Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Gheorghe Explains: Project 2025

The world has changed quite a bit since I started writing this post. In the span of a week - A FUCKING WEEK - we witnessed an assassination attempt on a Presidential candidate, a Vice-Presidential choice, a nominating convention, the other party's candidate existing the race, and the sitting Vice-President picking up the baton and getting off to a sprinting start. 

It's safe to say that the dynamics of the 2024 U.S. Presidential race have been upended in ways absolutely unprecedented. But it says here that the stakes have not, which is what I meant to write about in the first place. 

This is Kevin Roberts, President of the 
Heritage Foundation. He recently told Steve Bannon
"We are in the process of the second
American Revolution, which will remain bloodless
if the left allows it to be.” Charming. 

In recent weeks, more and more "neutral" political observers have begun to discuss Project 2025, widely regarded as the Trump campaign's actual (if preferably secret) platform for governance. Written by a number of former Trump officials and acolytes and coordinated by The Heritage Foundation, the 900-page document that details the intentions of the Trump movement is wide-ranging and radical, and serves as a blueprint that guides the things a second Trump administration would seek to implement.

We read* it so you don't have to (and by read, we mean, found some people online who actually did read it, summarized their conclusions, did actually read some text, and then wrote this really quickly). In any government the size of ours, there are offices and programs that deserve scrutiny, and I think any administration that follows the current one is well-served to examine what works and what doesn't. There are things in Project 2025 that are worth considering. For example, the priorities related to the Department of Defense in Chapter 4 (namely, 1) Reestablish a culture of command accountability, non-politicization, and warfighting focus, 2) Transform our armed forces for maximum effectiveness in an era of great-power competition, 3) Provide necessary support to Department of Homeland Security (DHS) border protection operations. Border protection is a national security issue that requires sustained attention and effort by all elements of the executive branch, and 4) Demand financial transparency and accountability) contain some valid critiques of DoD, though #3 makes me a bit nervous. But on balance, there's a lot to be concerned about in the text.

*In a bit of a Gheorghe Notes sorta way

Allow me a bit of an explanatory interlude here. I am prone to the occasional hyperbolic pronouncement. Sometimes that's done for effect, and sometimes I can get a tad carried away. Marls tends to play the sober-minded counterpart to my alarmism, the little c constitutional conservative to my hysterical lefty. And so I tried to do this post with Marls' generally more balanced viewpoint in mind. WWMD, if you will. 

Friends, I failed, because this shit is fucked up like a football bat. The policy objectives and prescriptions in Project 2025 amount to nothing short of a wholesale dismantling of a broad range of government programs we take for granted. For one example of many, say goodbye to NOAA, and hello to weather forecasting with Sharpies. From Chapter 21 of the Project 2025 report, "The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) should be dismantled and many of its functions eliminated, sent to other agencies, privatized, or placed under the control of states and territories." The author goes on to say,  in regard to NOAA component offices, "Together, these form a colossal operation that has become one of the main drivers of the climate change alarm industry and, as such, is harmful to future U.S. prosperity."

It is worth noting that the commercial concerns that would ostensibly benefit from privatization of certain NOAA functions want no part of it. AccuWeather CEO Steven Smith issued a statement that read in part, " “The American public and economy are best served when all entities provide their expertise, capabilities, and contributions to the common goal of best informing the public and protecting lives and property through accurate and timely forecasts and warnings." 

That's a pretty innocuous example, even as it represents the breadth of the project, so maybe let's talk about some of the more grotesque policy recommendations from the worst sort of ghouls (there I go with the hyperbole) like Stephen Miller to Russ Vought. 

Let's start with female bodily autonomy, which comes under attack in the Project 2025 report. Sure, abortion is a non-starter with the GOP, but they seem to be coming for contraception, as well. According to analysis by the left-leaning Center for American Progress, more than 48 million American women would be at risk of losing cost-free access to birth control medication. The personal consequences for women would be staggering, to say nothing of the economic implications.

Lock all these degenerates up.
The authors of the manifesto call for the criminalization of pornography and the imprisonment of anyone who produces or consumes it. Setting aside the wild impracticality of such a policy, the definition of pornography gives the game away. According to the authors, the "omnipresent propagation of transgender ideology" is a form of pornography, as are texts that influence the "sexualization of children" - the latter term being a preferred dogwhistle of the right referring to LGBT+ predation. All of this is of a piece with the weird sort of Christian nationalism vibe to much of the social policy elements of the document.

In addition to these, the plan seeks to eliminate the Head Start program, defund the FBI, radically shift the tax burden even further from the rich to the middle class, end climate change research (Chapter 2 calls for a "whole of government unwinding" of the Biden Administration's efforts to combat climate change), among a great many other changes large and small.

The icing on this particular cake comes in the broad-reaching changes to Federal employment policy that would ensure a President Trump would be able to replace wide swaths of the bureaucracy with true believers, pushing out anyone deemed sufficiently disloyal to the cause, and increasing the likelihood the policy goals outlined in the document are implemented. 

If you're interested in looking more deeply into the sources I leaned on, you can check them out here.

Verify

The Cut.com

People Magazine (when People is doing the work, well, that might tell you something about how their editorial staff views what's happening - or not - in other media outlets.)

There's a reason the Trump campaign is bending over backwards to discredit reporting that connects it with Project 2025: the policies therein are deeply unpopular. If the Harris campaign asks for my advice (and I'm told they're avid readers), I'd tell them to hang this shit around Trump's neck like Christmas lights. I'd also tell them to continue to attack Trump as a felon, a loser, and a shitty businessman. He hates being mocked, and he'll hate it all the more coming from a smart black woman. I think the Dems have traditionally been too unwilling to fight hard, even when they've been punched in the mouth. The stakes now are just too high for them to not go out guns blazing.

40 comments:

rootsminer said...

Pretty measured take, by rob standards.

rob said...

wwmd!

zman said...

You're doing the Lord's work here but I think Project 2025 is too process-oriented for the average voter to care about. As I've said repeatedly, the key themes against DJ Trump are:

* a million people died because he botched the covid response
* the economy collapsed because he botched the covid response
* he incited a deadly insurrection to try to overturn the 2020 election
* he cheated on all of his wives, on his taxes, and in his business activities
* taken together, do you trust this guy to handle another crisis or to tell you the truth?
* and Roe was overturned because of the justices he picked

Whitney said...

"The authors of the manifesto call for the criminalization of pornography and the imprisonment of anyone who produces or consumes it."

Setting aside the dogwhistle of the right referring to LGBT+ predation, let's focus on the wild impracticality of such a policy for 2 seconds.

Stormy Daniels.
Strip clubs in Trump casinos.
Porn galore in Trump's world.
Melania has posed nude. Canoodling with other women!

Trump's going to prison!

rob said...

starting to see a lot of high-profile dems basically just say "these people are all weirdos and freaks. why do we want them in charge?" which is, y'know, pretty accurate and an effective (in my mind) and easily-repeatable-and-understandable argument.

and honestly, z, also starting to see polls that suggest people have heard of project 2025 and overwhelmingly oppose the policies in it.

Marls said...

Roberto, I agree with most of your takes in here - measured indeed. I would point out that the Heritage Foundation and others have come out with platform pieces like this before (1973, 1981)It is really only the spectre of a Trump presidency implementing all of this shit that is scary. That said, Donald at his heart is a political opportunist. He has been backing away from abortion so fast it looks like the ending of an episode of Benny Hill. Why, because the dog finally caught the car and doesn’t like the taste of the bumper.

Many of the items in Project 25’ are political losers that are fine for folks like the Heritage foundation to put on paper but DoA in reality. In many ways this is similar to the Green New Deal that SOUNDS great to folks on the more liberal end of the spectrum but was populated with policy proposals that most Americans to the right of Bernie Sanders would have hated had they been implemented.

All of this is to point out why it is so important to stay civically involved and continue to vote. Public opinion matters. Local politics where policy gets implemented matters. Talking with your fellow citizens even when uncomfortable matters. Instead of “democracy dies in darkness” per the WaPo, I think in reality it’s “democracy dies in a vacuum”.

Whitney said...

So does a hamster. Trust me, folks.

Whitney said...

Love the Benny Hill add-in. Yakety Sax is just the greatest.

zman said...

Shuttering NOAA is dumb but I don't think it's persuasive. Defunding the FBI is literally defunding the police but no one cares about inconsistencies anymore. No one believes that Trump would really criminalize porn. Contraception is a major winner but I would fold that in with Roe.

Whitney said...

How many Spotify streams do you think "Smells Like Teen Spirit" has?

I'll tell you. 2.06 billion. Wowsers. The next time you hear someone bitch about the proliferation of Nirvana T-shirts on Gen Z-ers and that those kids don't even listen to the music of the shirt they're wearing, drop that number. The kids are listening. And they're alright.

Marls said...

Whit - I lol’ed however you are now on an animal cruelty watchlist.

rob said...

in the richard gere category

Whitney said...

Hey now. That was a gerbil, not a hamster. Big diff. Hamsters have short and stubby tails, while gerbils have long tails. Which you can use like leashes, should you... I've said too much.

Whitney said...

Did any of you cats ever go to Mex-Econo in OBX?

When I went to the Nirvana Spotify page, I noticed that Dave Grohl was wearing a Mex-Econo hat. Google tells me that he used to hang there in Mex-Econo's twilight years (my college years).

It was a pretty cool place in the same vintage and vibe as the Atlantis.

zman said...

Is that a Losing My Religion reference? Do the kids listen to that too?

T.J. said...

hey z, that's me in the corner...that's me in the spotlight...

rootsminer said...

keistering my hamster

rob said...

the meter is perrrrfect

Whitney said...

Well, rob, they don't purr per se, but I should point out that hamsters can make a sound similar to a purr, also known as bruxing, when they feel content and loved. For example, a hamster might brux if it's comfortable with your touch and you pet it gently. Other signs that your hamster is comfortable with you include:

Snuggling into your hand
Letting you hold it
Picking up the check at the Dubliner
Staying still when you pet it
Dropping anti-gerbilic slurs in front of you
Closing its eyes

zman said...

Is brux like Royal Trux?

zman said...

Marshawn Lynch appears to have endorsed Gavin Newsom.

https://x.com/GavinNewsom/status/1816129041243726178

rob said...

seeing additional reporting today about heritage's position on recreational sex. the short version: they're against it. from a tweet from their main account last year: "conservatives have to lead the way in restoring sex to its true purpose, and ending recreational sex and senseless use of birth control pills."

i think they should run with that message. seems like a winner.

Marls said...

Come on, Rob. That was from the under performing Project 24. Make America Masturbate Again.

The hats did not sell very well.

rob said...

that's recreational sex, marls. they'd never.

rob said...

also, i would advise against googling "did jd vance fuck a couch".

Whitney said...

What is the sensible use of birth control pills? Pegs in the Game of Life? Oooh, that’s rich.

Whitney said...

And I googled that, Rob. There are so many sites dedicated to affirming that JD Vance definitely did NOT have sex with a couch that he quite obviously is a serial sofa banger.

rob said...

i think we need to make sure to tell as many people as possible as frequently as possible that jd vance is unequivocally *not* a couchfucker.

Whitney said...

The Loveseat Lover, he should hear in a VP debate

rob said...

when he gets that feeling, he needs...sectional healing.

i stole that, but it's fucking funny.

Whitney said...

Sofa king good

rob said...

maybe vance was just acting out shakespeare? as antony said, as if to cleopatra:

eros! - i come my queen - eros! stay for me. where souls do couch on flowers, we'll hand in hand. and with our sprightly port make the ghosts gaze.

rob said...

as far as we know, jd vance *still* has not fucked a couch

OBX dave said...

Charlie Pierce brings the heat. Or the weariness.

https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/a61688537/cynic-presidential-election-2024-trump-biden-harris/

Marls said...

The cynic and the echo chamber…

Lots of words from Chaz to lay our current shitshow solely at the feet of anyone not in alignment with a progressive agenda. The righteous left have apparently done no wrong and have spent the last 20 years blindly being hoodwinked by the grifters of the right and their centrist enablers.

It’s melodramatic, revisionist “thought” pieces like this that cause Democrats to lose elections. It’s how you end up with a major party candidate stupidly calling half the electorate “deplorables” and while others smugly telling the same people that they are too dumb to realize they are “voting against their interest”. It’s also a modern version of the Lost Cause trope that romanticized the old south and grew into Jim Crow 2.0. When you portray a political position as the only righteous path forward it results in the vilification of anyone not in lockstep with you. The right does this all the time. Charlie just can’t seem to see that his team does it too.

OBX dave said...

Tim, many valid points. Probably worth a lengthier discussion for another time. I'll try to be brief with a few thoughts.

Charlie P. is indeed an old school liberal warhorse whose blinders are often un-helpful in examining or countering the current climate. A lot of levers have gotten us where we are, with politics reduced to binary winners/losers, right/wrong, us/them, complete with wartime language that demonizes and dehumanizes the opposition and therefore softens and justifies every heinous act and outcome. I won't get started on the media's role in all of it. In any case, actual governing is on life support because winning elections has become the end and no longer the means.

A villainous right-wing, evolutionary thru-line from Nixon to Reagan to the Bushes to Trump might make for a swell poli sci thesis or DNC fundraiser, but it doesn't get at how we got here. It doesn't acknowledge that Clinton and Obama and Joe, and the upper-tier Democratic machine, all but abandoned huge swaths of the population themselves to chase money and helped set the table for the Tea Party and the Orange Oaf. No idea about the way out. Way above my pay grade.

Danimal said...

g'day everyone! good time charlie at it again, is he?

the fam and i returned from a glorious time away to boston & maine. thanks all for your recs - i did hit on a couple including side-street cafe in bah hahbah, and luke's lobster in portland. thank you lumpy & z.

i have a couple more for those returning:
boston - lucia's in little italy!
bar harbor - traveling lobster; mainely meats; and rosalie's pizza (the latter two are when you tire of seafood and the accompanying $200 lunch tabs. jeezus.

tremendous hiking & sightseeing in acadia, galavanting in bar harbor, and chillaxin in our cabin in the woods. will definitely return.

rob said...

rod beck was a goddamn mensch. this is an amazing story.

Marls said...

Dave - thanks for posting the article and response BTW. As a person that feels slightly adrift without a political home these days I appreciate the back and forth here.

rob said...

here's the actual link to the beck story: https://www.sfchronicle.com/totalsf/article/giants-rod-beck-aids-19594162.php