Contrasting his essay with a piece that published yesterday. [Mother Jones]( MoJo Reader, I wanted to send a quick follow up note to David Corn's email from over the weekend, because it really illustrates a few things that are core to Mother Jones, and why it's so important that we raise the $325,000 in [donations from online readers]( we need right now. First, I'll admit, David's "hair-on-fire" essay made me a little uncomfortableâit's so damn fiery, and that's not something us journalists are used to embracing. But it's the reality we face, the rise of authoritarianism and election-denialism requires us to do to things differently, and like I often say when talking about why being [supported by a community of readers]( matters so much to us, there's no one holding our team back for fear of offending someone. Not even me as CEO. And there's [no question]( journalism that sounds the alarm bells, like David does, is needed right now, along with the reporting that lays the foundation. Like Abby Vesoulis' look, from yesterday, at [what a little-noticed 122-page strategy memo]( says about what a Republican congress will do. So I hope you'll contrast David's big-picture analysis, pasted below, with Abby's [matter-of-fact reporting]( about what's on the line, and that you'll [support our team's journalism]( that calls it like it is without fear or false equivalence if you can right now. We're about a third of the way through our fall fundraising drive and we really need to pick up the pace this week so we can raise the money it takes to keep our independent journalism charging hard. [Please pitch in if you can: whether $5 or $50, it all matters and makes a difference](. âMonika [Donate]( MoJo Reader, A political party led by a man who incites and excuses political violence, who threatens democracy, and who advances the loony conspiracy theory that his political opponents are baby-eating, Satanic sex-traffickers is close to seizing control of a portion of the US government, andâ¦this is not regarded as a national crisis. Itâs a month out to the congressional midterm elections, and the Republican Party remains the odds-on favorite of winning a majority within the House of Representatives, and it retains a good shot at bagging the Senate. Pundits on television calmly assess the 2022 elections, noting the historical patternâthe party in control of the White House tends to take a shellackingâand many within the political media world, including Democrats, act as if weâre in a normal cycle. Yet the nation is poised on a precipice that warrants apprehension, if not hair-on-fire screaming. Itâs a break-glass momentâthough itâs not. Are we sleepwalking? For years, Donald Trump has displayed an authoritarian impulse that threatens the republic. He refused to accept the 2020 election results, promoted baseless allegations of a stolen election, and encouraged violence to prevent the peaceful transfer of power. And since January 6, the Republican Partyâits officials and, more important, its baseâhas accepted or ignored Trumpâs reality-defying assertions and cheered on his assaults on the constitutional foundations of the country. In recent weeks, Trumpâs crazy has become crazier. As I [wrote]( last month, he fully embraced the bonkers QAnon conspiracy theory, transforming the MAGA movement into QMaga and leading millions to believe that Democrats are cannibalistic pedophiles who worship Lucifer. Literally. With this move, Trump is demonizing and dehumanizing a third or so of Americans and exacerbating the nationâs political polarization. (How can Republicans be expected to engage in policy debatesâlet alone to compromiseâwith miscreants who feast on dead infants?) And as he is delegitimizing his political foes, Trump has essentially endorsed the use of violence in politics. Five weeks ago he [vowed]( that if he returns to the White House he will pardon the January 6 insurrectionists who assaulted law enforcement officials. Here was the Trump seal of approval for Brownshirt thuggery. After all, if your enemies are indeed Beelzebubâs shock troops, shouldnât you confront them with fists and weapons? As he continues to travel down the dark path of demagoguery and treacherous nuttinessâdays ago Trump posted a social media [message]( that appeared to invite violence against Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell and included a racist reference to McConnellâs wifeâTrump is hardly alone. This past weekend, speaking at a Trump rally, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) [proclaimed](, âDemocrats want Republicans dead, and theyâve already started the killing.â What message does this send? We better kill them before they kill us. (By the way, why is a past president and current party leader featuring a speaker who once [spoke]( at a white nationalist conference?) And at a different Trump rally, Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) let loose this [rant]( about Democrats: âTheyâre pro-crime. They want crime. They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have. They want reparations because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.â Wow, so much racism in so short a time. His noxious conspiracy theory: Democrats are encouraging Black people to commit crimes to âtake overâ what white people have so the whites can be controlledâand they want to pay back the criminals with reparations. This is the GOP that appears to be cruising toward a majority in the House: racists, conspiracy nutters, and democracy deniers who donât seem to mind the exercise of political violence. Is it time to press the panic button? Developments in the last few monthsâsuch as the Dobbs decision that has unleashed a GOP war on womenâs freedom and assorted blunders committed by Republican knuckleheads running for officeâappeared to slow the expected GOP juggernaut. Still, the Rs are leading in the polls. And it doesnât matter much whether the Republicans win the House by a mile or a yard. Any victory will yield a thousand Hunter Biden investigations, assorted impeachments (Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Merrick Garland, you-name-it), and probes of the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago, the Trump-Russia investigation, Benghazi, andâIâll take bets on thisâHillary Clintonâs emails. The House Republicans will mount a ceaseless revenge-athon for Dear Leader. You can also look forward to a debt-ceiling crisis and potential government shutdowns. Plus, a GOP takeover of the House will bolster the right-wing forces that baselessly charge the 2020 election was stolen from Trump and that are scheming to gain control of the voting and vote-counting systems to block future Democratic triumphs. A few weeks ago, Biden moved to call out the danger posed by Trump and the Republicans. He [labeled]( MAGAism âsemi-fascismâ and [asserted]( that âDonald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our Republic.â Since then, Biden and the Democrats have not sustained this outcry. Practically every day, Republicans are denouncing Democrats as evil, crime-lovinâ enemies of America who want to replace real Americans (that is, white folks) with immigrants, take everything they have, and kill them. The Dems are not as assiduous in championing the notion that the Party of Trump advances fear and paranoia, winks at (or encourages) violence, and aims to sabotage American democracy. Itâs not a fair fight. Why arenât more people scared of a GOP victory in November? Why arenât we more focused on the prospect of a demagogueâs minions gaining power and hate-mongers like Greene and Tuberville attaining greater influence? My hunch: Trump Outrage Exhaustion. After more than seven years of Trumpâs democracy-endangering conduct and his vile, racist, divisive, and deceptive comments, his latest transgressionsâbear-hugging QAnon, signaling he would set free the January 6 rioters, and his autocratic responses to the FBIâs Mar-a-Lago raidâcome across as more of the same-old/same-old. Sure, they are a worrisome escalation in his anti-democratic behavior and an intensification of the threat he and his GOP cult present. Yet for many, itâs just more Trump junk thrown on an already enormous pile of Trump junk. Have we become too inured to Trumpâs outrages to notice collectively when the threat level moves from Trumpcon Four to Trumpcon Two? Has his steady output of nonsense and crap overwhelmed us? I recall when I was a young man bumming through Europe, a woman who owned a small boarding house in Nice tried to convince me that after a few days I would no longer hear the trains that rattled past the bedroom window. And then there was the landlord in Washington, DC, who told me that I would eventually become unaware of the buses that rumbled by the apartment he was seeking to rent me. Years later came the realtor who said the same about the airliners landing at a nearby airport via a flight path that guided them directly over the house he wanted to sell me. Maybe that works for some people. They become accustomed to the noise and tune it out. I couldnât in Nice, and I couldnât in that apartment. By the time I reached that realtor, I had learned my lesson. Trumpâs never-ending noise does cover up the threat. But he and his Republican comrades are not hiding the extremism, authoritarianism, and ugliness that will descend upon Congress, should the GOP capture either chamber. Itâs all in damn plain sight. This feels like a horror movie when you can see the monster approaching but most everyone else is acting as if itâs business as usual. Biden took a decent, if delayed, shot at warning the electorate. But he and the Democrats needed to do more. A couple of days of messaging in the waning weeks of summer was insufficient. Is all lost now? Iâm not saying that. And perhaps a last-minute blast from the president and his party might succeed. But they have not made the most of the opportunity they had to accurately depict the GOP as the party of political violence, extremism, and conspiracy theory lunacy. A catastrophe looms, and the political-media world has not clearly sounded the alarm. *** That's where my original essay ended, and if you made it to this point, let me ask you what for me is an important question: Do you think that the no-nonsense, unwavering reporting and big-picture analysis that Mother Jones and I provide is desperately needed right now? You know how I would answer that. And let me tell you that my colleagues and I would be incredibly grateful if [you can help us produce the type of journalism that this moment of crisis requires and demands](. We're working our tails off every day to cover the mounting threats to democracy that I know worry and concern you. To do that, [we need money](. It's a hard truth. And it's simple: the more money we can raise, the more hell-raising reporters we can put on the beat. So while I'd rather be digging up stories than asking for money, I know we can only do this indispensable work with your help and your contributions. That's why I've taken the time to write you with this direct request: [Please make a donation today so we can raise the $325,000 we need from our online readers in the coming weeks and be ready for the hard work ahead](. Thanks for reading. Even if you can't pitch in today, please know that I'm glad you're with us and find our work valuable. And if you like the work I do, please do [sign up]( for a free trial subscription to my Our Land newsletter. [David Corn] David Corn Washington DC, Bureau Chief Mother Jones [Donate]( [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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