Sunday, April 24, 2022

Bill Barr's Book: One Damn Thing After Another.

Six weeks ago I urged people not to buy Bill Barr's new tell-all memoir.

Medford journalist Tam Moore had already bought it.

I was dismayed that former Attorney General Bill Barr waited until after Trump was out of office, and after the second impeachment trial, before he revealed information the public--and the impeachment trial--would have found useful. He could have helped our democracy. Instead, he helped book sales. 

Tam Moore is a lifelong journalist, who worked in television in his early days and then in print, writing for the Capital Press, a regional newspaper focusing on the agricultural industry. In the mid-1970’s, Moore served as an elected Jackson County Commissioner in southern Oregon. He was elected as a Republican in 1974, back at a time when Oregon Republicans were progressive on civil rights, when there were pro-choice Republicans elected locally and statewide, and when Republicans supported cleaning up the environment.



.Guest Post by Tam Moore.

A review of One Damn Thing After Another

There’s no shortage of ”insider” books about the troubled Trump presidency. Former Attorney General Bill Barr weighed in with his memories of Trump times in early March. Some commentators – including the Up-Close blog – saying you ought to save your money. 

One Damn Thing After Another is worth a read, and your money, for several reasons. 

Tam Moore
First, it is a memoir of Bill Barr’s life. There’s insight into what shaped the son of a couple of Columbia University professors into a lawyer who would come out of retirement to take the thankless job of U.S. Attorney General for a president who in 2017 and 2018 had verbally savaged the prior AG in very public ways. Barr came to maturity wanting to be a China expert for the CIA, didn’t get into law school until after he joined the agency. 

Second, Barr is a good writer – who wouldn’t be with a couple of loving professors looking over your shoulder while doing homework. Usually, Barr recalls, help was needed with math problems. “My father would put down the book he was reading, grab a yellow pad, draw a line across the page, and say: ‘Now, let’s start with the number line.’ An hour later, he’d be just getting into the mysteries of long division, and we’d be ready for bed. My brothers and I referred to this as getting the ‘number line’ treatment.” (page 16)

Third, Barr cares about his country, its laws and its institutions—including ramifications of the constitutional crisis which almost always seemed just around the corner in the last two Trump years. Wherever you are politically, it’s helpful to know what those in leadership positions think as they pull the levers steering our republic. If you are a resident of Portland, Oregon, for example, Barr takes you through what the federal government debated as mobs triggered by the murder of George Floyd did their nightly riots around the Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse.

“But arguing at this stage over which set of extremists is more dangerous is largely a waste of time and diverts us from a far more important task. Instead of jockeying for political advantage on the issue, both parties have a solemn obligation to take a clear and unequivocal stand against all political violence.” (page 486)

Finally, you need to read this book to enjoy Barr’s recollection of learning how to play the bagpipes as a teenager. You’ll discover that decades later, he threw family parties, Ceildh in Scots, with traditional music and dancing. Barr’s ceildh filled hotel ballrooms. “It was essentially like having a large wedding reception every year. In addition to food and drink, we’d have bagpiping, of course, and I’d also book a traditional Celtic dance band and a “caller” to guide people through traditional Irish and Scottish dances—which are analogous to American square dancing.” (pages 153-154) 

Many years ago, I set out to buy a book written by a longtime acquaintance. Sitting at his kitchen table I observed how difficult it is to get everything right. I know the burden of trying to be accurate from editing untold thousands of words in news reports and from helping a friend organize his book about experiences as a prisoner of war. At the table, while he autographed the gift books that would become Christmas presents, this particular author smiled and told me “Tam, that’s why they call it a memoir, it’s the way I remember it.”

Thus, I cut Barr some slack for all the direct quotes which turn up in his memoir. Folks judged this book from the excerpt published March 3 in the weekend Wall Street Journal. It’s the sensational prologue to One Damn Thing After Another -- tightly written prose of a December, 2020 meeting with President Trump laced with direct quotes which are what Barr remembered being said. He was there. We weren’t.

Barr deserves credit for repeated efforts to get the defeated president to move beyond loss of an election, and he got some credit right here in this blog. 

Reading the Barr memoir leads me to recall another book which – regardless of how you view contemporary events in this troubled democracy – give insight into what got us to where we are. I’m referring to Henry Louis Gates, Jr.’s Stony The Road, a 2019 best seller. It documents post-Civil War Reconstruction and the White Supremacy backlash which followed, fueling some of the divisions seen in our current society. Gates does the job by presenting significant quotes from material printed at  particular times in our recent history. 

He spices up the understanding of what got people at the time thinking the way they did with a collection of political cartoons and images of colorful advertising. All of this makes you contemplate messages as you recall the history.

Barr tells his own story well, like he’s still amazed that as a young man he was picked by President George H. W. Bush to be Attorney General. You learn Barr’s experiences as a corporate lawyer, leading up to being chief counsel at Verizon, the communications giant. 

The significant insights come in the last 15 chapters, where two years with the Trump administration are recounted with reflections on school choice – “It is time to stop destroying the future of these inner-city children and start giving them the opportunity to attend schools of their choice” (page 400) –to letting Afghanistan’s government collapse – “China is now poised to ally with the Taliban and to develop Afghanistan’s mineral resources, gaining even further control over materials essential to numerous advanced technologies.” (page 407)

One of the most significant insights – given Barr’s Republican credentials and his gig with Verizon -- is that this Attorney General wanted to go after Big Tech—seeking legislation on how online platforms justify removing content published on the Internet (page 448). If you are in the free-speech camp, reading this will give you some thought – “The issue of Big Tech’s economic dominance and choke hold on Americans’ free speech rights was a constant worry during my second time as Attorney General.” (page 449)

Barr wraps up the Trump years with a succinct analysis of the former president’s base: “Trump voters aren’t won over to him by this low and puerile behavior; they’re willing to overlook it because they dislike the alternative more.” (page 562) That’s something to ponder with mid-term elections little more than a half-year away. 




11 comments:

Rick Millward said...

Barr's book is an attempt for redemption. Don't fall for it. Ponder for a moment if he'd been re-elected.

One of the more unsavory aspects of a corrupt administration are the self-seeking sycophants who flock to the center of power and then scurry away when the lights come on. If it weren't for enablers populist authoritarians wouldn't be able to do the damage they inflict.

Let's not forget that Putin is their role model.

"...they’re willing to overlook it because they dislike the alternative more."

What alternative? Democracy?

Mike said...

Thank you, Tam, for reading and reporting on Barr’s book so that I won’t have to. I can’t imagine wasting so many precious hours on the self-promotion of Trump’s worst enabler.

Barr’s claim that Trump voters overlook his low and puerile behavior “because they dislike the alternative more” doesn’t explain his cult-like status, or the GOP’s degeneration into the Insurrection Party. What has his voters so agitated is our changing demographics – too many immigrants from “shithole countries.” They love Trump, not in spite of but because of his racism, belligerence and pathological lies. Anybody that’s seen Trump’s performance at any of his rallies and still voted for him has to be as crazy as he is.

Ed Cooper said...

Agreeing with Rick and Mike, I'm certainly not going out and even borrow Belly Barr's book, much less waste however much it costs.
Is Tam Moore supporting further destruction of Public Schools, and suggesting we should have continued pouring blood and treasure into a corrupt Afghan government after a 20 year stalemate. It's my sincere hope that somebody finds a way to put Barr in the Dock for his own corruptalfeasance while AG. It might not be possible c to send him to prison, but at a minimum, he deserves to be disbarred, fined and shunned forevermore.

Trump Voter said...

"Barr wraps up the Trump years with a succinct analysis of the former president’s base: “Trump voters aren’t won over to him by this low and puerile behavior; they’re willing to overlook it because they dislike the alternative more.” (page 562) That’s something to ponder with mid-term elections little more than a half-year away".

BOY! It's about time that democrats understand that republicans aren't Trump sycophants, and that we understand that Trump has lots of warts, yet he's still better than the other GOP or democrat alternatives. What has Pete Buttigieg, or Biden, or Kamala ever accomplished? (crickets) Trump's pompous, braggadocios act is very tiring. Trump's relatives like Ivanka and Jared Kushner (both democrats) are leaches using government to get wealthy (at your expense). Trump's tax plan helped the rich, the poor, and corporations, but it royally screwed the middle class. Sometimes Trump is a lot of talk and no action. Nevertheless, when you look closely at Joe and Hunter Biden, and Hillary, and Barry Obama, then Trump looks like a Billion dollars. He had the best record in office, too. That can't be disputed. I'd prefer Ron DeSantis, but apparently he's happy to wait in the wings until Trump retires.

Michael Trigoboff said...

Tam emphasizes a point I have been making for years: Trump took advantage of a huge amount of alienation among the working classes. Trump did not cause that alienation.

The alienation was produced by decades of our economic and cultural elites destroying the lives of the working classes of this country. And then, to add insult to injury, the elites were pleased to look down their noses at the working classes and call them names like “white supremacists“ and “racist.“

The alternative that the working classes dislike more than Trump is continued rule by elites who hate them on the infrequent occasions when they bother to notice them.

John F said...

"Tell all" memoirs from the Trump insiders I find helpful in understanding what the person wants us to know about the situation at the time and their role in same. They're all cautionary tales of an attempted coup and what they did to enable a potential dictator. The whole story is not out yet. Malfeasance by a US President takes years to surface. At the moment we have only a few tell all books, a few court cases, evidence compiled to date by the January 6th Committee and independent news accounts.

Like the hearings into the events surrounding Benghazi and Hillary Clinton's actions simply amounted to a successful attempt to muddy an extremely capable presidential candidate. Republicans are in the process of ginning up a narrative about the January 6th Committee Public Hearings to be released when they do occur. It will go something like this: The January 6th Committee Hearings are exactly like our Benghazi hearings. Designed to distract and misinform to the point of nausea and holding on to their base.

Like the Bay of Pigs, the Cuban missile crises, the Gulf of Tonkin incident, Iran-Contra are all examples of at best serious miscalculation or outright malfeasance. However, none of these events rise to the level of seizing the presidency while spreading our founding documents. The firehose of misinformation and out right lies coming from the Trump administration and members of the Republican tell me they intend to hang on to power by any means necessary and damn our democracy.


Anonymous said...

It is absurd nonsense to suggest that Democrats hate working class people. Democrats support unions, not Republicans. Democrats have pushed for universal health care because so many Americans have and still do lack access to quality, affordable health care. Democrats support policies that help working women. Democrats support equal opportunities for women and people of color. Democrats support OSHA and safer workplaces. I could go on.

Some entitled, white men are angry and bitter because they feel that they have been discriminated against and "displaced" by women and people of color in the workplace, particularly in academia. At least some white men now know how it feels when the shoe is on the other foot. Also, maybe the answer is to look elsewhere for employment. White men still dominate in most sectors of the economy. But hopefully not for too much longer. Overall, white male privilege does appear to be on the decline. Many are holding on for dear life, kicking and screaming. It reminds me of the only child who is angry and bitter when parents have more children and the only child does not want to share.

Anonymous said...

Adding to the above list, Democrats are much more likely than Republicans to support the minimum wage (at any level), unemployment insurance, worker's compensation, fair overtime laws and regulations, Social Security and Medicare. All of these policies and programs are routinely attacked by Republicans and Libertarians.

Michael Trigoboff said...

Keep calling the working class racist, Anonymous, and you will ensure a major defeat for the Democrats this coming November.

I didn’t say “Democrats.“ I said elites. I have no beef with the labor union component of the Democratic Party. I have a hugebeef with the woke social justice warrior globalist cultural elite snobs of the left.

Mc said...

This country was founded by people considered elite at the time.

Racists fear change. People who constantly use the term "woke" fit into that category.
republicans like chaos.


It's that simple.

I'm a bit disgusted that Moore is giving Barr a pass, and that Peter published this endorsement.

Bob Warren said...

Tam Moore is more than a trifle deluded when she makes the claim that Bill Barr loves this nation and its laws and goals. Barr will always be tainted as a cohort and Trump "collaborator" rather with the image of a decent guy attempting to rein in a misogynistic racist and monumental liar from doing even more damage to the image of our nation on every level. I can only conclude that Tam Moore suffers from a severe form of dyslexia as she
is demonstrably incapable of interpreting what is prominently apparent in the book. Bill Barr was almost as much an embarrassment for this nation as the man he served and that's an accusation that is borne out by his utter failure to achieve some sense of decorum and common sense as attorney general. A dyed in the wool self-serving slob who also looks like one is an accurate summation of this individual who loves his own opinion more than than the oath he took when sworn in as attorney-general of our nation.
Bob Warren