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    Michelle Obama slams Trump as 'the wrong president' and 'in over his head' – as it happened

    Former first lady urges Americans to ‘vote for Biden like our lives depend on it’
    Bernie Sanders urges supporters to vote for Joe Biden
    Kristin Urquiza blames Trump for her father’s death from coronavirus
    Anti-Trump Republicans including Kasich speak at convention
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    Updated

    Play Video

    1:07

    ‘In over his head’: Michelle Obama delivers rebuke of Trump in DNC speech – video

    Key events

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    1.02am EDT01:02
    Takeaways from the first night of the Democratic convention

    11.08pm EDT23:08
    First night of the Democratic convention concludes

    10.59pm EDT22:59
    Michelle Obama: ‘Trump is the wrong president for our country’

    10.54pm EDT22:54
    Michelle Obama: ‘You simply cannot fake your way through this job’

    10.50pm EDT22:50
    Michelle Obama speaks at Democratic convention

    10.47pm EDT22:47
    Sanders: ‘Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Trump golfs’

    10.16pm EDT22:16
    Anti-Trump Republicans speak at Democratic convention

    Live feed

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    1.02am EDT01:02

    Takeaways from the first night of the Democratic convention

    That’s it from us tonight. We’ll be back tomorrow for the second night of the virtual Democratic convention.
    Here are the major takeaways from the night:
    Michelle Obama stole the show. The former first lady delivered a searing rebuke of Trump, arguing the president is incapable of leading the country during this moment of crisis. “If we have any hope of ending this chaos, we have got to vote for Joe Biden like our lives depend on it,” Obama said. The pre-taped speech attracted widespread praise, with many Democrats saying Obama offered an eloquent and urgent call to action.
    An everyday American who lost her father to coronavirus upstaged many Democratic lawmakers. Kristin Urquiza specifically blamed Trump for misleading her father, Mark Anthony Urquiza, about the seriousness of the virus. “My dad was a healthy 65-year-old,” Urquiza said. “His only pre-existing condition was trusting Donald Trump, and for that, he paid with his life.” Urquiza’s words struck a chord with many viewers, and commentators compared her speech to that of Gold Star father Khizr Khan, who memorably criticized Trump at the 2016 Democratic convention.
    George Floyd’s family delivered a plea for changes in policing. “George should be alive today,” Philonise Floyd said of his brother, a Black man who was kill by a white Minneapolis police officer in May. Floyd listed some of the African Americans killed by police in recent years and said: “When this moment ends, let’s make sure we never stop saying their names.”
    Bernie Sanders called on his supporters to rally around Biden. The progressive Vermont senator acknowledged his policy differences with the Democratic nominee, but Sanders argued Trump’s disastrous handling of the pandemic demanded that all Americans come together to elect Biden. “Nero fiddled while Rome burned,” Sanders said. “Trump golfs.”
    Anti-Trump Republicans warned against the dangers of reelecting the president. Former Ohio governor John Kasich, a frequent Trump critic, delivered his speech endorsing Biden alongside a literal fork in the road, attracting some mockery on Twitter. “America is at a crossroads,” Kasich said. “The stakes in this election are greater than any in modern times.” Like Sanders, Kasich acknowledged he does not agree with Biden on every issue, but he described his vote for the Democratic candidate as a matter of necessity amid a historic time of crisis.
    The virtual convention, while not seamless, still produced some memorable moments. The night saw some glitches and timing misses, but overall the event went as planned, despite the unprecedented nature of this year’s conventions. However, certain lawmakers’ Zoom backgrounds did prompt questions, such as, where did Bernie Sanders find all that chopped wood?
    The Guardian’s convention live blog will be back tomorrow night, so tune back in then.

    Updated
    at 1.53am EDT

    12.46am EDT00:46

    In case you missed the full video, here’s Billy Porter and Stephen Stills closing out the night:

    2020 #DemConvention 🇺🇸
    (@DemConvention)
    Thanks @theebillyporter + Steven Stills for helping us close night one of the #DemConvention! 🎵So much more to come! Come back tomorrow ⬇️https://t.co/NEJtNqxFPV pic.twitter.com/vqXfLCUVfk

    August 18, 2020

    Stills, who wrote the song, was inspired by the 1966 Sunset Strip curfew riots, when counterculture youths protested and clashed with police.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 2.00am EDT

    12.29am EDT00:29

    Here are a couple of behind the scenes looks at tonight’s speakers, prepping for their speeches.
    Michigan’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer, had this preamble on Shark Week:

    The Recount
    (@therecount)
    Gov. Whitmer (D-MI) jokes before going live: “It’s not just Shark Week … it’s Shark Week *mouths expletive*” pic.twitter.com/KSndbTvLZi

    August 18, 2020

    And Bernie Sanders had a very Bernie Sanders response to staff fussing over him:

    Johnny Verhovek
    (@JTHVerhovek)
    Bernie’s reaction to being told to stand up straight is me, everyday, to everyone pic.twitter.com/8FE8INRPSU

    August 18, 2020

    Updated
    at 12.49am EDT

    12.14am EDT00:14

    Max Benwell

    Michelle Obama’s necklace, which spells out V-O-T-E, has been getting a huge amount of attention since her speech.

    Angela
    (@anzawose)
    Okay, can we all take a moment to appreciate Michelle Obama’s “Vote” necklace?! 😍 pic.twitter.com/U4j7LxuF89

    August 18, 2020

    According to Google Trends, which measures the relative volume of search interest, it’s the most newly searched for thing in the last hour or so.

    GoogleTrends
    (@GoogleTrends)
    “Michelle Obama necklace,” “vote necklace” and “letter necklace” are breakout searches, past hour, US – The necklace is the top trending search on all of US Google in the last hour of the event.https://t.co/I0WiP7r7bt

    August 18, 2020

    12.13am EDT00:13

    One subject of deep speculation tonight: what’s with all that chopped wood behind Bernie Sanders?
    Politico’s Holly Otterbein, who covered the Sanders campaign this election cycle, brings us this perfectly logical explanation …

    Holly Otterbein
    (@hollyotterbein)
    I’m told Bernie’s iconic firewood backdrop was courtesy Burlington’s Hen of the Wood.

    August 18, 2020

    But viewers and journalists couldn’t help but kindle alternative theories … (Sorry not sorry).

    Alexandra Petri
    (@petridishes)
    look what happened to Clint Eastwood’s chair pic.twitter.com/lv3YSeTt3W

    August 18, 2020

    Will Steakin
    (@wsteaks)
    oh that’s what he was doing in the woods pic.twitter.com/Bckz7Dpcxg

    August 18, 2020

    … and engage in some fun punning (here’s the reference).

    alvin gunnion
    (@AGUNNION)
    “yeah, wood, ok” pic.twitter.com/ub9Cw9cZXG

    August 18, 2020

    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 12.49am EDT

    11.56pm EDT23:56

    Trump seems especially perturbed by the Republicans, including John Kasich, who spoke at the Democratic convention.
    He told reporters this evening that Kasich will be “a loser as a Democrat”.

    Anthony Zurcher
    (@awzurcher)
    On Air Force One this evening, I asked Trump what he thought of John Kasich speaking to the Democrats. His response: “He was a loser as a Republican, and he’ll be a loser as a Democrat. … People don’t like him. People don’t trust him. … He hasn’t done too well with Trump.”

    August 18, 2020

    Kasich told CNN that he wasn’t sure where the Republican party was headed: “I’m very disappointed in them – I’m disappointed in their silence and I’m disappointed in an agenda that doesn’t seem very positive.”
    But the former Ohio governor and presidential candidate didn’t seem ready to join the Democratic party either, critiquing some Dems as getting “too extreme” in their policies. “Who knows where we’re going to go,” after the elections, he said. “If there’s not support for the Republican party or the Democratic party, there will be a third party.”
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 12.50am EDT

    11.42pm EDT23:42

    Donald Trump, on a tweeting spree, has so far focused his attacks on Andrew Cuomo and John Kasich – with 13 tweets and retweets deriding the New York governor so far.
    The president accused Cuomo of botching the coronavirus response and noted that he at times had praised Trump’s actions int the initial aftermath of the pandemic. Of course, at the time, Cuomo and other governors desperate for supplies from the federal government needed to stay on the president’s good side.

    Updated
    at 12.52am EDT

    11.30pm EDT23:30

    In her speech, Michelle Obama also painted a stark picture of what voting might look like in November, as the Trump administration tries to enforce changes to the US Postal Service.
    “We’ve got to vote early, in person if we can,” Obama said. “We’ve got to request our mail-in ballots right now, tonight, and send them back immediately and follow-up to make sure they’re received. And then, make sure our friends and families do the same.
    “We have got to grab our comfortable shoes, put on our masks, pack a brown bag dinner and maybe breakfast too, because we’ve got to be willing to stand in line all night if we have to.”
    Democratic officials and voting rights advocates have warned that the Trump administration’s actions could jeopardize voting by mail this November.
    However, Obama is the first person to use a national speech to warn Americans about the drastic steps they may need to take to ensure their votes are counted.

    11.26pm EDT23:26

    Max Benwell

    For someone who says she “hates politics”, Michelle Obama has managed to pull off something remarkable in her pre-recorded convention speech.
    The response to it has been overwhelmingly positive across social media:

    Julia Ioffe
    (@juliaioffe)
    When historians talk about Black women being the conscience of America, remember Michelle Obama’s speech. #DemocraticNationalConvention

    August 18, 2020

    Ayanna Pressley
    (@AyannaPressley)
    Grace. Empathy. Truth telling. @MichelleObamapic.twitter.com/rICNPmEQiu

    August 18, 2020

    Tony Karon
    (@TonyKaron)
    Mic drop. They should end this convention right there, because it’s not going get better than that speech https://t.co/uYKBvADCKp

    August 18, 2020

    Sherrilyn Ifill
    (@Sifill_LDF)
    Mrs. First Lady 44 #MichelleObama is breaking it down truthfully and restoring a frame of sanity. Giving it straight. America has become a nation “underperforming not only in terms of policy, but in character.”

    August 18, 2020

    Jill Filipovic
    (@JillFilipovic)
    Barack married so well.

    August 18, 2020

    11.23pm EDT23:23

    Trump has weighed in on tonight’s convention events, lashing out against New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, who criticized the president’s response to the coronavirus pandemic in his speech.
    Cuomo lambasted the “dysfunctional and incompetent” federal government in his remarks, but Trump noted the Democratic governor previously thanked the president for some of the steps he took to assist New York
    “Cuomo, just like his brother Fredo, has not got a very good memory!” Trump tweeted, apparently referencing Cuomo’s brother, CNN host Chris Cuomo.

    Donald J. Trump
    (@realDonaldTrump)
    Cuomo, just like his brother Fredo, has not got a very good memory! https://t.co/H8J0RjNlvb

    August 18, 2020

    Trump also reshared a tweet from Republican senator Lindsey Graham that challenged Michelle Obama’s praise of her husband’s administration.

    Updated
    at 12.52am EDT

    11.09pm EDT23:09

    Emily Holden

    Bernie Sanders and Michelle Obama’s remarks revealed how the coronavirus pandemic, the economic downturn, vast inequality and threats to a fair election from the US’s most controversial president in history could drown out the climate crisis at the Democratic convention.
    Climate is always a top tier issue for Sanders, who pledged the most ambitious goals of any Democratic contender. Yet it was only a brief mention in his speech tonight.
    “We are facing the worst public health crisis in 100 years and the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression. We are confronting systemic racism and the enormous threat to our planet of climate change,” Sanders said. “And in the midst of all of this we have a president who is not only incapable of addressing these crises but is leading us down the path of authoritarianism.”
    Rattling out a list of Biden campaign promises, from paid family leave to universal pre-K, Sanders said Biden would also invest in crumbling infrastructure and fight climate change by transitioning the US to 100% clean electricity in the next 15 years, creating millions of jobs.
    Obama mentioned climate in a list of ways the US used to work with other countries.
    Biden’s climate plan – widely endorsed by advocacy groups – is likely to fall to the background of the event.

    Updated
    at 11.30pm EDT

    11.08pm EDT23:08

    First night of the Democratic convention concludes

    The first night of the Democratic convention has now concluded, following Michelle Obama’s speech fiercely condemning Trump’s leadership.
    The blog will have more reactions and analysis coming up, so stay tuned.

    11.07pm EDT23:07

    Michelle Obama’s pithy, understated rebuke of Trump: “It is what it is.”
    The former first lady here subtly referenced Donald Trump’s reaction to the staggering coronavirus death toll earlier this month. “They are dying. That’s true. And you – it is what it is,” Trump said in an interview with Axios. “But that doesn’t mean we aren’t doing everything we can. It’s under control as much as you can control it.
    Using the president’s own words against him, Obama said Trumo is the “wrong president for our country. He has had more than enough time to prove that he can do the job, but he is clearly in over his head. He cannot meet this moment.”

    NBC News
    (@NBCNews)
    Michelle Obama: “Let me be as honest and clear as I possibly can: Donald Trump is the wrong president for our country … He is clearly in over his head. He cannot meet this moment. He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us. It is what it is.” pic.twitter.com/9nUJDOBaij

    August 18, 2020

    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.31pm EDT

    11.03pm EDT23:03

    Michelle Obama emphasized the urgency of this election, asking voters to understand the crucial need to defeat Trump in November.
    “If you think things cannot possibly get worse, trust me, they can; and they will if we don’t make a change in this election,” Obama said.
    “If we have any hope of ending this chaos, we have got to vote for Joe Biden like our lives depend on it.”
    Obama specifically called out voters who might be considering supporting third-party candidates in November, which cost Hillary Clinton dearly in 2016.
    “This is not the time to withhold our votes in protest or play games with candidates who have no chance of winning,” Obama said.

    10.59pm EDT22:59

    Michelle Obama: ‘Trump is the wrong president for our country’

    Michelle Obama offered a stinging rebuke of Trump’s leadership, saying he is the wrong man for the job at a critical moment for our country.
    Obama specifically referenced her words at the 2016 convention: “When they go lie, we go high.” Obama said tonight. “Going high is the only thing that works.”
    She then added: “But let’s be clear: going high does not mean putting on a smile and saying nice things when confronted by viciousness and cruelty. Going high means taking the harder path. It means scraping and clawing our way to that mountain top.”
    Obama followed that by taking direct aim at Trump, saying: “Let me be as honest and clear as I possibly can. Donald Trump is the wrong president for our country.
    “He has had more than enough time to prove that he can do the job, but he is clearly in over his head. He cannot meet this moment. He simply cannot be who we need him to be for us. It is what it is.”

    Updated
    at 11.31pm EDT

    10.56pm EDT22:56

    Maanvi here, with more on Bernie Sanders:
    Bernie Sanders, who just urged his supporters to back Biden, has been working to unite Democrats to defeat Trump, even as some of those who lead his presidential campaign have critiqued the Democratic nominee’s moderate policies.

    Rob Flaherty
    (@Rob_Flaherty)
    Really can’t be overstate how much of a team player Bernie has been in the campaign to defeat Donald Trump.

    August 18, 2020

    Belén Sisa, the former national Latino press secretary, has commented that progressives need to keep pushing the policies Sanders championed, even though he’s not the nominee.

    Belén Sisa
    (@belensisaw)
    Hearing @BernieSanders speak brings back many memories of unprecedented policy, outreach, & straight up people power. This isn’t the end. It was never about just electing Bernie, it was about a movement. This isn’t the last you’ll see of progressives, see u out in the field ✊🏽

    August 18, 2020

    The Sanders campaign’s former national press secretary, Briahna Joy Gray, echoed the sentiment:

    Briahna Joy Gray
    (@briebriejoy)
    Policy, finally: $15 min wageUniversal pre KInfrastructure Climate changeHealthcare improvement (though still a ways to go)End private prisons/detention centers/cash bail I’m biased, but best sell of the night.

    August 18, 2020

    Updated
    at 11.32pm EDT

    10.54pm EDT22:54

    Michelle Obama: ‘You simply cannot fake your way through this job’

    Michelle Obama noted she has seen the difficulties of the presidency firsthand, saying: “You simply cannot fake your way through this job.”
    The former first lady argued Trump has not provided the necessary moral leadership as the country faces crises on multiple fronts.
    Obama said: “Whenever we look to this White House for some leadership or consolation or any semblance of steadiness, what we get instead is chaos, division and a total and utter lack of empathy.”

    Updated
    at 11.31pm EDT

    10.50pm EDT22:50

    Michelle Obama speaks at Democratic convention

    Former first lady Michelle Obama is now addressing the Democratic convention, saying this election will determine the direction of the country.
    Repeating her words during the 2016 campaign, Obama said the job of the presidency is difficult and requires a strong leader.
    “A president’s words have the power to move markets,” Obama said. “As I said before, being president doesn’t change who you are. It reveals who you are.”

    10.47pm EDT22:47

    Sanders: ‘Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Trump golfs’

    In his convention remarks, the Vermont senator Bernie Sanders strongly urged his supporters to vote for Joe Biden in the November election, warning that Trump represents a severe threat to US democracy.
    “Our great nation is now living in an unprecedented moment,” Sanders said, describing this election as the “most important in the modern history of this country”.
    “We need Joe Biden as our next president,” Sanders aid.
    He thanked his millions of supporters and emphasized he would continue fighting for the progressive causes he championed during his campaign.
    “Together, we have moved this country in a bold new direction,” Sanders said. “Our campaign ended several months ago, but our movement continues and is getting stronger every day.”
    But Sanders emphasized the progressive progress made in recent years could be undone by Trump’s re-election.
    “Let us be clear: If Donald Trump is reelected, all of the progress we have made will be in jeopardy,” Sanders said, emphasizing the need to “preserve this nation”.
    “This president is not just a threat to our democracy, but by rejecting science he has put our lives and health in jeopardy,” Sanders said.
    Sanders added: “Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Trump golfs.”

    Updated
    at 11.34pm EDT More

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    Democratic national convention: Michelle Obama and Bernie Sanders among speakers – watch live

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    Democrats kick off a four-day virtual convention with a display of party unity for Joe Biden and the broad coalition aiming to defeat Republican Donald Trump in November.
    Biden’s top primary rival, Bernie Sanders, and the former first lady Michelle Obama will headline a parade of speakers appearing from around the US to make a virtual case for a Biden presidency, organizers said

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    The Brain Malfunction Affecting the US and Its Respectable Media

    Ever since Dwight Eisenhower denounced the military-industrial complex in no uncertain terms, the intelligence community (IC) can be seen as the literal brain of an immense, tentacular but poorly-structured system of economic and political governance. The clandestine nature of its activities within an officially democratic system of government means that this reality will never be publicly acknowledged. 

    Without IC, the Democratic Party could not have entertained the nation for four years with the Russiagate show. One of the unintended consequences of the media’s obsession with alleged Russian interference in US elections has been to highlight both the central role of the IC brain and its fatal weaknesses. 

    A Double Twist in Russiagate

    READ MORE

    The New York Times and The Washington Post have relied on the IC to provide the substance of unending streams of stories revealing the functions of the brain. MSNBC and CNN have rivaled against each other to recruit and then display the insight of former intelligence chiefs, presenting them as paragons of objectivity.

    The NY Times provided an example of this last week in an article by Robert Draper concerning the latest National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), a classified report on Russiagate. A close reading of Draper’s analysis reveals some of the subtleties both of how the IC brain works and how The Times has become the voice of that brain.

    Here is an example in which Draper quotes veteran national intelligence office, Christopher Bort: “The intelligence provided to the N.I.E.’s authors indicated that in the lead-up to 2020, Russia worked in support of the Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders as well. But Bort explained to his colleagues … that this reflected not a genuine preference for Sanders but rather an effort ‘to weaken that party and ultimately help the current U.S. president.’”

    Here is today’s 3D definition:

    Genuine:

    In the language of intelligence agencies, the official interpretation of facts that should be retained to the exclusion of the facts themselves

    Contextual Note

    Draper and Bort want Americans to understand that Vladimir Putin’s Russia is committed to one thing alone: maintaining their man, Donald Trump, as the US president. If Russia speaks kindly of Senator Bernie Sanders, it can only be a tactic to comfort Trump’s reelection. It certainly cannot be the hope that, if elected, Sanders might be less rigid than past presidents — including both Trump and Barack Obama — in terms of his Middle East policy, for example. Elections are not about concrete issues. They are only about personalities and loyalties.

    As the brain of the system, the IC has the role of defining acceptable and unacceptable codes of behavior for itself and for the population as a whole. It can define, for example, what is “genuine.” Unlike moral codes, the behavioral code it defines is a single ethical criterion called “interest.” This is particularly evident in the realm of foreign policy, where actions can always be justified as the defense of “American interests.”

    Embed from Getty Images

    The system’s most obvious feature is the nature of what fuels it: money. But the IC doesn’t understand money as an allocated budget measured in dollars and cents. Instead, money exists in a far more abstract sense, taking it beyond any form of traditional reckoning. The IC uses unlimited amounts of unaccounted-for means of payment to conduct operations designed precisely to optimize the national and global environment in ways that will boost the production of unaccounted for streams of profit.

    The profit will ultimately accrue to the commercial beneficiaries of the system. These are the famous “American interests,” though they are never specifically named. The system functions as a community structure but with no dimension of personal kinship. In its opaqueness and focus on money, it resembles the mafia, but devoid of the cumbersome sense of honor that can sometimes get in the way of straight business.

    The IC has traditionally steered clear of electoral politics. Because the US is technically a democracy, the IC must play the role of the influencer rather than a manipulator. The task of manipulation has been confined to the media, essentially privately-owned tentacular structures whose role is to orient and stabilize an ideology and worldview shared by the population. Influenced by the brain, the media define what is normal (good and reassuring), what is tolerable (not so good but non-threatening) and what is extreme (to be banished or shamed). Such a system is designed to ensure the stability that will permit the perpetuation of profits for the entire corporate class, of which the media is a part.

    In normal times, the IC prefers to remain invisible. But Trump’s election victory in 2016 forced the Democratic Party and its sympathizers in the media to bring it into the spotlight. Together, they provided the American public with four years of Russiagate entertainment. They also revealed how close the ties are between the Democratic Party and the brain of the oligarchic system.

    Historical Note

    In a Foreign Affairs article published on August 5 bearing the title, “There Is No Russian Plot Against America” and the subtitle, “The Kremlin’s Electoral Interference Is All Madness and No Method,” seasoned analyst Anna Arutunyan examines the history of Russia’s purported interference in the 2016 US presidential election. In contrast with Christopher Bort, who, among other things, claimed to know that Russia did not have “a genuine preference for Sanders,” the author warns that “ascribing motive and intent is a tricky business, because perceived impact is often mistaken for true intent.”

    Arutunyan notes that the intelligence community has unearthed plenty of evidence of “activities of Russian actors with ties to the Kremlin during the 2016 election.” But the IC possesses “comparatively little information about the real impact of these measures on the election’s outcome—and still less about Moscow’s precise objectives.” In other words, the brain is doing only half its job. It fails to see the connection between what it sees as causes and the reality of the effects produced.

    The author concludes that the campaign to subvert the 2016 election was essentially “a series of uncoordinated and often opportunistic responses to a paranoid belief that Russia is under attack from the United States and must do everything it can to defend itself.”

    Concerning the motives, Arutunyan describes a chaotic environment encouraging the “activities of this or that activist, or special forces group, or businessmen and entrepreneurs—these people are always active in fields like this. It’s what they do.” And what do they want? “They are trying to earn money or political capital that way,” she writes. 

    As for the 2020 election, she speculates: “If there is another Russian operation, expect contrarian messages targeting both candidates’ campaigns and highlighting generally divisive issues such as the United States’ response to the coronavirus pandemic. The messaging will not be coherent, and it will have no further purpose than to provoke arguments.”

    Could this be Vladimir Putin’s ultimate stroke of genius? The Russian president understands how to exploit, with the least amount of effort, the fact that Americans love nothing more than to argue, insult, cancel, shame and, by any other means possible, put in their place fellow Americans who don’t agree with them. It requires far less effort than dialogue or debate. Addressing the issues implies listening, revising one’s judgments, seeking nuanced understanding of complexity, and finally agreeing on collaborative actions adapted to the nature of the challenge.

    If the 2020 election continues to focus on nothing more than the increasingly visible inadequacies of the two candidates — Donald Trump and Joe Biden — their failure to understand the historical context in which they are living and their lack of vision for the future, Putin’s strategy will have paid off. 

    The big question facing electors today seems to be: Which of the two men is the most cognitively impaired? Which has the worst history of corruption? Neither appears to want to focus on the concrete measures required to address the issues that Americans are struggling with today, whether it’s race, the economy or health care. 

    On the other hand, there will be plenty of room for arguments. But the satisfaction of a good dispute may not appease those about to be evicted or deprived both of the prospect of finding a job and, in the midst of a pandemic, the guarantee of health care that would accompany it.

    *[In the age of Oscar Wilde and Mark Twain, another American wit, the journalist Ambrose Bierce, produced a series of satirical definitions of commonly used terms, throwing light on their hidden meanings in real discourse. Bierce eventually collected and published them as a book, The Devil’s Dictionary, in 1911. We have shamelessly appropriated his title in the interest of continuing his wholesome pedagogical effort to enlighten generations of readers of the news. Read more of The Daily Devil’s Dictionary on Fair Observer.]

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy. More