General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThis might explain Merrick Garland's seeming incompetence
This writer says it is a cover for deep corruption and she brings receipts.
https://open.substack.com/pub/sarahkendzior/p/servants-of-the-mafia-state?r=d569l&utm_medium=ios
tritsofme
(18,532 posts)Loupe Garoue
(69 posts)tritsofme
(18,532 posts)msfiddlestix
(7,811 posts)Ever... under any "normal" conditions in our political system
tritsofme
(18,532 posts)Unfortunately we just live with shittier people than we imagined a few weeks ago.
msfiddlestix
(7,811 posts)somewhere, yeah maybe. cuz then, no matter what shit happens here, wouldn't impact my life or granddaughters. Not in a million years, do I find any comfort in what we have just experienced and what is unfolding hourly reported and posted here in LBN
Might take a quick glance at the headlines.
msfiddlestix
(7,811 posts)what we think is true, or merely conspiracy "theory" in the context of our democracy.is just not going to make a bees knees worth of difference.
.
.
soandso
(1,178 posts)after JFK's assassination, to frame those not buying the official story as crazy. Government is full of conspiracies and meets the definition of organized crime. Unfortunately, it requires tons of reading to begin to understand and without the interest in such subjects, most will never do it.
I would take issue with some of what she wrote because the OKC bombing, the WTC bombing and 9/11 were all things I spent years digging into. They're all much worse than she laid out. Just about nothing is what it seems but people are more comfortable with the "stories" that they're fed because the truth is too awful. I'll just say that each of those events resulted in exactly what the conspirators wanted them to and it is not a coincident the legislation was already written and ready to pass after each.
I would also disagree with her about Trump. He is not in that club and is not liked by any of them. He was perfectly tolerable while in real estate, a celebrity attraction, making donations to politicians and charities and one of the who's-who at all of the big Manhattan parties where people go to be seen. He was, though, as welcome as a skunk at a lawn party in their world and the fact that he had no idea how to navigate it when he got to DC was a source of ridicule. He was an oaf and out of his league. They have their club and he had his and their club is way more exclusive. Now, they have to deal with him and she may be right that he has learned some things about them so they may need to be somewhat careful. I don't really know but it makes some sense. It sure is one crazy fucking story, though. Whoever thought that the Donald Trump that everyone knew of back his NYC days would be a global center of attention? Not me. That was not on my bingo card. It's surreal.
hlthe2b
(106,365 posts)Is there an anti-tinfoil bath I can take now?
UTUSN
(72,421 posts)cilla4progress
(25,918 posts)Sarah J. Kendzior[1] (born September 1, 1978) is an American author, anthropologist, researcher, and scholar.[2] Kendzior is the author of The View from Flyover Country a collection of essays first published by Al Jazeera and is a former co-host of the Gaslit Nation podcast. In 2020, she published her second book, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America, which was a New York Times bestseller.[3] In September 2022, she published her third book, They Knew: How a Culture of Conspiracy Keeps America Complacent, which was a finalist for a Los Angeles Times Book Prize.[4]
Early life and education
Kendzior was born in New Haven, Connecticut.[5]She was raised in Meriden, Connecticut.[6][7]
In 2000, Kendzior received a Bachelor of Arts in history from Sarah Lawrence College and, in 2006, she received an Master of Arts in Eurasian Studies from the Department of Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University Bloomington. Her thesis was State Propaganda on Islam in Independent Uzbekistan.[8] In 2012, Kendzior earned a Doctor of Philosophy in anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis.[6] Her dissertation was The Uzbek Opposition in Exile: Diaspora and Dissident Politics in the Digital Age, and her advisor was John Bowen.[9] Her focus of study was former Soviet Union totalitarian states. Kendzior's dissertation was on how dissidents from Uzbekistan used the internet to challenge an authoritarian government in a climate of surveillance and distrust.
Career
From 2000 to 2003, Kendzior worked as an online news editor and writer for the New York Daily News.[10][11] From 2012 to 2014, Kendzior was a columnist for Al Jazeera,.[12] From 2016 to 2020, Kendzior was a columnist for The Globe and Mail.[13] She has also written for The Guardian,[14] Foreign Policy,[15] Marie Claire,[16] and other outlets. Some of Kendzior's journalism has focused locally on St. Louis.[17]
Kendzior has frequently appeared on MSNBC on the AM Joy show hosted by Joy Reid.[11][18]
Kendzior and Bill Kristol were the main speakers for the 7th annual Public Values Symposium held on March 29, 2019, at the University of MissouriSaint Louis.[19][20] The two speakers saw "eye-to-eye... on the importance of people speaking up for what they believe in the face of eroding societal norms."[19] They disagreed on the role of American institutions, which Kendzior described as corrupt and unable to stave off authoritarianism, with Kendzior noting, Belief in American exceptionalism is what got us here. [21]
Kendzior was a featured speaker for the Canadian Journalism Foundation's annual Ottawa J-Talk on April 9, 2019.[22]
Regarding her coverage of Donald Trump, Kendzior has stated that she has had "three advantages":[6]
I transitioned into covering the presidential election in March 2016. I had three advantages in covering Donald Trump specifically as a candidate. First, I worked in New York tabloid media, so I knew exactly how he marketed himself. Then, I studied dictatorships and authoritarian regimes the entire time I was doing my PhD.... A lot of things that Trump was doing in his campaign reminded me of things I saw in Uzbekistan, Russia, and other authoritarian states around the world. Alarm bells started going off in my head.... Third, I live in the center of the country, not in D.C. or New York. When they talk about how hard things are out here, that's accurate.[6]
Arthur Levitt interviewed Kendzior about her book and career in a May 2019 podcast for Bloomberg News.[23]
The Columbia Journalism Review reported that because of her writings and expertise on authoritarian states, "as the new president came into power and the specter of Russian interference in his victory triggered Mueller's investigation, the limos started lining up"[11] to drive Kendzior to interviews at television studios because her insights are valuable to the public.
The View from Flyover Country
In 2015, Kendzior self-published her first book as an ebook a collection of essays on the American condition first published by Al Jazeera starting in 2013 called The View from Flyover Country.
In June 2017, speaking to an American Library Association conference, Hillary Clinton described herself as "riveted by... The View From Flyover Country, which turned out to be especially relevant in the midst of our current health-care debate."[24][25]
In April 2018, Flatiron Books published an updated print version of Kendzior's The View .[26] The New York Post described it as a "collection of essays from the talented Kendzior, who writes intelligently and with great empathy about problems faced by the Midwest."[27] The Buffalo News described Kendzior's The View as "an astonishment and a challenge to convention for all sorts of reasons,"[28] and described Kendzior as having "roared to the fore" because of her prediction of the 2016 election results, a result of having studied foreign demagogues and understanding deteriorating conditions in the U.S.
The book was listed as a New York Times bestseller in May 2018.[29]
Gaslit Nation podcast
Together with Andrea Chalupa, Kendzior co-hosted a podcast, Gaslit Nation, which originated as part of Dame magazine.[30] In Psychology Today, Joe Pierre stated that the podcast "frequently reminds listeners that the Trump administration is part of a 'transnational crime syndicate masquerading as a government'",[31] stating that
The podcasts title, Gaslit Nation, refers to their assertion that the Trump administration is "gaslighting" America in precisely the way that Arendt, Orwell, and Pomerantzev have described, by repeatedly contradicting the facts and claiming that black is white. This assertion is supported by independent databases maintained by Politifact and The Washington Post that tally false claims involving President Trump. According to The Washington Post's Fact Checker, President Trump has made 15,413 false or misleading statements (and counting) since taking office. Many of these... have been repeated again and again to the point that some no doubt believe it.[31]
In October 2023, Kendzior announced she would no longer appear on the podcast.[32]
Incidents during the Trump administration
In 2016, Kendzior wrote about similarities between Donald Trump and the authoritarian leaders she had studied given Trump's admiration for Russian president Vladimir Putin before there was widespread public awareness of Russia's interference in the US election.[33]
Personal life
Kendzior lives in St. Louis, Missouri, with her husband and their children.
Selected works and publications
Scholia has an author
1WorldHope
(904 posts)She seems pretty well qualified to me. I am going to read her books. Because, "Americans are stupid" just doesn't make more sense to me. God knows our government has many well guarded secrets. Bigger even than, who killed the Kennedy's. This country and it's inception were not heroic. We massacred and destroyed the culture of ancient peoples who lived on this soil from the beginning of time. Then we brought over slaves from Africa to build this whole damn thing. Imagine the things we don't know. 🥺
tenderfoot
(8,725 posts)eom
msfiddlestix
(7,811 posts)Autumn
(46,333 posts)Intractable
(546 posts)It was patently obvious to me that Mueller and Garland were running out the clock. It was not obvious to me, but made clear in the article, that this is what the DOJ is intended to do in our current times.
It's like a warm blanket we just throw over all the institutionalized stalemates and personal corruption to make everything seem like democracy.
msfiddlestix
(7,811 posts)weak, spinelessness was my primary thoughts.
But yeah, I'm leaning towards delay quite on purpose,.
TSF's rise to power didn't happen out of thin air, and now, well. now it's unspeakably too late.
DET
(1,691 posts)If shes correct, the corruption goes much deeper and wider than anyone could expect. Theres no denying Garlands complete ineptitude during an existential crisis. No amount of dithering can account for his failure to prosecute the people who actually committed crimes.
Loupe Garoue
(69 posts)Hotler
(12,175 posts)and did nothing?
Edit to add; Is the date on the essay correct? it shows 2023, read likes it's current.
Thanks.
Loupe Garoue
(69 posts)I found it on Substack and found the author credible.