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Good evening. It's Tuesday, August 6.
Tonight: Kamala Harris – who is the Democratic presidential nominee who became that somehow without a single vote being cast – announced her choice today for the vice-presidential running mate. He is the current governor of Minnesota and a former House member, Tim Walz. By all accounts, Harris was strongly considering the governor of Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro, but chose Walz at the last minute instead. The dominant Republican response to this choice, one that even some Democrats and their media allies are echoing, is that Harris’s rejection of Shapiro was driven by, or at least intended to appease, antisemitism, on the ground that Shapiro is Jewish and Walz is not. In other words, since the left wing of the Democratic Party was championing Walz over Shapiro and was doing so, so goes this dreary narrative, simply due to their antisemitism, Harris's choice is being cast as a capitulation to antisemitism. Is there any validity to this bigotry and racism narrative this time coming from Republicans? No, there's not, but we'll take a look at why that is.
Then: Today is the 79th anniversary of one of the darkest moments in human history even if you support it as the right decision: on August 6, 1945, the U.S. dropped the first ever nuclear bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, killing and incinerating immediately an estimated 450,000 people and leaving generations sick from radiological poisoning. With the Middle East on the brink of a new war that involves at least two nuclear powers for now, Israel and the U.S., as well as the ongoing war in Ukraine involving Russia on one side, the largest nuclear power on the planet, and multiple other nuclear states on the other, including the United States, it's very worth looking at how the risk of nuclear war has been largely forgotten, perhaps deliberately so. To help explore this, we will speak to Nina Tannenwald, who is a professor and senior lecturer in political science at Brown University. She has a book entitled “The Nuclear Taboo: the United States and the Non-use of Nuclear Weapons Since 1945,” which traces the reasons why, not necessarily inevitably, there is no further use of nuclear weapons after the date 79 years ago, and whether we can continue that trend.
Finally: Much of the self-identified American left, the DNC left, has spent the last ten months flamboyantly and self-serving and screaming “genocide” as a way to express their opposition to the U.S.-funded and armed Israeli war in Gaza and, more to the point, as a way of branding themselves as moralistic radicals. Though many of them alluded to the possibility that they would refuse to vote for the Democratic candidate in the 2024 election, due to their deep and extremely passionate objection to what was being done to the people of Gaza, it was always so obvious – and so inevitable – as many of us have pointed out many times, that they were never going to refrain from voting Democrat, they were instead going to do exactly what they are now doing, not only vowing to vote for the Democratic ticket but doing so with extreme excitement and glee, all while what they call this genocide in Gaza continues unabated.
Both Kamala Harris's and Tim Walz’s views on Israel are indistinguishable not only from the vast majority of democratic party’s but also to Joe Biden's or even Josh Shapiro's. But nobody in the DNC left really cares about, quote, “genocide” any longer. That's all done and forgotten. There's an election coming, and they will tell you that it's absolutely crucial that Americans do everything we can to keep in power those who funded, armed and defended this genocide, something you would say only if you were a complete partisan fraud who never believed any of what you were saying in the first place.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.