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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Monday, June 30, 2025

For decades, Bill Moyers warned about our current crisis of democracy as it gradually drew nearer.

And he saw the path through to the other side " should we choose to take it. I cannot say for sure when Bill Moyers first developed such a clear eyed-view of the path we were heading down, but I can say that by the time I first started working for him in 2012, as America was clawing its way out of the recession that trailed the 2008 financial crisis, it was already solidly in place.

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For decades, Bill, who died last week at the age of 91, was a prominent, relatively mainstream voice like almost no other, warning of the growing gap between America's rich and poor, the increasing political pow

er of a handful of American oligarchs, and the ever-more-distorted information environment. His hard-hitting dispatches on the concerning state of our reality aired in documentaries and broadcast interviews, often introduced matter-of-factly, following his signature, Cronkite-esque greeting " "Good evening, I'm Bill Moyers," delivered with an East Texas accent from another era.

They continued through both terms of the Bush administration, both terms of the Obama administration, and into the dawn of the first Trump administration. He warned about voter suppression, advancing climate change, and the inability of everyday Americans to achieve the dream of entering, and staying in, the middle class.

Finally, he warned that it was all leading us toward a crisis of faith in American institutions that would shake the foundation of our democracy. Ultimately, Donald Trump, he would suggest, was symptom, not cause.

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"Let me make it clear that I don't harbor any idealized notion of politics and democracy," he said in a 2013 speech to NYU's Brennan Center for Justice, followed by a quip: "I worked for Lyndon Johnson, remember?"

But, he added in that speech, "there is nothing idealized or romantic about the difference between a society whose arrangements roughly serve all its citizens and one whose institutions have been converted into a stupendous fraud. That difference can be the difference between democracy and oligarchy."

Ultimately, he was right. And not just about that."

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#1 | Posted by Corky at 2025-06-30 10:38 PM | Reply

We're so much in trouble. Thank God I won't be around for the worst of this. I fear that this is the end of our country. I have no proof just a guy feeling that I have. We had a good run. Sad to see it like this.

#2 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2025-06-30 10:46 PM | Reply

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