giving me the choice? EITHER WAY, I'M EATING PEANUT BUTTER!

I was under the impression that we're supposed to value diversity, but there's no diversity in a group of weak-kneed sycophants that panic and compare others to Nazis and warmongers any time someone disagrees with them on a topic of some personal importance. There's no equality OR tolerance in a society in which distasteful, yet otherwise innocuous and incidental behavior is moderated, restricted, and punished by law based upon things like the race and income of the supposedly guilty parties and whether or not the behavior is directed at people of a different race and income level. And yet, that's where we're headed. I'm not defending a single thing that President Trump has said or done to date just by saying that the reaction to him and his mistakes and occasional idiocy have become or are quickly becoming every bit as consequential BECAUSE instead of it just being the acts and words of one man, no matter how powerful or how many he represents, it's the acts and words of the national community... the "mob," if you will... that ultimately has and was always meant to have the most power at the end of every day here in America.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Dear Fellow Republicans, Trump Supporters, And Patriots On Both Sides,

I'm a fairly loyal Republican, but if the president's assertion, "Mission accomplished," means that nothing was accomplished except to make Russia and Iran angrier and maybe set the next chemical weapons attack back, say... a few weeks, then sadly, I agree. Mission accomplished... I get why the attack wasn't more comprehensive and didn't hit specifically Russian or Iranian targets in the region (assuming there are any worth hitting), and if nothing else, Syria is of interest to the U.S. because it borders Israel, our most reliable Middle Eastern ally. However, Israel is no pushover and, as we've actually seen recently, is pretty capable of defending itself as it has more or less been fending off its more aggressive Muslim neighbors for decades - both with and without help. Furthermore, based on what I and most of us armchair pundits THINK we know, nothing is likely to change for the better in Syria or with Russian and Iranian relations short of a total Syrian regime change, which Obama officially helped make all but impossible short of Assad's death and which we probably can't seriously initiate now without blatantly breaking international law (and our own, probably), risking yet another violent and - this time - more globally consequential war.

Of even greater concern is this action's potential effects on our situation with North Korea, with whose own murderous dictator I think Trump too quickly agreed to meet next month. Shortly after that acceptance, Kim Jong Un made an unexpected trip (and very rare for Kim) to China to meet with its General Secretary and President Xi Jinping, whose limited cooperation in putting pressure on North Korea over its nuclear weapons program was then arguably put into jeopardy by Trump's ill timed and uneven application of trade tariffs. China, by the way, is not only a neighbor bordering Russia (and a pretty powerful one, too), but one that is known to vote with and/or in solidarity with Russia. While Russia's military might may be a little exaggerated, as I've heard some say, a military partnership with China would be greatly significant and not unexpected if keeps acting so provocatively without a solid, long term plan. Given his direct involvement in its planning and care taken to limit or avoid collateral damage and civilian casualties, I even find it difficult to believe that a man of General Mattis' experience and reputation would've even agreed to do this if SOME kind of response wasn't warranted and if he thought he could get Trump to wait or consider an alternative. Like all the others, I'd bet good money, if I had it, that the year won't be much more than half over before we hear something like this along with rumors that Mattis plans to leave... just like all the rest.

A few minutes ago, I watched a report on Barbara Bush, who appears to be dying even though that wasn't specifically said, and it reminded me of the raw deal that Former President George H.W. Bush got in 1992 for cooperating with the U.N. and, in that case, wisely choosing not to try to forcibly remove Saddam Hussein - later done by his son and, in hindsight, at great long term cost, which too few of us predicted at the time... myself included. Many say that Trump's election and policies are a threat to our democracy, but I disagree. If anything, it's a symptom of the REAL threat, which I think started growing slowly after Vietnam and matured suddenly as of 9/11. That threat is US - the voters - and the stance most of us have taken on both sides of the aisle from which we are demanding purer and purer versions of our parties' general policies and refusing to accept imperfect, yet comparably solid solutions to problems and issues simply because they may come from the other side. The Affordable Care Act is a mistake that was all but totally unsustainable unless the Democrats stayed in charge of at least one branch of government after Obama and could influence more states with regards to their Medicare and Medicaid programs. Neither side wanted it except as a potential political tool that Republicans could fight with and Democrats could use as leverage and credibility if it failed to finally force through socialized medicine as the only option left. However, it was based on an idea by the conservative Heritage Foundation and probably not the total disaster it was described as on the campaign trails. It could have easily and more successfully been fixed or modified... even with minimal Democrat participation and approval... but that's not what our party promised voters, and so, in the end, its "repeal and replace" wound up being a massive embarrassment. All that was accomplished was the repeal of the mandate forcing people to buy insurance or pay a "tax" that would, unless I'm too much mistaken, conceivably go towards some of the government subsidies of still private insurers on the exchange. Now, if too much of the ACA stays in place without suitable funding, the situation could actually get worse without.

It may seem like I'm inadvertently slamming political competition and therefore contradicting myself, but when competitions such as our elections really depend as much or more on how many vote in what places as on the way those people vote, the integrity of that competition is in trouble. Just as Democrats probably did when pushing the ACA through unilaterally, too few of us on the right thought about those potential consequences. Instead of putting more thought into them and taking some responsibility for the potential impacts of our goals and how we try to accomplish them, we ALL are way too beholden to our parties and increasingly simplistic and inflexible ideologies. If (on both sides) we're not instinctively making too many broad demands of and blaming government for failing to give us what we want while we're lazily "waiting on the world to change," we're taking more and more of our frustrations out on our parties' more knowledgeable and experienced incumbents and replacing them with dogmatic and BLINDLY patriotic morons who probably can't even spell the word compromise, let alone fathom why - without it - our democracy is USELESS.  But as often as Democrats and Republicans, alike, claim to love America and superficially strengthen their arguments by trying to claim that the other side's agenda immediately puts democracy, itself, at stake, we voters are hacking away at it faster than anyone else could with our own extremism. We may as well choose which side we want our new benign American dictatorship to come from now because, judging by the behavior and rhetoric I too often see from others and have occasionally been guilty of, myself, all we ever do is vote the same way for the same things, over and over. Instead of acknowledge all the changes around us and look for ways to adapt, we look for people to blame for that change while looking for others we think can put things back the way they were.

Politics is like history. It's cyclical, so something like this has happened before. Unlike something like the formation of the Bull Moose Party, for example, I think it's been a longer time coming, the specifics are different, it seems to be succeeding, and with social media comes what seems like its never-ending perpetuation because absolutely NOBODY can truly be silenced or denied a larger-than-ever bullhorn. The reason Trump is a consequence of this is that, like the popularity of Bernie Sanders, in some ways (some of whose Midwestern supporters voted for Trump), his election represents the fact that having felt let down by our own parties, we're just doubling down and turning to more extreme candidates offering more extreme and less nuanced versions of the same general "solutions" we expect our parties to offer and implement in reaction to each and every issue. It didn't even matter in 2016 that, if you really listened to Trump, he wasn't and still isn't all that conservative. Ultra-liberal Elizabeth Warren, herself, got on Fox News recently to PRAISE Trump's tariffs and say only that they didn't go far enough and were not evenly applied. Even where Trump seems to be ultra-conservative on issues like immigration and deregulation, it doesn't seem to have dawned on anyone that - because he prides himself on being a deal maker - Trump may ultimately care more about bringing home "a deal" than whether it's really what he promised everyone, which certainly seems to be the case with this latest budget agreement. This is also relevant to my opinion that, were he not so egotistical, he'd realize that while the press IS biased and waging an unusually intense war on him, personally as well as politically, it's not one he can truly win. His reactions only fan the flames and his expectations of holding them more accountable are every bit as or more unconstitutional as any new gun regulation.

What mattered then and seems to matter most even now to Trump's base (which, in some cases, don't even call themselves Republicans anymore) is that he's a tough businessman with no prior political experience, so to them, that equates to near-total transparency when it comes to his intent, a different way of taking action because he's supposedly not bound to the Beltway's rules, and an all-but-ironclad guarantee that he will, in fact, DO something. Shortly before the election, I listened to a few supporters on the radio admit that while they had no idea if Trump would really succeed as a president or accomplish what he claimed, they were voting for him, anyway, largely based upon the fact that he wasn't the sort of entrenched "politician" that had talked down to them for years while never making anything significantly better AND wasn't afraid to say that, as President, he would represent the interests of America and of those that voted for him first and foremost. I became concerned because Trump's platform didn't really seem to go deeper or feature more than the broad strokes of a nationalist conservative agenda - a concern that I think the GOP's failure under Trump to repeal and replace, among other things, has since validated. Yet as far as I can tell, not only does it NOT matter to most of Trump's ardent supporters, but they are now prone to labeling anyone to whom it does matter a traitorous, intellectual "elitist," "RINO," or - most bizarrely - a "swamp" creature. 

As I see it, the bottom line is just that we're wasting a lot of time and money trying to discover and prevent further Russian "meddling" in our elections on behalf of our democracy because, in the end, I think we will have issued the final coup de gras all by ourselves!

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Why Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions' & DOJ's Lawsuit Against California Over Sanctuary Cities Is Potentially DISASTROUS

Well, hell... Pardon my French, but apparently, Attorney General Jeff Sessions had a nightmare that convinced him that he had to, you know... DO his job as attorney general... and what does he start with? Suing California over sanctuary cities.

Now, I'm going to be very clear in saying that I want more secure borders and that there should be at least some consequences for California and the mayors and other officials therein which have not only sheltered undocumented and illegal immigrants, but warned those guilty of crimes when the feds were about to come after them and legally threatened employers with punishment should they cooperate in any way with the federal government under the Trump administration's efforts to detain and deport illegal immigrants, even those that have committed other crimes. With that said, I think those consequences should be doled out very carefully and only on a case-by-case basis .I disagree with what I'm hearing from pundits at Fox News in that I think this has the potential to turn into both a political and economic disaster, and here's why.

1. Whatever one's opinions on the matter, illegal immigration is not America's most pressing problem right now. At the very least, there other equally or more important matters on which the government could more effectively successfully act. As important an issue as immigration is or will be in the near future, it is one that needs comprehensive reform - bipartisan cooperation in the passing of legislation, not a lawsuit pitting the federal government against one of its biggest states and the fifth-largest-economy in the world. Even with gangs like MS13 and the shootings at the border that keep getting referenced, these problems are arguably as or more relevant to issues like gun and drug trafficking as to immigration, and as for the immigrants, themselves - on the whole - I just don't they present enough of a clear and urgent threat to warrant what Sessions is doing. At the very least, I don't think the GOP is going to be as successful at presenting them as great threats as it thinks it will and, in my opinion, should not be gambling in this way.

2. Again, California is the third largest state in the union with a massive economic footprint and has actually been threatening and/or asking to secede from the U.S. since before Donald Trump ever decided to run for office. Right or wrong, we've also long-since seen proof that judges and other state and court officials can successfully turn their activism into enforceable law regardless of the stances and desires of the Federal government. Besides the resources this state could bring to bear to fight the feds all on its own, it has a number of other, sometimes comparably wealthy and powerful states such as Illinois and New York that have stood in solidarity with each other on this issue - galvanized in large part, I think, by their mutual hatred of Trump and everything for which they believe he and his election stands. Were they to come to California's aid, I think Governor Brown is right when he says that it could potentially outlive the Trump administration, itself, even if Trump were to somehow get reelected. Like me, my fellow GOP voters are already upset about the time and energy that is arguably being wasted on the ongoing Mueller investigation, which has managed to hit just about everyone but its biggest intended target: President Donald J. Trump. At the moment, that's a fact whether you think Trump is guilty or innocent or that he will more clearly be incriminated sooner or later or not. We're already on the verge of seeing some of the perceived good of the administration's recent tax bill potentially undone by Trump's proposed tariffs, which are arguably being fought more more vigorously by Republicans (like outgoing economic adviser Gary Cohn, I think) than by Democrats, which is something that shouldn't be taken lightly by any Republican simply because they think the House Majority Leader and others are RINOs, "elites," or residents of the "swamp" that Trump is supposedly in the process of draining. However much we think is being "wasted" by the ongoing Mueller investigation could become nothing compared with what Sessions' lawsuit has the potential to become and to cost.

3. Politically, this suit could be even worse for coming right before the first midterm election since Trump's inauguration. Historically speaking, parties that hold the White House generally see a few losses during the first midterms, but as potent as Trump's unpopularity can be among conservatives and liberals, alike, we could wind up seeing a repeat of 2006, which was actually the second round of midterm elections during the Bush presidency. Essentially, this lawsuit isn't just going to be fighting a large state, but will in essence be fighting a very large group of people that probably represent more money and power in terms of the productivity of their labor contributions and, as Hispanics in general (since many legal Hispanic residents side with their undocumented brethren), their political weight as probably the fastest growing "minority" group in the country. The overall power that Democrats wield in this nation is still historically low, yet the party has recently seen some unexpected success in states like Alabama and is seeing significantly increased voter participation and fundraising right now in the large and often impenetrably conservative state of Texas. Even more of a threat to the GOP could be the number of Republicans retiring or refusing to run again dwarfing that of Democrats - a number that could go even higher before the Midterms in November if Trump has his way with the tariffs and the result is a trade war on top of continued losses in the market. That could mean that some of the blue collar jobs and increased bonuses in manufacturing and so forth that we've allegedly gained recently, particularly since passage of the GOP's tax bill, could be lost again. That's something that I don't think Trump or the party can easily withstand given that Trump won with fewer votes that Romney had when he lost in 2012 and did so in large part, I think, due to the absence of Bernie Sanders, whose supporters in the Midwest and Rust Belt were left with only Trump in terms of a candidate that seemed to care about their kind of American jobs.

More directly tied to the lawsuit and the issue of immigration, though, is the fact that the Democrat Party - which is already seeing small gains - relies largely on the support of minority voters, and of the various minority groups in America, Hispanics have arguably had the best relationship with the Republican Party given the support they got from the Bush family in Texas and the Cuban immigrants in Miami that have been opposed to any warming of America's relationship with the regime of the late Fidel Castro and his brother. However significant or insignificant it was to begin with, the GOP's relationship with Hispanic voters is one they will likely need in this year's and future elections, yet has already been damaged by Trump's and other's rhetoric on this issue. Given the number of other states that have been doing roughly the same things as California, this lawsuit could be the very thing the Democrat Party needs to rally its comeback in a big way, arguing that besides the moral implications, it could be construed as an attack on states' rights by the party that has championed them the most and a hypocritical one given Republicans' JUSTIFIED opposition to President Obama when his Justice Department decided to take action against Governor Brewer of Arizona and her treatment of Hispanic illegal and undocumented immigrants.

When Trump was first elected, about the closest thing he got to a compliment from most of the mainstream press was that he seemed to be the least ideological president in American history. Given that his election was largely about rejecting the status quo in terms of the way the federal government has been run by more experienced and "mainstream" politicians up to now, that perceived LACK of ideological attachment is something that Trump, who fancies himself a deal-maker able to bring both sides to the table, should be going to great lengths to continually validate and expand upon. This lawsuit being brought by Attorney General Sessions, who many in the Republican Party seem to feel should have been replaced months ago when he first recused himself from the Russia investigation, is about as partisan and IDEOLOGICAL as anything the administration could do. Like what many Republicans think the Mueller investigation to be, it has the potential to be yet another long, drawn-out, and even more costly attempt to solve what is, in terms of confirmed detrimental effects, a problem of exaggerated proportions, at best.