It Isn’t Just Mississippi and Wyoming

I found this piece in The Guardian by Dani Anguiano about the goings-on in Shasta Country, California distressing:

Retired police chief and self-described Reagan Republican with decades of public service, Leonard Moty checked all the boxes to represent his community in one of California’s most conservative counties.

But on Tuesday, voters ousted Moty, handing control of the Shasta county board of supervisors to a group aligned with local militia members. The election followed nearly two years of threats and increasing hostility toward the longtime supervisor and his moderate colleagues in response to pandemic health restrictions.

While it’s not yet clear who will replace Moty, the two candidates in the lead attended a celebration on Tuesday with members of an area militia group, the Sacramento Bee reported.

The recall is a win for the ultra-conservative movement in Shasta county, which has fought against moderate Republican officials and sought to gain a foothold in local government in this rural part of northern California.

It also highlights a phenomenon that extends far beyond the region, as experts warn the pandemic and eroding trust in US institutions has fueled extremism in local politics and hostility against officials that could reshape governments from school boards to county supervisors to Congress.

“I think it’s going to be a change in our politics. I think we’re going to shift more to the alt-right side of things,” Moty said on Wednesday. “I really thought my community would step up to the plate and they didn’t and that’s very discouraging.”

I think they identified some of the factors in the change but not all. The obvious hypocrisy and arrogance of state officials and constant negative advertising for political gain are undoubtedly contributing factors as well.

8 comments… add one
  • CuriousOnlooker Link

    Why distressing? From what I can tell; people are following the law and using established means of removing office holders they are dissatisfied with (voter recall).

    Given everything in the past couple of years — it wouldn’t shock me if people are dissatisfied and want a change, even if they normally agree with those office holders. Even Winston Churchill lost in 1945 after leading the country to victory — UK voters were very tired after 7 years of war and the preceding depression.

    Certainly, the news keeps reporting the mood on the street as “exhausted” right now.

    If the concern is on the new office holders — they soon will face the realities of governing. Either they govern with pragmatism (people sometimes call it “moderation”) or they stick to their ideology in spite of reality and disappoint voters — and face recall in their turn.

  • steve Link

    What could go wrong? Seriously, I think CO has it right. Need to wait and see.

    https://www.amazon.com/Libertarian-Walks-Into-Bear-Liberate-ebook/dp/B083J1FXY8

  • Jan Link

    Of late I have found little agreement with CO’s opinions. However, his/her take on Shasta County’s change in governance is not only sensible but spot on. Also, IMO, ultra extreme behavior and policy-making, on either the left or right, seems to become vulnerable eventually to voter fatigue.

  • Drew Link

    “Also, IMO, ultra extreme behavior and policy-making, on either the left or right, seems to become vulnerable eventually to voter fatigue.”

    Indeed. Who trusts the FBI leadership? Fauci or the CDC? State? Facebook? The Fed? Citibank? Corporate media? Elite universities, or public education in general? Congress? Biden and the border?

    Unaccountable, arrogant, self serving and authoritarian all.

    Shasta County may have just invited extreme behavior. Let’s hope the rioting is mostly peaceful, like a BLM or Antifa riot…………

  • steve Link

    They can have legitimate political discourse, just like on January 6!

    Steve

  • Jan Link

    ” They can have legitimate political discourse, just like on January 6!”P

    Differences of opinions can be openly discussed when police don’t lob flash grenades into a crowd to disorient them – in one case causing a fatal heart attack. When rubber bullets are not used against women and children in the crowd, or a woman fatally clubbed by the police in the western tunnel; another air force veteran woman fatally shot without any warning issued. Furthermore, magnetic doors, that can only be opened from inside the Capitol building, magically are unlocked for access, joined by barricades taken away with police waving people to come inside, are disconcerting. They all become very confusing signals to a crowd mainly gathered to protest election results.

    BTW, the stain of the J6 event, that will remain forever, is less how this protest was colored, the videos skewed and the slanted viewpoints projected by the progressives and their media cohorts, and more by how people were rounded up, jailed without due process, and kept indefinitely in solitary confinement under inhumane conditions. It appears we are becoming China’s CCP in how we are punitively treating those in which we are not in agreement with.

  • Jan Link
  • Zachriel Link

    Jan: people were rounded up, jailed without due process, and kept indefinitely in solitary confinement under inhumane conditions.

    Who was denied due process? What inhumane conditions?

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