A free look at Our Land by David Corn. [Mother Jones]( MoJo Reader, With summer (alas) winding down, Congress heading back to DC, the midterm elections approaching, and assorted investigations of Trump's skullduggery intensifying, I'd like to invite you to [sign up for my personal newsletter, Our Land, so that together we can make sense of it all](. I could go on about why I suspect you'll enjoy my exclusive newsletter. For each issue, I strive to concoct a compelling brew of information you won't find elsewhere, no-holds-barred analysis, stories behind the headlines, and reports on various cultural developments. But for this sales pitch, I'll let Our Land itself and some of its readers make the case. Pasted below is an issue that went out a week ago in which I wrote about the value of preaching to the choir; provided a sneak peek of my new book, [American Psychosis]( (due out on September 13), highlighted [a recent scoop of mine about a deplorable podcaster's interview]( with a US Senate candidate; awarded the Dumbass Comment of the Week; pondered the finales of several much-discussed television series; answered questions readers sent in for the Mailbag; and featured the ever-popular MoxieCamâ¢. This shows the type of writing that Our Land readers receive twice weekly (most of the time). I thinkâI hopeâyou'll enjoy it and want to be part of our community of subscribers. So please check it out below and [sign up today](. You'll join a collection of readers that includes Sirius XM host Julie Mason, who calls Our Land a "fantastic newsletter of precisely the right length full of interesting reporting, great writing and a few things you weren't expecting. It's like opening a box of surprisesâsmart, funny and very unique!" Norm Ornstein, emeritus scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and contributing editor for the Atlantic, raves, "David Corn has an absolutely terrific newsletter, which has become for me a must-read." And Daily Beast columnist Wajahat Ali says, "Check out David Corn's excellent Our Land newsletter and subscribe. Always tasty stuff and sometimesâ¦a Star Wars reference." My one-of-a-kind newsletter is also a big experiment for Mother Jones. After [a free 30-day trial](, we ask readers to pitch in $5/month to keep receiving the exclusive writing and insider access that you'll only find in Our Land. This helps make our work possible and allows our Mother Jones reporting to be free for everyone. It's damn hard running a newsroom these days, and I'm glad that Our Land can help us keep the lights on around here. Plus, paid subscribers have the opportunity to share their own thoughts and engage with me and other newsletter readers in entertaining and feisty exchanges. [Please give my newsletter a chance and start your free trial today](. I hope you'll agree with Peter Sagal, the perceptive host of NPR's Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me and an early subscriber, who says of Our Land: "We all have way too much to readâ¦but I am enjoyingâand learning things I did not know!" This project has been informative and fun for readers and for yours truly. [So give Our Land a shot and sign up for your free trial]( to get more exclusive content from me like the issue below. Thanks for readingâthere will be plenty more to come if you sign up today! âDavid Corn [Our Land] A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN [Our Land] A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN In Praise of Preaching to the Choir By David Corn September 2, 2022 [A church choir in Germany. AP/Peter Zschunke] A church choir in Germany. AP/Peter Zschunke I was on the road the past few weeks, and often people approached me with questions about the news and politics. One of the topics most raised (other than the FBI raid!) was the January 6 committee, and a frequent query was whether this House panel, even though it was doing a bang-up job of publicly chronicling the insurrectionist riot that Donald Trump triggered, was merely preaching to the choir. Preaching to the choir. That metaphor, usually deployed in a negative manner, has long intrigued me. As a journalist affiliated with progressive outlets and a commentator on MSNBC, Iâve been accused of committing this act. But in a church, preaching to the choir is a damn important job. A choir is an essential component of many churches. It brings the parishioners into the pews and helps to keep them there. It serves the spirit of the movement. A choir needs to be strong and well-tuned. Consequently, preaching to this group and bolstering this portion of the flock is a task of great purpose. The same is true in politics. Ensuring your own supporters are well-informed is a top priority. Yes, they may already be on your side. But the more they feel empoweredâarmed with information and understandingâthe more effective they will be as foot-soldiers in the cause. They will do a better job of inspiring and mobilizing their fellow citizens. Preaching to the choirâin politics or in religion (and sometimes it is both)âcan be reaffirming for those on the listening end. So if the January 6 committee is only providing citizens already concerned about Trumpâs assault on American democracy a deeper, clearer, and more comprehensive picture of what happened that day and during the entirety of Trump and his crewâs attempt to overturn a free and fair election, that would be a triumph. [Dayenu](, as the Jews sing during Passover. These people are now better able to consider the crisis at hand, discuss the matter, and perhaps do battle to protect the republic. If the committeeâs preaching happens to reach others and prompt them to think more about what Trump and his minions tried to pull off, thatâs even better. We shouldnât expect it to persuade the deplorables and Trump-cult zombies, but reinforcing those Americans who already comprehend the danger at hand is a noble and critical mission. This week, pundits pointed to a new NBC News [poll]( to suggest the January 6 committeeâs work might indeed be influencing the electorate. When asked to rank the most important issue facing the nation, a whopping 21 percent of voters cited threats to democracy. This was the number-one choice; the cost of living (16 percent) and jobs/the economy (14 percent) placed second and third. Did this mean the democracy crisis spurred by Trump has become the top concern of American voters? Not exactly. I asked a friend at NBC News for the partisan split on this question. Hereâs that data. For Democrats, the order was threats to democracy (29 percent), abortion (14 percent), climate change (14 percent), gun violence (13 percent), cost of living (12 percent), jobs/the economy (6 percent). For Republicans, immigration (26 percent), jobs/the economy (21 percent), threats to democracy (17 percent), cost of living (16 percent), crime (8 percent). Clearly, if you combine cost of living and jobs/the economy, you get a plurality that surpasses threats to democracy. And the standing of threats to democracy in the overall list of concerns is also boosted by Republicans who presumably believe that the 2020 election was stolen and that this did-not-happen theft represents a threat to the political order of the country. A fifth of the country does not consider Trumpâs war on democracy the most pressing challenge for the country. But the fact that the democracy crisis topped the D list is likely a result of the hearings conducted by the January 6 committeeâand its efforts appear to be moving the choir and the rest of the Democratic congregation. As has the recent Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade. In many states, more women than men have recently registered to vote. And in the much-watched special election this week in New Yorkâs bellwether 19th congressional district, Democrat Pat Ryan, who cast the race as a referendum on reproductive rights, vanquished the favored Republican candidate. Ryanâs upset victory sparked a great deal of yapping about the possibility of a shift in the nationâs political mood that might forestall the much-predicted GOP takeover of the House. As veteran political journalist Ron Brownstein (who decades ago hired me for my first job in Washington!) [reported](, Ryanâs win reinforced the belief of Democratic strategists that a combo of issuesâabortion, gun violence, and threats to democracy (the J6 attack, the Republican Partyâs steady nomination of election deniers in races across the country, and Trumpâs apparent theft of classified documents)âhas stirred the Democratic base and improved the partyâs prospects for the midterms. That is, itâs not one thing; itâs everything. And President Joe Bidenâs recent accomplishmentsâthe Inflation Reduction Act, canceling some student debtâcertainly help. During the 2004 presidential election, George W. Bushâs campaign calculated that âpersuadablesââvoters who could cast their ballots for either the Democrat or the Republicanâhad declined from about one-fifth of the electorate 20 years earlier to about 6 percent. With this information in hand, Bushâs strategists focused mostly on driving their base to the polls. They preached to the choir, deploying state initiatives to ban gay marriage. Itâs a good bet that in our increasingly divided nation, there are fewer persuadables these days. All the more reason for each side to rally its adherents with clear messages. The January 6 committeeâwith ranking Republican member Liz Cheneyâhas been doing that for Democrats, and it promises to do more with additional hearings in the coming weeks. Recent events suggest the Democratic choir is paying attention and singing stronger. Thatâs not a bad way to spread the word. Got anything to say about this itemâor anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com. American Psychosis Tease of the Week and Special Offer Thanks to a PR push for Our Land, the newsletter has a bunch of new trial subscribers (who I hope will become premium subscribers by clicking [here](). So allow me to note once more that on September 13, Twelve, a Hachette imprint, will publish my new book, [American Psychosis: A Historical Investigation of How the Republican Party Went Crazy](. The book chronicles the long relationship between the GOP and far-right fanaticism. For over seven decades, the party has exploited and encouraged extremism. It didnât start with Trump. In a way, January 6 was not an aberration; it was a continuation of the longstanding Republican practice of revving up right-wing radicals. As Iâve noted in previous issues, thereâs no other history of the Republican Partyâs embrace of fanaticism, bigotry, and paranoiaâfrom McCarthyism to Bircherism to the Southern strategy to the New Right and the religious right to Limbaughism (as in Rush) to Gingrichism (as in Newt) to Palinism (as in Sarah) to the Tea Party to Trumpism. Itâs an ugly tale that the GOP has refused to acknowledge and that the mainstream media has never thoroughly covered. As a desperate authorâwhat author isnât desperate?âIâve also [pointed out]( the tremendous significance of preorders these days. The more prepublication purchases, the more booksellers (Amazon, the remaining bookstore chains, and independent book shops) promote the book. So readers can be influencers by ordering American Psychosis right now. It truly helps. And to make doing so easier, Our Land is offering its readers a special deal: You can purchase a signed edition of American Psychosis now for 35 percent off. Just click [here](. Please help me spread this important story of the GOPâs dark side by preordering and telling your friends and foes about American Psychosis. On to this weekâs sneak peek: Would you support someone who claimed you were literally part of a Satanic plot to destroy the world? The GOP has done that. In early 1990, Pat Robertson, a nutty but wealthy televangelist who had unsuccessfully run for the Republican Partyâs presidential nomination, formed the Christian Coalition, and the outfit fast became a political powerhouse, fielding and backing far-right and socially conservative candidates across the land. The GOP quickly embraced the organization, with top Republicans, including presidential wannabes, flocking to its annual convention. The first of these shindigs, held in November 1991, drew Vice President Dan Quayle, Sen. Jesse Helms, and several House Republicans. At this confab, Robertson shared his bizarre and conspiratorial world view, claiming the âacademic elites, the money elites, and the government elitesâ were trying to âdestroyâ American society and impose a one-world governmentâand they were in league with Lucifer to do so. Weeks earlier, Robertson had published a book asserting that this evil, anti-Christian, Satanic plot was being aided and abetted by none other than President George H.W. Bush. This book, titled The New World Order, was a pile of paranoia that compiled the various conspiracy theories of the ages and claimed secret societies, occultists, communists, and elites had for centuries conspired to lock the world into a godless, collectivist dictatorship. The Federal Reserve, the J.P. Morgan bank, the Rockefellers, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Ford Foundation, the United Nations, Henry Kissinger, the Trilateral Commissionâthey were all in on it. So, too, were âEuropean bankersâ and the Rothschild family (long a target of the antisemitic conspiracy theories Robertson echoed). Bush, Robertson revealed, had âunwittinglyâ carried out âthe missionâ and mouthed âthe phrases of a tightly knit cabal whose goal is nothing less than a new order for the human race under the domination of Lucifer and his follows.â That is, George Bush was a Satanic dupe. With this book, which sold hundreds of thousands of copies and became a bestseller, Robertson transmitted classic antisemitic garbage and the slop of conspiracism. The Wall Street Journal called the work a âcompendium of the lunatic fringeâs greatest hits.â Yet the GOP welcomed Robertson into its tent, validating this loon. A year later, Bush attended the second annual conference of Robertsonâs Christian Coalition and lauded Robertson for âall the work youâre doing to restore the spiritual foundation of this nation.â He then attended a private reception with major contributors to the coalition in the rose garden of Robertsonâs estate. Black swans swam in a pond, as Bush warmly greeted members of the televangelistâs inner circle. Presumably, Bushâs alliance with Satan was not mentioned. American Psychosis has all the details on how Bush and the GOP forged a partnership with this crazy, antisemitic, conspiratorial extremistâwhile claiming to seek a kinder, gentler nation. (For other American Psychosis teases, see the list of recent Our Land issues below, which is only available to trial and premium subscribers.) J.D. Vance and the Podcaster Who Said âFeminists Need Rapeâ Want a deep and scary dive into the dark and extremist far-right worldview of J.D. Vance, the Republican Senate candidate in Ohio? Read the [scoop]( I published this week. I reported on an interview Vance gave to a rightwing activist in which Vance proposed a âde-Nazificationâ plan to purge liberals from the government and other societal institutions. To achieve this purge, Vance said, the right has "to get pretty far out there and go in directions that a lot of conservatives right now are uncomfortable with." He called on Trump, should he be elected in 2024, to fire "every civil servant"âwhich the president does not have the power to doâand to defy the law to implement this cleansing. Vance also suggested seizing the endowments of Harvard University and other elite colleges "for being on the wrong side of some of these cultural war issues." He claimed the Chinese are waging a sinister plot to inject woke-ism into American businesses. Itâs frightening stuff. Check it out [here](. Dumbass Comment of the Week There have been plenty of obvious contenders since the last issue, particularly comments from Republicans and conservatives who went bananas over Bidenâs cancellation of some college debt. (One example: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene [complained]( it was âcompletely unfairâ to have such debt forgiven. Her business had $180,000 in PPP loans forgiven.) But the early favorite was Herschel Walker, the GOPâs Senate candidate in Georgia. This Trump endorsee with an extensive record of idiotic statements, lies, and misconduct attacked the recently enacted climate change legislation with this argument: âThey continue to try to fool you that they are helping you out. But theyâre not. Because a lot of money itâs going to trees. Donât we have enough trees around here?â [Twitter]( Is it stunning or just S.O.P. for the Republicans to field such a stupid candidate? Ronald Reagan in 1981 did falsely claim, âTrees cause more pollution than automobiles do.â So Walker is preserving a grand GOP tradition. Tucker Carlson once again uttered an inane remark about the January 6 terrorist attack on the US Capitol. Referring to that horrific assault, he bleated, âWithin hours, they were telling us that an election justice protest, which is what it was, was an insurrection.â [Twitter]( Nothing unusual here for Foxâs [most popular fascist](. This was just another Carlson attempt to gaslight the public about the riot that Trump incited. Calls for the execution of Mike Pence, an attempt to stop the peaceful transfer of power, brutal assaults of law enforcement officers? It was merely âan election justice protest.â Disinformation is foul. Disinformation that justifies violence that threatens American democracy is evil. But this weekâs winner takes the prize by setting a record. We have never had a first-place finisher triumph with a one-word remark. On Saturday, Trump posted a [statement]( on social media that denigrated Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and his wife Elaine Chao, who had served as Trumpâs secretary of transportation and who resigned after January 6. He referred to Chao as âcrazy.â Three days later, McConnell was asked if he had any reaction to Trump insulting his wife. His reply: âNo.â [Twitter]( That mono-syllabic response tells us all we need to know about McConnell. The Watch, Read, and Listen List The Old Man, For All Mankind, and Westworld. Endings are tough. For books, movies, and songs. This is particularly true for the season finale of a television series that is not yet done. The producers need to wrap up enough of the dilemma(s) at hand to satisfy the viewer but also leave the audience wanting moreâthat is, establish a powerful story line for the next season. Questions must be answered; questions must be raised. Closure and continuation. You want both an exclamation point and an ellipsis. Ta-dum and to be continued. Thatâs a tough balance to strike: satiation and anticipation. Not every show gets it right. That was obvious to me, as I wrapped up the current season of three premier series. FXâs The Old Man was a promising venture. Jeff Bridges as Dan Chase, a onetime CIA operative, is in hiding, and John Lithgow as Harold Harper, his former agency colleague and now a top FBI official, is hunting Chase down, sort of. Itâs a delight to watch each of these two veteran thespians act up a storm against the other. (Was there no role for Jeff Daniels?) And Alia Shawkatâperhaps best known as Maeby Fünke on Arrested Developmentâkeeps up with them as Chaseâs daughter, who has a double identity. The set-up is smart: an Afghan warlord, for some reason, is after Chase and using the CIA to find him, and his pursuit of the ex-CIA man threatens to kick up bad memories and some very inconvenient dust for Harper and the agency. Along the way, Chase, on the run, hooks up with a divorced mom (Amy Brennerman), and sparks of crisp dialogue fly. Yet each episode ramps up the plotâs implausibilityâcould an Afghan warlord influence the CIA so easily?âand steers the series away from its le Carré-ish potential. The final episode tosses out a revelation about Chaseâs daughter that seems obvious upon its disclosure and concludes with Chase and Harperâtwo old menâat an airfield in Morocco, presumably planning a rescue operation that might not be necessary. It was underwhelming. The actors carry the show, imbuing the occasional leaden monologues with spy-guy sizzle. But all I could think as the season finalized was whether these long-in-the-tooth ops had enough frequent flyer miles to get back home. [[ratio] ]( This recent season of Westworld was a great improvement on the previous outing (Season 3), in which the sentient robots (known as hosts), who had once been automatons at the Westworld high-tech amusement park, battled an artificial intelligence force that seemed to control the destiny of most humans. It was a hard-to-follow narrative that nearly drove me to change the channel. But as if I had been programmed to watch the top HBO show of the momentâwhatever it isâI stuck with the series. This latest season returns to basics: humanity versus robot overlords. This is a golden plot line thatâs almost foolproof. Whoâs going to prevail? Unfortunately, this classic confrontation descends into preposterousness. In one climatic scene of the last episode, the two main villainsâeach a hostâhave a shoot-out at a high-tech facility, and this face-off between robots could determine the fate of both the human species and this new species of hosts. Yet this massive Hoover Dam-like placeâwhere a kind of virtual robot heaven is maintained in super-duper computersâis empty. Thereâs no security. Not a host, human, or guard to secure the command center or to keep the lights on. These two hosts prance about firing shots at each other. Too often Westworld has served up abstract notions that are hard to comprehend for hard-to-comprehendâs sake, in the [style of Tenet](. (Jonathan Nolan, one of the co-creators of the show, is the brother of Christopher Nolan, the director of Tenet.) But this showdown is plain absurd and a lousy way to resolve a fundamental issue (should humanity be saved?). More to the point, the final moments of the season are hard to sort out. It seems that Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood), the host who kicked off the robot revolution at the end of Season 1, now plans to set up a test to determine whether humans should be given one last chance before being condemned to the extinction that seems to be upon them. But didnât she sacrificeâor seem to sacrificeâher life to free humans from the chains of A.I. last season? A forced ambiguity appears at hand because HBO has not yet decided whether to renew the show. Consequently, Nolan and co-creator Lisa Joy had to bring this season to a close not knowing whether there was more story to tell. This episode had to function as a possible thatâs-all-folks ending and render at least a partial verdict on who should inherit the Earthâhosts or humansâ¦or no oneâeven though there might be more to come. Iâm not sure artificial intelligence could crack this code. [[ratio] ]( As [I noted a year ago](, I have seldom experienced as satisfying an hour of television as the Season 2 closer of For All Mankind, the alternative-history drama on Apple TV+. The show started with a brilliant premise: the Soviets land a man on the moon in 1969 ahead of the Americans. A Cold War moon race ensues, and assorted elements of American society are changed, including who inhabits the White House. By the end of Season 2, the Yanks and the commies each have a lunar base, and Cuban Missile Crisis-like tensions threaten to destroy space exploration and maybe much more. Season 3 takes usâAmericans, Russians, and possibly othersâto Mars in the 1990s. There is plenty of derring-do and smarty-pants engineering that goes into this very large step for humankind. Unfortunately, the soap opera elements this season are too sudsy and overwhelm the clever alt-history running in the background. Still, the ride remains thrilling, as one life-threatening challenge after another is overcome by human ingenuity. (Yay, us!) This seasonâs final episodes deliver major shocksâIs that a footprint of unknown origin on the Red Planet? Can an astronaut really ride on the outside of a spaceship during blast-off?âand thereâs a wonderfully delightful tease about the season to come. The showâs producers, like a sharp NASA engineer, know how to make good use of a launch window. [[ratio] ]( The Mailbag With our new influx of subscribers, let me remind everyone of the few rules of The Mailbag. Please include your name and keep comments as compact as you can. To-the-point emails have a much better chance of being published. I know Our Land readers can be passionate. Please, though, refrain from excessively crude language. Itâs not a deal-killer, but it can distract. Spelling counts. Be mindful of punctuation and syntax. And [no double-spacing]( after sentences. Thatâs an anachronistic practice that has long been thrown to the curb by grammarians and just about everyone else. (Need to be convinced? Read this: [âNothing Says Over 40 Like Two Spaces After a Period!](â) With interest growing in the coming midterm elections, there was much response to the latest issue featuring my [examination of Joe Bidenâs recent messaging efforts](. Craig Berrington called the article: The very best analysis of where things stand today and what is critically necessary from Bidenâa Trumanesque assault on the Republicansâfrom now through the election. I flinched at your retelling of the disastrous 2010 midterms, when the Tea Party clobbered Obama and Biden, cratering the Democratic Congress. It also brought back terrible memories of how [Harry and Louise]( clobbered the Democrats in 1994. The big problem today is that the Republicans have found their Harry and Louise theme for a Tea Party-style attack for this yearâs midterms. Itâs the IRS staffing increase in the Inflation Reduction Act. This single provision will allow every Republican to say, âOf course I supported this or thatâ in the IRA, but I would never vote for making the IRS into Americaâs Gestapo.â We may think that is worse than nuts. But thatâs what I thought about critical race theory, too. If the Ds donât figure out that they need Rapid Response, repeated over and over, that takes down this stuff, they will lose the narrow leads they have now. The Republicans are certainly good at ginning up phony crises and issues, and we can see them now zeroing in on the increase in IRS agents, a necessary move to deal with a gigantic backlog of cases and to pursue the many tax cheats who steal from the rest of us. Biden and the Democrats do need to repeat ad infinitum that the IRSâs targets are these cheats, particularly the well-off scofflaws. That wonât stop the Rs from this demagoguery, but it could lessen the impact. Will Stanton wrote: I really don't understand why any voter concerned about inflation (all of us), or climate change, or saving democracy, etc. would blame the Democrats who are trying to govern instead of the united Republican obstruction. I am not aware of any Republican solution to inflation or any other problem. The Republicans have made it clear that if they take the House, they will not do one thing to help regular people. Yet the mainstream media constantly states that Democrats will lose the House. I am so tired of Democrats being blamed for Republicans obstruction. Is the problem really "messaging" rather than the power of hate and fear which the Republicans harness so well? Both. The Democrats cannot on their own neutralize the politics of hate and fear. But more effective messaging can motivate some voters to be more favorable toward them and perhaps on the margins counter Republican attempts to exploit resentments and grievances. Anthony Barbieri had this to say: I enjoyed my first receipt of Our Land. I could not agree more about the Democrats messaging. If Democrats want to win in November their mantra to Americans should be, âYour children are being slaughtered in school and a woman is not equal any longer because of the Republicans.â They all should all be saying it every time they get in front of a camera. Hell, the Republicans still always start off with "the election was stolen" Jack Altschuler wrote: Iâve been excoriating Ds for their terrible messaging for a long time, but your current Our Land is center of the bullâs eye. Iâd like to link to your post. Are you willing to allow that kind of access? What link should I use? Thanks, Jack. As Iâve said previously, the newsletter exists as a newsletter and not as a website post. Our goal is to encourage subscriptions. Consequently, its contents are not published on an easy-to-access website. This is the business model of many newsletters these days. The issues can be shared, if you forward the newsletter via email, or you can cut and paste its content into your own social media posts. By the way, if you forward any issues, please tell recipients they can sign up at [www.davidcorn.com](. Holly Hertel emailed Thank you for a hint of Pride and Prejudice in your beginning, and, as always, your superb writing: engaging word choice and great information. I'm looking forward to my copy of your new book! I confess: There was no intentional reference to P&P. I must have accidentally dropped a beat from the Jane Austen novel. What was it? Dell Erwin had a complaint: Great article but I wish your paragraphs were not so long. Much easier to read if you keep them short. Okay. I will. Keep that in mind. MoxieCam⢠âYou know that Tom Petty song when he sings, âWhen dogs get wingsâ?â âYes, Moxie, âItâs Good To Be King.ââ
âWell, watch this!â Read Recent Issues of Our Land [August 19, 2022](: Has Biden learned from Obamaâs big #fail?; American Psychosis tease of the week; conflicted feelings about Liz Cheney; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Ted Cruz); Better Call Saulâs magnificent finale; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [August 5, 2022](: The January 6 Rudy Giuliani mystery; American Psychosis tease of the week; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Alex Jones); the Mailbag; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [July 29, 2002](: We need to worry about Christian nationalism; American Psychosis tease of the week; Stranger Things jumps a ghoulish shark; Steve Earle honors his forebears; Joni Mitchellâs glorious return; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [July 23, 2022](: Trumpâs trap for the GOP; American Psychosis update and tease; Dumbass Comment of the Week (John Cornyn); the Mailbag; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [July 19, 2022](: Announcing the forthcoming release of American Psychosis; Breitbart gets something right; The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent and The Player (three decades later!); Simon Winchesterâs The Map That Changed the World: William Smith and the Birth of Modern Geology; and more. [July 16, 2022](: Does Steve Bannon buy his own BS?; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Catherine Glenn Foster, Lauren Boebert, and Dave Yost); the Mailbag; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [July 12, 2022](: Itâs about sex; Iran-contra flashback: the day reality died; a dangerous state Supreme Court decision; and more. [July 9, 2022](: Why did the Atlantic enable Mitt Romneyâs dangerous both-sidesism?; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Marjorie Taylor Greene, again); the Mailbag; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. [July 2, 2022](: Mark Meadows: one helluva liar; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Ali Alexander); the Mailbag; MoxieCamâ¢; and more. Got suggestions, comments, complaints, tips related to any of the above, or anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com. [Mother Jones]( [Donate]( [Subscribe]( This message was sent to {EMAIL}. To change the messages you receive from us, you can [edit your email preferences]( or [unsubscribe from all mailings.]( For advertising opportunities see our online [media kit.]( Were you forwarded this email? [Sign up for Mother Jones' newsletters today.]( [www.MotherJones.com](
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