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CSotD: Here’s the News Across the Nation

Might as well lead off with the one in dubious taste. Jones doesn’t mind pushing things and I agree with his premise that only crooks wear masks. He’s not the first person to point out that all sorts of law officers manage to get through their workday without hiding their identities and there’s no reason ICE agents should be in any greater danger.

Well, except if they behave unprofessionally. Bad cops used to put tape over their badge numbers so they could beat people up and act like bullies without getting reported for it. Funny thing is that the same people who support random stops and searches and who say “If you have nothing to hide …” now argue that ICE thugs should be anonymous.

Tying it into the Nancy Guthrie search is edgy, but what’s also edgy is suggesting that if she weren’t semi-famous, her abduction wouldn’t be getting the wall-to-wall coverage it has been. I hope they find her and that she’s okay, but I hope they find all the missing women, even the obscure, unknown ones.

But what I really wish is that we could preserve the spirit of Norman Rockwell’s original illustration, in which a friendly cop is befriending a runaway kid at the local diner before taking him home.

When I was a kid, one of our two State Troopers was married to my second-grade teacher’s daughter, who was a dental hygienist at our school, and the other one went on to become a somewhat legendary trainer at their division’s headquarters. Sheriff Andy Taylor was more realistic than you might think, if you didn’t grow up with community policing as a given.

And not everyone has. I was walking through a desperately poor neighborhood in Chicago one summer when I came on a dogcatcher loading a dog into his van while two or three little Black kids stood on the crumbling sidewalk crying. Their mother said, “Don’t cry. He’s just going to jail for a few days.”

Nobody should have that as their normal.

When Dick Gregory ran for president in ’68, he released a book explaining his proposals. It included this:

Instead, we’re working to find ways to undo all the efforts of voter registration and passage of laws protecting the franchise. Those kids would be 60 or so now, and I’ll bet they don’t have passports. They may not have birth certificates, but if they were girls who changed their names when they got married, that won’t help a whole lot under the Republican plan.

Sorensen states the women’s case in this transparent farce. I’m more concerned with people who live in rural America, far from any place that might have their birth certificate on file, assuming they weren’t born at home, which was the case for some of my classmates. Not everyone belongs to a country club, not everyone goes to Italy for vacations, not everybody has a birth certificate.

And if you don’t have a car, you’re not going 40 miles to retrieve your birth certificate because there are no buses running from town to town out in the sticks.

Meanwhile, as noted before, a passport is just a poll tax priced at over a hundred bucks. Don’t pretend otherwise.

And don’t play that game where you pretend the SAVE Act is about showing ID when you vote. The Senate version requires proof of citizenship not just to register but whenever you go to the polls.

Though I’ve got to say, suggesting that Democrats want to reduce the inclusion of eligible voters is a heretofore unheard argument.

More than half the states already require ID at the polls. That still requires people to get something like a driver’s license, and not every town has a DMV, but purposefully melding that barrier with the much higher barriers of the SAVE act is dishonest and, alas, unsurprising.

Dear Leader wants to nationalize the elections, which is (A) fascistic and (B) clearly unconstitutional. He’d like our elections to be like the ones in Russia and Iran, where the ballot count is confirmed before the votes are cast, or like his new pals in Venezuela, whose government announces the results it wants, however the people voted.

However, he’d need an amendment to take voting away from the states, unless Mitch McConnell’s SCOTUS appointees decide that the Constitution doesn’t mean what the words say.

One issue is that the Founders assumed a literate electorate. Jefferson famously said he’d prefer newspapers without government to government without newspapers, but he followed that with “But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them.” And then he founded the University of Virginia.

And it should be noted that the Constitution (which, BTW, Jefferson had little to do with) never limited the vote to white land-owning men. The limitations on voting were put in by individual states, which is why we needed amendments to forbid them to keep African-Americans and women away from the polls.

And we’d need one to force them to demand proof of citizenship, which would be our second amendment restricting, rather than expanding, freedom. The first was Prohibition. How’d that one work out?

The states, meanwhile, have the option of installing rightwing social clubs in schools, and that movement is not just in Nebraska. But Fell is right in suggesting that high school kids aren’t necessarily looking to have Mrs. Charlie Kirk tell them what to think. In fact, I’d wager that most high schools contain more Bad Bunny fans than Kid Rock fans.

Just setting up a Turning Point USA club won’t do more than reinforce the divisions that are already obvious to them, if not to you. Then somebody’s gonna want to start a MoveOn.org group with equal access and support. What are you going to tell them?

Maybe skip trying to convert them to partisan politics and focus on teaching them to read, write and cipher.

If nothing else, teach them the difference between “may have” and “might have,” so they don’t spark rumors of babies who rose from the dead but can’t be found.

And otherwise let them march to the beat of their own drums.

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 16

  1. I’ve been using my US passport to the polling place as a way of protesting the GOP campaign of voter disenfranchisement. It’s been one of their acceptable forms of voter ID, but it flummoxes some poll workers, and does absolutely nothing to prove that I live in the polling district.

    Well, that protest may (might?) soon be mooted. Next time I see my Republican Rep at a town hall, I’m going to demand that he produce his passport then and there; and if he can’t, I’ll question whether he’s even eligible to serve in Congress.

  2. “But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them.” – Thomas Jefferson

    “We are in danger of producing an educated proletariat.” Roger A Freeman, advisor to Ronald Reagan, y”s.

    It’s no accident that the dismantling of affordable higher education and the demonization of public schools began under Reagan, and it is to this that we can attribute a demographic that pollsters call “low information voters.”

    1. What did the GI Bill and increased enrollment at universities yield? Educated folks who decided that civil rights, voting rights, equal rights, clean air, clean water, safe food, safe products etc. were good things. And maybe not blindly supporting whatever war adventures the country called for was a good thing too. Some politicians figured out that educated citizens are a bother.

  3. The SAVE Act requires states to turn over their voter rolls to the federal government, which is what’s going to prevent its passage in the senate.

    I recently attempted to read the Copyright Act of 1976. I thought I understood English, and how sentences are constructed before trying to plow my way through it to try to figure out the logic of why they made the thing retroactive to 1964, which I’ve no problem with, but none of the search engines’ A.I. bots chose to figure it out for me, so I wanted to try to find out how by seeing how they phrased it, exactly. I spent about ninety minutes on it before giving up; even searching for that particular year was fruitless. I suddenly felt great sympathy for congressmen and senators who are asked to read the actual laws before voting on them; by the time the bills make it to them, many hands have successfully obfuscated the basic bones of it till you truly do require a staff of four to six people to decode and explain them to you.

    1. A former boss of mine, a librarian lobbyist who knew more about copyright than most of Congress* and the Register of Copyrights, referred to the 1976 legislation as the Lawyers’ Full Employment Act.

      *This was back in the days when members of Congress actually knew a lot about the matters facing the committees they were on.

  4. As a resident of Wisconsin, I apologize for the existence of Ron Johnson.
    I have met every Senator from WI who served during my lifetime with one exception.
    I have a hard time believing Joe McCarthy could be worse than Johnson.
    At least Tailgunner Joe could blame his stupidity and bigotry on his alcoholism.
    The behavior of Johnson and Moreno towards Minnesota’s Attorney General this week was an embarrassment to the Nation.

    1. And we in Ohio ought to apologize for Moreno. And JD Vance. And Husted who took big bucks from Epstein pal Wexler.

  5. Growing up in rural Missouri, our version of the Turning Point clubs was the John Birch Society, which regularly sent speakers to our schools, distributed their books, pamphlets, and other paraphernalia (“Get US out of the UN” bumper stickers were wildly popular), etc. It made me pretty cynical at a young age, and I suspect (hope!) TPUSA will have the same effect on a lot of kids today.

  6. The one thing I don’t get about MAGA pushing the SAVE Act is that it would disenfranchise more of their own voters than the opposition’s. Right wingers are less likely to have passports (NBC says 57% of self-described liberals hold passports, while 48% of conservatives do) and conservative women are more likely to take their husband’s names when they marry.

    I don’t think SAVE has a chance of surviving a Senate filibuster, but there’s a small part of me that would enjoy hearing the wails from the heartland if it passed and suddenly millions of MAGAs were turned away from the polls. It could be the best thing that ever happened to liberalism.

    1. Oh, and Mike–thanks for the “Laugh In” earworm this morning. I understood that reference.

      1. I’ve wondered that about the SAVE act too, in between getting that earworm out of my mind. I didn’t have a passport until I was around 50, mostly because I couldn’t afford to go anywhere other than Canada. Then when I needed a passport for Canada I got one. It’s moderately easy to get a copy of a birth certificate from the state where I was born, but other states? I don’t know.

        Before the 2024 election, Republican governor Larry Hogan said that Maryland had the second most secure elections in the country. I’ve been registered to vote here since 1987. I can’t remember what I needed to register way back in the olden days, but I’ve never been asked for ID since.

  7. It is deeply disturbing the sheer number of conservatives who wish to get rid of schools and replace them with brainwashing facilities.

    Sure, it would be nice if The Powers That Be focused more on education than propaganda, but then that isn’t very helpful to TPTB’s agenda now is it?

  8. Gosh, all the local Republicans have sent mailers allowing us to get mail-in ballots. I don’t think they got the memo.

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