Showing posts with label Damned Democrats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Damned Democrats. Show all posts

Nancy Pelosi, Please Do Something Real

I am utterly beyond the beyond with this nonsense:

House Democrats are drafting a resolution to condemn President Donald Trump's racist tweets against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other high-profile freshman congresswomen, Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Monday.

..."This morning, the President doubled down on his attacks on our four colleagues suggesting they apologize to him," Pelosi wrote to House Democrats. "Let me be clear, our caucus will continue to forcefully respond to these disgusting attacks."
Continue to forcefully respond? Democratic leadership hasn't even begun to forcefully respond yet.
Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) and freshman Rep. Tom Malinowksi (D-N.J.), who was born in Poland, will draft the resolution, according to Pelosi. It's unclear when the House will vote on the measure and the speaker did not specify in her letter.

"One step at a time," a senior Democratic aide said when asked about vote timing.
Oh for fuck's sake.

As I noted on Twitter, a resolution is aggressively inadequate.

Also, Pelosi is urging Republicans to sign the resolution. THEY'RE NOT GOING TO SIGN IT, NANCY.

We are long past the point at which it's enough baiting to "prove" (like it wasn't already manifestly evident) that Republicans are fully on board with every ounce of Trump's malice and depravity.

We have reached the point at which justifying symbolic actions by claiming to be gathering such proof is nothing more than an excuse for not doing something meaningful.

Trump is torturing people, including children, in concentration camps. A strongly-worded letter ain't gonna fucking cut it!

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Trump's Massive Purge of Undocumented Immigrants Is Back On

[Content Note: Nativism; abuse.]

Last month, Donald Trump announced a massive purge of "millions" of undocumented immigrants, then reversed course at the last minute, demanding that House Democrats fund his vile immigration agenda or he would proceed with the sweep.

A week later, Speaker Nancy Pelosi caved on her demands that any emergency border funding include protections for migrant children and limitations on the use of the funding, and allowed the Senate border bill to come up for a vote in the House, where it passed, giving Trump a $4.6 billion check to spend on his nativist malice, with zero restrictions.

And in exchange for that capitulation, Trump has now announced that the purge is back on, anyway.

Caitlin Dickerson and Zolan Kanno-Youngs at the New York Times report:

Nationwide raids to arrest thousands of members of undocumented families have been scheduled to begin Sunday, according to two current and one former homeland security officials, moving forward with a rapidly changing operation, the final details of which remain in flux. The operation, backed by [Donald] Trump, had been postponed, partly because of resistance among officials at his own immigration agency.

The raids, which will be conducted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement over multiple days, will include "collateral" deportations, according to the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the preliminary stage of the operation. In those deportations, the authorities might detain immigrants who happened to be on the scene, even though they were not targets of the raids.

...Agents have expressed apprehensions about arresting babies and young children, officials have said. The agents have also noted that the operation might have limited success because word has already spread among immigrant communities about how to avoid arrest — namely, by refusing to open the door when an agent approaches one's home. ICE agents are not legally allowed to forcibly enter a home.
This is happening in the United States of America right now: Donald Trump is ordering a purge and the agents tasked with carrying out that order are expressing qualms about arresting babies.

Undocumented immigrants must know their rights, and ICE agents who are apprehensive about the operation must acknowledge their responsibility to resist inhumane orders. STAND DOWN. Don't carry out these raids.

And Democrats must learn to never, ever, negotiate with Trump. They gave him $4.6 billion in exchange for absolutely nothing, except more betrayal and more malice.

You know what to do: MAKE NOISE. RESIST.

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Pelosi Caves; Trump Gets $4.6B Border Package

[Content Note: Nativism; abuse.]

So, late yesterday, under pressure from moderates in her caucus, Speaker Nancy Pelosi caved on her demands that protections for migrant children and restrictions on the Trump Regime's use of emergency border funding and allowed the Senate border bill to come up for a vote in the House. It passed.

In other words, Donald Trump just got a $4.6 billion check to spend on his nativist malice, with zero restrictions, while he's torturing children in concentration camps.

This is a massive failure. Progressives in the Democratic caucus are deeply unhappy about it, as well they should be. Moderates in the Democratic caucus should be ashamed of themselves, but aren't — because they believe they need to look tough on border security be reelected.

Honestly, when you're voting to fund the abuse of children knowing that malice is Trump's agenda, I don't know what difference there is between you and a Republican, anyway.

I'm so filthy fucking angry.

As I noted on Twitter yesterday: Trump is now going to say, forever, that whatever he does to children at the border has bipartisan approval.

And anyone who is still saying at this point that Pelosi is a great strategist who's just giving Trump enough rope with which to hang himself has to understand that they are implicitly making an argument that children's lives are negotiable.

What is the line in the sand? What is it?


Pelosi should be launching impeachment hearings of Trump for his vicious nativism at the southern border. Instead, she's giving him what might as well be a blank check to escalate it.

I cannot believe I am saying this, but Pelosi must be removed and replaced immediately.

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We Resist: Day 879

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Today in Rampaging Authoritarianism and Primarily Speaking and Some Good News from SCOTUS.

Here are some more things in the news today...

Bozorgmehr Sharafedin at Reuters: Iran Says It Dismantled a U.S. Cyber Espionage Network. (Emphasis on "says.") "Iran said on Monday it had exposed a large cyber espionage network it alleged was run by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and that several U.S. spies had been arrested in different countries as the result of this action. ...The secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council, Ali Shamkhani, said on Monday: 'One of the most complicated CIA cyber espionage networks that had an important role in the CIA's operations in different countries was exposed by the Iranian intelligence agencies a while ago and was dismantled.' ...He did not specify how many CIA agents were arrested and in what countries."

Nasser Karimi and Jon Gambrell at the AP: Iran Says It Will Break Uranium Stockpile Limit in 10 Days. "Iran will break the uranium stockpile limit set by Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers in the next 10 days, the spokesman for the country's atomic agency said Monday while also warning that Iran could enrich uranium up to 20% — just a step away from weapons-grade levels. The announcement by Behrouz Kamalvandi, timed for a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels, puts more pressure on Europe to come up with new terms for Iran's 2015 nuclear deal. The deal has steadily unraveled since the Trump administration pulled America out of the accord last year."

Aaron David Miller at USA Today: Why Are We Headed for a Blowup with Iran? It Began When Trump Scrapped the Nuclear Deal.
The Iranian regime is authoritarian, ideological, and repressive, a serial human rights abuser and regional troublemaker. But we now find ourselves in a dangerous situation largely as a result of a great unraveling begun by the Trump administration's unilateral decision last year to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement.

The accord — known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — was flawed, to be sure, and didn't address Iran's aggressive regional behavior or its ballistic missile programs. Even so, it was still a highly functional arms control agreement that imposed significant constraints on Iran's nuclear program for at least for a decade or more.

Campaigning hard against the agreement, candidate Trump vowed to renegotiate or leave what he deemed the worst agreement ever negotiated. Then as president, he pulled out of the agreement and launched his "maximum pressure" campaign. The administration reimposed sanctions on banking and petrochemicals and, in the past several months, has made a major effort to reduce Iran's lifeblood — its oil exports — to zero. As intended, all of this has wreaked havoc on the Iranian economy.

Not surprisingly, the regime, which the Iranian foreign minister quipped had a Ph.D. in sanctions busting, signaled through mine attacks on six oil tankers in the past month that it had options, too. Within hours of Thursday's attacks, oil prices spiked.

No matter how egregious the regime's behavior in other areas, pulling out of the JCPOA without a Plan B other than "maximum pressure" has more than any other factor brought us where we are today.
Well, that and the fact that Donald Trump and his advisors actively want a war with Iran.

As, it appears, does Vladimir Putin. Olga Lautman notes on Twitter: "While tensions are heating up with Iran Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak is in Iran holding talks with Iran's oil minister."

I strongly suspect the Kremlin is trying to orchestrate a U.S.-Iran war. A war that it won't even have to fight:


* * *

[Content Note: Racism; nativism. Covers entire section.]

Oliver Laughland at the Guardian: How Trump's Census Question Could Transform America's Electoral Map. "For the first time, the census could include a question on respondents' citizenship that, according to the bureau's own research, will substantially reduce the number of people willing to participate. A study published last week estimated that the addition of the question could mean up to 4 million people — mostly people of color from immigrant minority communities — could go uncounted. If such an undercount occurs the effects will be profound. It could allow for electorate boundaries throughout America to be redrawn, almost certainly favouring the Republican party. It could result in billions of dollars in federal funds being withheld from some of the most vulnerable communities in America."

Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: Census Battle over Citizenship Question Leaves Immigration Activists with Their Hands Tied.
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule on the constitutionality of the the citizenship question by the end of the month, but not before the Census Bureau launched a test last Thursday to examine how its inclusion will impact responses. Approximately 480,000 housing units around the country will receive a questionnaire with households randomly assigned to one of two versions of the questionnaire: one with the citizenship question included, the other without. These results are expected to be completed by October.

So where does that leave the groups that advocate on behalf of immigrants and want to ensure their community members are counted? For now at least, their hands are tied.

Many people are not aware of the census in the first place, and a tremendous amount of resources is spent on outreach and keeping communities informed. With the citizenship question in limbo until at least the end of June, that reduces the amount of time groups can provide outreach.

"We are waiting to see what happens and then we'll decide accordingly," Zahra Billoo, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations' (CAIR) San Francisco Bay office told ThinkProgress. "I tell my staff we are planning to encourage participation in the census the same way we did in 2010. Because it's really important that all of these communities be counted. This matters now and well beyond this president's time in office."

But, Billoo emphasizes, that's not to say she isn't extremely hesitant.

"We recognize, of course, that we could not discourage participation in the census," she added. "The option isn't discourage versus encourage. It is neutral or silent versus encourage. Because even though I do want my community to be counted, it would also weigh heavily on me if I weren't confident in the safety, security, and secrecy of the census data."
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux at FiveThirtyEight: The Citizenship Question Could Cost California and Texas a Seat in Congress. "The results of the count determine everything from where grocery stores are placed to how congressional representatives are distributed. There are few things we care more about around here than political apportionment (although, if we're being honest, we care an awful lot about groceries, too). So we went in search of researchers who had estimated the potential effect of the citizenship question. We found several, none of whom agreed on just how big an impact this would have. But they were all on the same page about one thing — if the Supreme Court rules that the new question can be included, it could alter our political future."

* * *

Kate Riga at TPM: On Heels of Conway Rec, Dems Call for Probe into Kushner for Hatch Violations. Just days after the Office of Special Counsel recommended that White House counselor Kellyanne Conway be fired for violating the Hatch Act, Reps. Ted Lieu (D-CA) and Don Breyer (D-VA) are calling for Jared Kushner to be investigated as well. 'As you know, under the Hatch Act, federal employees are prohibited from fundraising for political candidates,' they wrote to the Office of Special Counsel. 'Alarmingly, recent media reports indicate that Mr. Kushner is nonetheless taking a direct role in raising funds for the re-election campaign of [Donald] Trump.'"

This is the right thing to do, because ethics and rules still matter. But nothing will come of it. Kellyanne Conway and Jared Kushner will not be fired. Members of the Trump administration won't stop violating the Hatch Act. The only result will be that that the Trump administration is further empowered by having visibly broken the law and gotten away with it (again). Which underlines the urgency of impeaching him now.

Rachael Bade at the Washington Post: Push to Impeach Trump Stalls Amid Democrats' Deference to — and Fear of — Pelosi. "As pressure has mounted in recent weeks on House Democrats to move more aggressively against Trump, Pelosi has demonstrated the firm grip she wields over her caucus — quashing, at least for now, the push for impeachment. It is a command that colleagues say is drawn from a deep well of respect for the political wisdom of the most powerful woman in American politics — and fear that challenging her comes with the risk of grave cost to one's career."

Care more about the entire country than your careers, Democrats. For fuck's sake.

If we wanted opportunistic careerists who didn't give a flying fuck about the nation's future, we could just vote for Republicans. Get a goddamned grip.

* * *

[CN: Misogyny; racism] Isabella Dally-Steele at Ms.: This Week in Trump's War on Women. "On Tuesday, Politico revealed that claims of racism and sexism in the Treasury Department, which came to a head after Secretary Steve Mnuchin's decision to delay the historic rebranding of the $20 bill by changing out Andrew Jackson's image for Harriet Tubman's until at least 2026, were spot on. Nancy Cook revealed that the department's lack of diversity is much more than skin deep — with only three women and one person of color in Department's 20-person senior staff and an overwhelmingly white, male boys club culture permeating the workplace. 'For women and people of color,' said one of Cook's sources, a former Treasury official, 'there is just a general feeling when you walk in and there are all white men that it is not a comfortable environment.'"

[CN: Sexual assault; war on agency] Staff at AP: Ex-Pastor in Texas Accused of Sexually Abusing Teen Relative. "A former Southern Baptist pastor who supported legislation in Texas that would have criminalized abortions has been arrested on charges of child sex abuse, accused of repeatedly molesting a teenage relative over the course of two years." Men who object to women's right of consent over our own bodies when it comes to healthcare frequently don't care about our right of consent in any circumstance.

[CN: Misogyny] Sam Stein at the Daily Beast: Exclusive Poll Reveals Dems' Sexism Problem in 2020.
Sexism is weighing down the women running for the Democratic presidential nomination, a new public opinion survey conducted by Ipsos for The Daily Beast reveals.

A full 20 percent of Democratic and independent men who responded to the survey said they agreed with the sentiment that women are "less effective in politics than men." And while 74 percent of respondents claimed they were personally comfortable with a female president, only 33 percent believed their neighbors would be comfortable with a woman in the Oval Office.

That latter number, explained Mallory Newall, research director at Ipsos, was a strong tell about how gender dynamics were souring voters on certain candidates. Asking respondents how they believe their neighbors feel about an issue is "a classic method to get around people being reluctant to admit to less popular views."
Jesus fucking Jones, dudes. Get your shit together.

* * *

Jaclyn Jeffrey-Wilensky at NBC News: Without Swift Action on Climate Change, Heat Waves Could Kill Thousands in U.S. Cities. "If global warming sometimes seems like a distant or abstract threat, new research casts the phenomenon in stark, life-or-death terms. It predicts that in the absence of significant progress in efforts to curb emissions of temperature-raising greenhouse gases, extreme heat waves could claim thousands of lives in major U.S. cities. If the global average temperature rises 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels — which some scientists say is likely if nations honor only their current commitments for curbing emissions — a major heat wave could kill almost 6,000 people in New York City. Similar events could kill more than 2,500 in Los Angeles and more than 2,300 in Miami."

Brian Kahn at Earther: Half of Greenland's Surface Started Melting This Week, Which Is Not Normal. "Greenland has been scorching (by Greenland standards) for the past few days, with temperatures rising 10-20 degrees Celsius (18-36 degrees Fahrenheit) above normal across the island. Ruth Mottram, a climate scientist with the Danish Meteorological Institute, told Earther that the weather station at the top of the ice sheet saw temperatures reach above freezing on Wednesday and they were headed that way again on Thursday. That puts them just a degree or so away from setting the all-time heat record for June, which is currently held by June 2012."

Erin McCormick, Bennett Murray, Carmela Fonbuena, Leonie Kijewski, Gökçe Saraçoğlu, Jamie Fullerton, Alastair Gee, and Charlotte Simmonds at the Guardian: Where Does Your Plastic Go? Global Investigation Reveals America's Dirty Secret.
What happens to your plastic after you drop it in a recycling bin?

According to promotional materials from America's plastics industry, it is whisked off to a factory where it is seamlessly transformed into something new.

This is not the experience of Nguyễn Thị Hồng Thắm, a 60-year-old Vietnamese mother of seven, living amid piles of grimy American plastic on the outskirts of Hanoi. Outside her home, the sun beats down on a Cheetos bag; aisle markers from a Walmart store; and a plastic bag from ShopRite, a chain of supermarkets in New Jersey, bearing a message urging people to recycle it.

Tham is paid the equivalent of $6.50 a day to strip off the non-recyclable elements and sort what remains: translucent plastic in one pile, opaque in another.

A Guardian investigation has found that hundreds of thousands of tons of U.S. plastic are being shipped every year to poorly regulated developing countries around the globe for the dirty, labor-intensive process of recycling. The consequences for public health and the environment are grim.
This is a must-read report.

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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Nancy Pelosi, What Are You Even Doing?

I have long been a supporter of Nancy Pelosi. I have regarded her as a savvy strategist and effective Speaker, and I have defended her when she faced misogynist and ageist and partisan and otherwise bad faith attacks, and I have also criticized her (for example) when she got shit wrong.

She is getting shit very wrong at the moment.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Today, she and Chuck Schumer are heading to the White House once again to discuss Donald Trump's infrastructure plan — a policy of corporate giveaways and privatization schemes that doesn't even deserve their time of day on its face, no less when a significant portion of the Democratic base and an increasing number of the Democratic Congressional caucus is calling for Pelosi to launch impeachment hearings.

Because, as my representative, Congresswoman Madeleine Dean, correctly put it, Donald Trump's actions demand it:


That is the only ethical conclusion.

I am not sympathetic to Pelosi's arguments that Democrats have to focus on their agenda and not get into a prolonged impeachment battle, because the top item on the Democrats' agenda in this moment should be standing in the way of fascism.

But I am even more hostile toward Pelosi's decision to head to the White House to discuss policy as if everything is normal. Fuck that.

Impeach. Now.

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This Is a Real Thing in the World

This is just a real thing that a real person wrote and other real people edited and then decided to really publish in a real publication in the world: Biden Should Run on a Unity Ticket with Romney.

Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha no.

The author of this heap of trash is Juleanna Glover, whose author bio at the end of the piece informs us that she "has worked as an adviser for several Republican politicians, including George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and Rudy Giuliani and advised the presidential campaigns of John McCain and Jeb Bush. She is on the Biden Institute Policy Advisory Board."

Cool cool cool.

Setting aside that the Biden Institute has on its advisory board a Republican operative who has presumably also found gainful employment between election cycles as a fox guarding hen houses, I suppose we can assume that her affiliation with the Biden Institute means this is a trial balloon.

If this is an indication of the sorts of ideas we can expect from Joe Biden should he run yet again, HARD FUCKING PASS.

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This Is Making Me Filthy Angry

[Content Note: Misogyny; ageism.]

Matt Fuller at the Huffington Post reports the latest on Democrats who want to deny Nancy Pelosi the speakership:

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi is suddenly in a fight for her political survival as a group of Democratic detractors is preparing to block her ascent to the speakership.

About a dozen incumbent Democrats and a half-dozen incoming Democrats are preparing a letter pledging to not support Pelosi on the House floor for speaker. The members also intend to note another contingent of Democrats who privately say they won’t support the longtime California Democrat but won’t sign the letter, according to Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), one of the ringleaders of the effort to block Pelosi.

Sources familiar with the letter say there are currently 17 names on it, but the group is trying to get more than 20 members before releasing it. Currently on the letter, though not certain to stay on it, are:

- Tim Ryan (D-Ohio)
- Seth Moulton (D-Mass.)
- Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.)
- Ed Perlmutter (D-Colo.)
- Kurt Schrader (D-Ore.)
- Filemon Vela Jr. (D-Texas)
- Marcia Fudge (D-Ohio)
- Bill Foster (D-Ill.)
- Brian Higgins (D-N.Y.)
- Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.)
- Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.)
- Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.)
- Jeff Van Drew (D-N.J.)
- Joe Cunningham (D-S.C.)
- Max Rose (D-N.Y.)
- Anthony Brindisi (D-N.Y.)
- Ben McAdams (D-Utah)

There is another contingent of Democrats ― including Conor Lamb (D-Pa.), Dan Lipinksi (D-Ill.), Ron Kind (D-Wis.), Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.), Jason Crow (D-Colo.), Haley Stevens (D-Mich.), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.) and Andy Kim (D-N.J.) ― who are seen as likely to vote against Pelosi, but who also are hesitant to sign the letter.
A number of Pelosi foes don't want to go public officially, because they are goddamned cowards who know they have no legitimate reason to challenge Pelosi. They lurk in the shadows with nebulous talking points about "the establishment" and "effective leadership," the latter of which falls to absolute rubbish when Pelosi's actual record is discussed.

So they conceal their names and make the vaguest of arguments, relying on public hostility for any older woman seeking power to serve as the case they refuse to make.

Meanwhile, they're skulking around trying to bring other Democrats on board and claiming they have the numbers to defeat her, to force her out of the contest altogether:
Pelosi's allies all readily point out that "you can't beat somebody with nobody," but Pelosi's opponents are testing that idea. In fact, they seem to think their movement is strengthened without a clear alternative.

The idea is that, once Pelosi knows she can't win, she will step aside and there would be a new race for the speaker position.
Shady fucking cowards. They don't have the decency to just choose someone among their ranks to run against her fairly and squarely. Instead they want to push her out of the way in the most craven and undemocratic way possible.

Utterly shameful.


Additionally: If your biggest concern right now is keeping Nancy Pelosi out of power, you've really taken your eye off the ball.

These folks should be grateful they have someone as experienced and effective as Pelosi positioned to hit the ground running in opposition to Donald Trump and the Republicans. Instead, they're resisting her.

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Today in Misogyny Dressed Up as Revolution

I've really just about had it with the "anti-establishment" Dems, by all the different names they go.

In particular, this juxtaposition is doing my head in today:

1. NBC News' Frank Thorp V reports on Twitter: "Sen Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has been re-elected to be Senate Minority Leader by acclamation, per a source familiar."

2. Bo Erickson and Rebecca Kaplan at CBS News: Anti-Pelosi Democrats Confident They Can Keep Her from Becoming House Speaker Again. Of course.

My favorite (cough) line from that article: "The group isn't backing or putting forward an alternative to Pelosi; their sole aim is to ensure she's not elected speaker."

Cool.

During a conversation with the other mods about the "anti-establishment" Dems yesterday, I said: "If you're going to 'tear down the establishment,' you'd better be prepared to build and lead its replacement. These fucking dipshits are clearly unprepared to do either."

Proving me right, over and over.

Also pissing me off is this headline at Talking Points Memo: Pelosi Launches Speakership Charm Offensive, Schmoozes Members-Elect.

How to make BEING A TALENTED AND EFFECTIVE POLITICIAN sound like being a shitty con artist instead. Thanks a heapload, TPM.

Men are savvy politicians playing 12-dimensional chess. Old (experienced) women are shady, inauthentic creeps who must be stopped. Rinse and repeat ad infinitum.

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We Resist: Day 587

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Election Thread and Today in This Corrupt Oligarchy and TV Corner: The Americans.

Here are some more things in the news today...

[Content Note: Racism] Josh Israel at ThinkProgress: Florida's Republican Gubernatorial Nominee: My Black Opponent Will 'Monkey' up the State. "Hours after winning the Republican nomination for Florida governor on a 'Pitbull Trump Defender' platform, Rep. Ron DeSantis used racially charged language in a Fox News interview to attack his Democratic opponent, Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum. Asked how he would defeat Gillum, DeSantis first conceded that his opponent is an 'articulate spokesman for the far left views and a charismatic candidate.' He then warned that Florida has been going in a good direction and 'the last thing we need to do is to monkey this up by' embracing Gillum's 'socialist agenda.'" This fucking guy.

[CN: Stochastic terrorism] Yesterday's Quote of the Day was Donald Trump projecting that the Democrats would take away "everything" from conservative evangelicals if Dems won the midterms. It turns out that Trump also said (projected) that there would be violence. Lois Beckett at the Guardian reports: "At a state dinner for evangelical Christian ministers on Monday night at the White House, Trump urged religious leaders to use the power of their pulpits to make sure that 'all of your people vote' in November, the New York Times reported. 'You're one election away from losing everything you've got,' Trump reportedly told them. If Republicans lose Congress, 'they will end everything immediately,' the president said, seemingly referring to congressional Democrats. He went on: 'They will overturn everything that we've done and they'll do it quickly and violently. And violently. There's violence. When you look at antifa, and you look at some of these groups, these are violent people.'" Seethe.

Trump announced by Twitter (of course) that White House Counsel Don McGahn will be leaving soon, and it's interesting, ahem, timing:


Huh.

* * *

John Wagner at the Washington Post: Trump, without Citing Evidence, Says China Hacked Hillary Clinton's Emails. "Trump asserted early Wednesday, without citing evidence, that Hillary Clinton's emails were hacked by China, and he said the Justice Department and the FBI risked losing their credibility if they did not look into the matter. Writing on Twitter, Trump alleged that much of the former secretary of state's emails that was hacked contained classified information and called it 'a very big story.' ...Trump provided no details about the alleged hacking, but his tweets came shortly after the online publication of a story by the Daily Caller asserting that a Chinese-owned company operating in the Washington area hacked Clinton's private server while she was secretary of state and obtained nearly all her emails."

This was the United States president: 1. Taking another swipe at the U.S. intelligence community; 2. Taking another swipe at his political opponent; 3. Publicly accusing a foreign state of espionage without evidence.

The latter while simultaneously provoking that nation via a trade war.


Steven Lee Myers at the New York Times: With Ships and Missiles, China Is Ready to Challenge U.S. Navy in Pacific. "A modernization program focused on naval and missile forces has shifted the balance of power in the Pacific in ways the United States and its allies are only beginning to digest. While China lags in projecting firepower on a global scale, it can now challenge American military supremacy in the places that matter most to it: the waters around Taiwan and in the disputed South China Sea. That means a growing section of the Pacific Ocean — where the United States has operated unchallenged since the naval battles of World War II — is once again contested territory, with Chinese warships and aircraft regularly bumping up against those of the United States and its allies."

* * *

[CN: Nativism. Covers entire section.]

Shannon Najmabadi at the Texas Tribune: Across the Country, Basements, Offices, and Hotels Play Short-Term Host to People in ICE Custody.
The basement of a federal building in downtown Austin, 10 floors below U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz's office. Space in a "fashionable" South Carolina office park. Branches of major hotel chains in Los Angeles, Miami, and Seattle.

These facilities rarely appear together on government lists, but they all have something in common: They're nodes in a little-known network of holding areas where people in the custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spend hours or even days on their way to other locations.

The government's [family separation] policy drew attention to the country's vast and often obscured immigration detention apparatus, particularly to a billion-dollar private contracting industry and to U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing centers that migrants call "ice boxes."

But hidden in plain sight across the country, hotels, federal buildings, and office space are used by ICE as way stations for immigrants — and their existence often comes as a surprise to the unsuspecting civilians who work or live nearby.

...All told, at least 80 hospitals and 150 holding locations — scattered across the country — have played host to people in ICE custody over the last decade, records show. Some of the facilities are unmarked processing areas where migrants transferred from local jails under detainers, or picked up by ICE, are kept until the agency can bus them to longer-term detention facilities.
Tina Vasquez at Rewire.News: Immigrants in Washington Detention Center Join National Prison Strike. "One week into the national prison strike, a movement led by incarcerated people demanding an end to 'prison slavery' and improvements that recognize their humanity, immigrants in detention have launched a strike of their own in solidarity. ...This morning, Maru Mora Villalpando, a spokesperson for the undocumented-led immigrant rights group, NWDC Resistance, told Rewire.News the number of immigrants participating in the strike is fluctuating. She said that she could confirm six hunger strikers at NWDC had been placed in solitary confinement by ICE and that the strike may spread to Oregon and California." I take up space in solidarity with their protest and I angrily grieve that it's required in the first place.

Colum Lynch at Foreign Policy: U.S. to End All Funding to U.N. Agency That Aids Palestinian Refugees. "Months after scaling back financial support for the United Nations agency that provides humanitarian aid to more than 5 million Palestinian refugees, the Trump administration has decided to end funding altogether, several sources told Foreign Policy, in a decision that analysts said would cause more hardship and possibly unrest in Gaza, the West Bank, and other parts of the Middle East. The decision was made at a meeting earlier this month between [Donald] Trump's advisor and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, according to the sources. The administration has informed key regional governments in recent weeks of its plan." This is not only a reflection of Trump's nativist agenda, but it has major foreign policy implications.

* * *

Holger Roonemaa and Inga Springe at BuzzFeed: This Is How Russian Propaganda Actually Works in the 21st Century. "The Russian government discreetly funded a group of seemingly independent news websites in Eastern Europe to pump out stories dictated to them by the Kremlin, BuzzFeed News and its reporting partners can reveal. Russian state media created secret companies in order to bankroll websites in the Baltic states — a key battleground between Russia and the West — and elsewhere in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. ...The websites presented themselves as independent news outlets, but in fact, editorial lines were dictated directly by Moscow. ...The revelations about the websites in the Baltic states provide a rare and detailed inside look into how such disinformation campaigns work, and the lengths to which Moscow is willing to go to obscure its involvement in such schemes."

Julie Bykowicz at the Wall Street Journal: The New Lobbying: Qatar Targeted 250 Trump 'Influencers' to Change U.S. Policy. "The professor also didn't know he was on a list of 250 people Mr. Allaham says he and his lobbying-business partner, Nick Muzin, identified as influential in [Donald] Trump's orbit. The list was part of a new type of lobbying campaign Qatar adopted after Mr. Trump sided with its Persian Gulf neighbors who had imposed a blockade on the tiny nation. Qatar wanted to restore good relations with the U.S., Mr. Allaham says. Win over Mr. Trump's influencers, the thinking went, and the president would follow. ...Qatar's lobbying operation over the next year was an unconventional influence plan to target an unconventional president — and shows how much Mr. Trump has changed the rules of the game in the influence industry."

Marianne Levine and Lili Bayer at Politico: Trump Lawyer Giuliani Got Paid to Lobby Romanian President. "Donald Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani was being paid by a global consulting firm when he sent a letter to the president of Romania last week that contradicted the U.S. government's official position. Giuliani's letter to Romanian President Klaus Iohannis appears to take sides in a fight at the top of the Romanian government over how to rein in high-level corruption. The former New York mayor's letter criticizes the 'excesses' of Romania's National Anticorruption Directorate (DNA), contrary to U.S. State Department policy, which has been supportive of the agency's efforts. Although the missive does not claim to have been sent on [Donald] Trump's authority, Romanian politicians seeking to blunt the power of the DNA have already used it to sow doubt about the U.S. government's position."

Jason Leopold and Anthony Cormier at BuzzFeed: "Suspicious" Transactions at Russian Embassy Sparked Deeper Bank Probe Than Previously Known. "American bank examiners delved deeper into the [Russian] embassy's financial activity than was previously known — and reveal why they flagged two of the transactions as suspicious. The first, made just 10 days after the U.S. presidential election in 2016, was a $120,000 lump-sum check to then-ambassador Sergey Kislyak that was twice as large as any payment he'd received in the previous two years. The second, just five days after [Donald] Trump's inauguration, was a blocked attempt to withdraw $150,000 in cash that a bank official feared was meant for Russians the US had just expelled from the country."

* * *

Libby Watson at Splinter: Why Are Democrats Poised to Let 7 Trump-Nominated Judges Slide to Confirmation? "Since he took office, Trump has appointed more federal appeals court judges than former Presidents Obama and Bush had at the same point in their administrations combined. As the Pew Research Center noted earlier this year, Trump had trailed his predecessors in appointing district court judges until today, when Senator Chuck Schumer helpfully struck a deal with the Republicans to confirm seven district court judges, plus four other federal appointees. ...What is the deal? I mean, literally — what did Democrats receive in return for dropping their filibuster of these nominees? Is it simply so they can go home and resume campaigning for the midterms over Labor Day weekend? Is that where the Democrats are today, so utterly defeated that they'll accept 11 lifetime conservative judges for a few extra days of campaigning?"

Whatever the reason, Adam Jentleson, former Deputy Chief of Staff to retired Senator Harry Reid, is not fucking impressed (and I agree):


There is more to Jentleson's thread, which is worth reading in its entirety.

* * *

[CN: Climate change; extreme weather. Covers whole section.]

Dan Whitcomb at Reuters/Yahoo News: Hawaii Residents Hit by Floods from Hurricane Lane as New Storm Forms. "Flash flood warnings were issued on Tuesday for the Hawaiian island of Kauai, with residents on the north coast told to evacuate and others left stranded by high water as the remnants of Hurricane Lane drenched the archipelago and a new storm brewed in the Pacific Ocean. Hawaii was spared a direct hit from a major hurricane as Lane diminished to a tropical storm as it approached and then drifted west, further from land. But rain was still pounding the island chain, touching off flooding on Oahu and Kauai. ...The advisory urged residents near Hanalei Bridge on the north side of the island to evacuate their homes due to rising stream levels. A convoy that had been used to escort residents over roads damaged by historic floods in April between was shut down, leaving many cut off. 'Heavy pounding and hazardous conditions are being reported island-wide. Motorists are advised to drive with extreme caution. Updates will be given as more information is made available,' the Kauai Emergency Management Agency said."

Yessenia Funes at Earther: Puerto Rican Government's New Hurricane Maria Death Count Is Nearly 50 Times Higher Than Original. "A long-awaited study the Puerto Rican government commissioned to determine the number of deaths attributable to Hurricane Maria is finally here. To no one's surprise, Puerto Rico's official death toll of 64 was a serious understatement. Researchers from George Washington University's Milken Institute School of Public Health and University of Puerto Rico concluded the hurricane resulted in the deaths of 2,975 people. This estimate varies from the death tolls estimated in previous reports conducted by other scientists using different methodologies. ...The study is sure to note that while Hurricane Maria impacted everyone on the island, those in lower-income neighborhoods were 60 percent more likely to be at risk of dying over this period."

Christopher Flavelle at Bloomberg: Miami Will Be Underwater Soon; Its Drinking Water Could Go First. "Miami-Dade is built on the Biscayne Aquifer, 4,000 square miles of unusually shallow and porous limestone whose tiny air pockets are filled with rainwater and rivers running from the swamp to the ocean. The aquifer and the infrastructure that draws from it, cleans its water, and keeps it from overrunning the city combine to form a giant but fragile machine. Without this abundant source of fresh water, made cheap by its proximity to the surface, this hot, remote city could become uninhabitable. Climate change is slowly pulling that machine apart. Barring a stupendous reversal in greenhouse gas emissions, the rising Atlantic will cover much of Miami by the end of this century. ...If Miami-Dade can't protect its water supply, whether it can handle the other manifestations of climate change won't matter."

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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We Resist: Day 585

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Fatal Shooting at Video Game Competition in Florida and An Observation and Former Trump Doorman Released from Silence Contract.

Here are some more things in the news today...


Related Reading: Rafi Schwartz at Splinter: Trump's Ends Shitshow Phone Call with Mexican President with Request for a Hug.

First of all, I have no clue how the executive branch just terminates NAFTA by fiat, with zero input from the legislative branch.

Secondly, a sustained and increasingly hostile trade war with Canada is yet another policy that plays right into Vladimir Putin's hands. If you don't believe that, consider how the Kremlin feels about Canada having a whoooooooole lotta Arctic coastline that the United States won't give a shit about protecting.

Meanwhile... Jeanne Whalen and John Hudson at the Washington Post: Too Big to Sanction? U.S. Struggles with Punishing Large Russian Businesses.
When the Treasury Department imposed tough sanctions on Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska and his companies in April, the fallout for the Putin ally was fast and fierce.

Western customers stopped buying from the aluminum company he controls, sinking its share price and shaving Deripaska's fortune from $6.7 billion to $3.4 billion, according to Forbes estimates.

The sanctions also caused havoc far beyond Russia. Global aluminum prices spiked, battering U.S. and European companies that use the metal. After an outcry from manufacturers and foreign governments, Treasury softened its stance, giving companies more time to end dealings with the aluminum producer, Rusal, and suggesting it could lift sanctions on the company if Deripaska cedes control.

The episode is a cautionary tale as the United States readies more sanctions against Russia, including some beginning Monday that will affect U.S. technology exports, and some under consideration in Congress that could prove painful for European oil and gas companies.
So we're gonna start a trade war with Canada, and back off sanctioning Russia. Cool.

* * *

Tom Hamburger and Rosalind S. Helderman at the Washington Post: Attorney for Michael Cohen Backs Away from Confidence That Cohen Has Information About Trump's Knowledge on Russian Efforts. "An attorney for Michael Cohen, [Donald] Trump's former lawyer, is backing away from confident assertions he made that Cohen has information to share with investigators that shows Trump knew in 2016 of Russian efforts to undermine Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. Lanny Davis, a spokesman and attorney for Cohen, said in an interview this weekend that he is no longer certain about claims he made to reporters on background and on the record in recent weeks about what Cohen knows about Trump's awareness of the Russian efforts."

Shocking. Cough.

It's almost like Davis was just using Donald Trump's favorite medium to communicate with him that he'd better keep a lid on any dirt he has on Cohen — unless the president wants Cohen to spill the beans, and, now that he's satisfied the message has penetrated, he's backing off. Huh. Who could have seen that coming.


That is such bad news. Fucking hell.

Cory Turner at NPR: Student Loan Watchdog Quits, Blames Trump Administration. "The federal official in charge of protecting student borrowers from predatory lending practices has stepped down. In a scathing resignation letter, Seth Frotman, who until now was the student loan ombudsman at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, says current leadership 'has turned its back on young people and their financial futures.' The letter was addressed to Mick Mulvaney, the bureau's acting director. In the letter, obtained by NPR, Frotman accuses Mulvaney and the Trump administration of undermining the CFPB and its ability to protect student borrowers. 'Unfortunately, under your leadership, the Bureau has abandoned the very consumers it is tasked by Congress with protecting,' it read. 'Instead, you have used the Bureau to serve the wishes of the most powerful financial companies in America.'"

[CN: Genocide]


* * *

[CN: Child abuse; sexual assault; death; descriptions of violence] Christine Kenneally at BuzzFeed: Nuns Killed Children, Say Former Residents of St. Joseph's Catholic Orphanage.
Outside the United States, the orphanage system and the wreckage it produced has undergone substantial official scrutiny over the last two decades. In Canada, the UK, Germany, Ireland, and Australia, multiple formal government inquiries have subpoenaed records, taken witness testimony, and found, time and again, that children consigned to orphanages — in many cases, Catholic orphanages — were victims of severe abuse. ...The inquiries focused primarily on sexual abuse, not physical abuse or murder, but taken together, the reports showed almost limitless harm that was the result not just of individual cruelty but of systemic abuse.

In the United States, however, no such reckoning has taken place. Even today the stories of the orphanages are rarely told and barely heard, let alone recognized in any formal way by the government, the public, or the courts. The few times that orphanage abuse cases have been litigated in the U.S., the courts have remained, with a few exceptions, generally indifferent. Private settlements could be as little as a few thousand dollars. Government bodies have rarely pursued the allegations.

So in a journey that lasted four years, I went around the country, and even around the world, in search of the truth about this vast, unnarrated chapter of American experience.
[CN: Sex abuse by clergy] Nicole Winfield and Jon Sharman at the Independent: Pope Francis Refuses to Answer Question on 'Cover-Up' of Child Abuse Allegations. "Pope Francis has refused to say whether he knew about child sexual abuse claims against the former archbishop of Washington, five years before his resignation last month. ...Asked about the document [alleging that Pope Francis has known about the allegations since 2013], the pontiff declined to confirm or deny the claims it made. It 'speaks for itself,' he said, adding that he would not comment on it. He said he had read Archbishop Vigano's document and trusted journalists to judge for themselves. 'It's an act of trust,' he said. 'I won't say a word about it.'"

[CN: Homophobia] Joe Jervis at Joe.My.God.: Pope Francis: Parents Shouldn't Reject Their Gay Kids, But Should Seek Psychiatric Help for Them. "Agence France-Presse reports: 'Pope Francis has recommended parents seek psychiatric help for children who show homosexual tendencies, during a press conference on his plane taking him back to Rome from Ireland." So, to recap: Nothing to say about priests who have sexually abused countless children, but gay kids should be taken to a shrink. FUCK THIS GUY.

[CN: Homophobia; bullying; self-harm] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Mother: Denver 9-Year-Old Killed Himself Four Days After Telling Classmates He Was Gay. "Jamel Myles, a 9-year-old in fourth grade at Joe Shoemaker Elementary School in Denver, killed himself last week (police are investigating his death as a suicide) and his mother says it happened after he told her he was gay and planning to come out to his classmates. ...She told KDVR that Jamel said he was being bullied: 'Four days is all it took at school. I could just imagine what they said to him. My son told my oldest daughter the kids at school told him to kill himself. I'm just sad he didn't come to me. I'm so upset that he thought that was his option.'" Blub.

[CN: Misogyny; violence; toxic masculinity] Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: Boy Stabs Girl at School Assembly up to 11 Times After She Rejected His Advances. "A 14 year-old boy stabbed a 16 year-old girl about nine to 11 times at an Oklahoma high school assembly because she didn't want a relationship with him beyond friendship, authorities told the Oklahoma County District Attorney's Office on Friday. ...The girl didn't see the boy as he moved to a seat behind her at the assembly. Then, silently, he stood up and began stabbing her with a 4-inch folding knife, creating wounds in her arm, upper back, wrist, and head, KFOR reported. Luther Police Chief David Randall told the Oklahoman that the boy wanted a closer relationship with the girl, and that she declined, saying that 'she liked him as a friend, not anything more and that they remained friends.'"

[CN: Misogyny; violence; toxic masculinity; exploitation]


[CN: Death; racism; nativism; exploitation; video may autoplay at link] Benjamin Fearnow at Newsweek: Mollie Tibbett's Father Ignores Trump, Thanks Hispanic Community for Search Help During Eulogy. "Although Rob Tibbetts has not commented publicly on the nationwide debate over illegal immigrants that has encircled her killing, he applauded the Hispanic community for helping in the search for Mollie. ...Tibbetts repeatedly called on the jam-packed gymnasium at Brooklyn-Guernsey-Malcom High School in Brooklyn, Iowa to 'celebrat[e] something wonderful' as Mollie's older brother Jake discussed her passionate, caring personality, according to the report. But the Tibbetts family's calls 'to turn toward life — Mollie's life — because Mollie's nobody's victim' has fallen on the deaf ears of many national political figures who have inserted her death into a wider debate on undocumented immigrants living in the country. At least one member of Tibbetts extended family has blasted right-wing figures for using Mollie's death as anti-immigrant 'political propaganda.'"

This poor family, having to navigate this exploitative shit while grieving the loss of their loved one. I'm so sorry. My sincerest condolences to them. And in honor of their request to remember Mollie and to turn toward her life, I will end with this:
Rob encouraged the people in the crowd to smile at the person next to them, take the hands of those they know and love and to take time each day, and in each moment, to "live like Mollie did," with compassion and kindness and a desire to help those around her. He also thanked everyone involved in the five-week effort to find his daughter and help bring her home.

"You want to know the secret of why there was this outpouring of support for Mollie? It's because we see ourselves in Mollie — it's because we are a part of her," he said.

Rob remembered his daughter as sweet, kind, faithful, and passionate. She was someone who always had an ear ready to listen, he said, and a hand ready to help.
An ear to listen and a hand to help. ♥

* * *

Yessenia Funes at Earther: Trump's Science Adviser Nominee Won't Call Out Climate Denier Bullshit. "The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation welcomed science adviser nominee Kelvin Droegemeier to Capitol Hill on Thursday with open arms. The University of Oklahoma meteorology professor [Donald] Trump has picked to head the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) is inching closer to securing the position, which has been vacant a record-breaking 578 days. ...He also seemed keen to avoid discussing how the issue of climate change has been politicized. He kept insisting that politics have no role in science, without noting how climate denial has fueled politicization of this subject."


Nicola Davis at the Guardian: Climate Change Will Make Hundreds of Millions More People Nutrient Deficient. "Rising levels of carbon dioxide could make crops less nutritious and damage the health of hundreds of millions of people, research has revealed, with those living in some of the world's poorest regions likely to be hardest hit. Previous research has shown that many food crops become less nutritious when grown under the CO2 levels expected by 2050, with reductions of protein, iron, and zinc estimated at 3–17%. Now experts say such changes could mean that by the middle of the century about 175 million more people develop a zinc deficiency, while 122 million people who are not currently protein deficient could become so." Fuck.

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

Open Wide...

This Rhetoric Enables Trump


If this is the best the Senate Democratic leader has to offer in this moment, he needs to step the fuck out of the way so that someone who actually wants to lead can.

Open Wide...

Joe Biden, What Are You Even Doing?

In Pennsylvania's 18th District, there is a special election to be decided in one week to fill the seat vacated by Republican Rep. Tim Murphy, who recently resigned after revelations that he urged his mistress to have an abortion, despite being a virulently anti-choice candidate.

It's a Republican district: Trump carried the 18th by 20 points in 2016. But Democrat Conor Lamb nonetheless has a legit shot at beating Republican candidate Rick Saccone. He's made himself competitive mostly by shit-talking Nancy Pelosi and demurring on gun reform, which isn't great, but, again, this has been a reliably Republican district and the special election is now a toss-up.

Anyway. Former Veep Joe Biden traveled to the 18th, which is near Pittsburgh, to support Lamb and rally the Democratic troops.

At the Pittsburgh rally [before a crowd of union workers], Biden stressed the importance of standing with unions, and protecting Medicare and Social Security.

Roughly 10 miles away at Robert Morris University, he again discussed the middle class with a packed room of Lamb supporters and took more swings at Republicans.

Biden slammed the GOP tax overhaul, saying it would lead to cuts in entitlement programs. And he denounced the millions spent on the airwaves to support Saccone and attack Lamb.

"If there's going to be a fight out there, I'm betting on that guy working construction or in a steel mill, I ain't betting on that fat cat writing a big check," the former vice president said, arguing that the grass-roots energy could overcome the barrage of critical TV ads.
All of that is fine. Good stuff. It's important to remind voters that the Republican tax cut is rank garbage and hardly a gift to the working class.

But Biden didn't stop there. And it's no coincidence, of course, that this clip came from Fox News, to whom Biden delivered a perfect gift:

I know what it's like, watching uncles, aunts, friends, neighbors losing jobs. My dad used to say, "Joe, remember: A job's about a lot more than a paycheck. It's about your dignity. It's about your respect. It's about your place in your community." [edit] Some people in my party don't even get it anymore. They don't get it. It's about our pride. It's about our dignity. It's about who the hell we are and what we've done. [edit] And it makes me angry; it makes me angry.
Joe Biden is not talking about women here. Because jobs that confer dignity have historically been reserved for men.

There is a long history, in fact, of women — and men of color — being harassed and threatened for "taking away" jobs that confer dignity from white men.

By deliberately concealing that history, Biden is being, at best, extremely careless.

But then comes this: Flanked by workers who are almost exclusively white and male, Biden says, "It's about our pride."

To call that gross dogwhistle careless would be to give it good faith it doesn't deserve.

I am a practical person. I understand, no matter how much I don't like it, that a Democratic candidate in a Republican district may have to distance himself from national party leadership and hedge on gun reform.

But if the only way to win is to go full Nazi, party affiliation becomes nothing but a distinction without a difference.

Shame on Joe Biden. If this is a preview of what his 2020 campaign would look like, and I'm sure it is, he'd better fucking stay home. We're all full up on white supremacist patriarchy here.

Open Wide...

Just Curious

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Bernie Stinks

I know this is hardly trenchant political commentary, but my god does Bernie Sanders stink.

A lot.

Exhibit Wev in an endless series of examples:


It isn't clear when Sanders will give his rebuttal, but presumably he will deliver it immediately following the State of the Union, just like he did last year.

(It wasn't technically a State of the Union, because Donald Trump had just been inaugurated, but it was where the SOTU would have been, if he hadn't been a first-year president.)

Not only will Sanders be splitting progressives' attentions and subverting the message that will be delivered by Democratic Rep. Joe Kennedy, but, he will also be speaking opposite Rep. Maxine Waters, who will be delivering a national address on BET.


Bernie Sanders will never, ever, have my support as long as he keeps pulling stunts like this one, which are clearly designed to explicitly fracture the progressive coalition.

And here's something else: As long as the Democrats continue to give any support or sanction to this divisive asshole who undermines them at every turn to Donald Trump's favor, they are not getting a dime of my money. It's that simple. He is not helping them; he has been actively hurting the Democrats, and here he is doing it yet again.

When he wants to leverage the Democrats' infrastructure, he's a Democrat. When he wants to be a spoiler, then he's suddenly an Independent again. And the only people who can put a stop to his assault on the Democratic Party are the leadership of the Democratic Party.

This is what he's going to keep doing. Give up on this loser.

I sure have.

Open Wide...

On the Shutdown Deal

This is a good piece by Jim Newell at Slate explaining "Why Democrats Caved," striking a deal with Republicans that seems like a shitty and incredibly stupid deal on its face: Agreeing to reopen the government at current spending levels for another 17 days in exchange for a promise from Mitch McConnell "to debate immigration through regular order after Feb. 8 if no deal is struck beforehand."

No deal is going to be struck beforehand. And McConnell will almost certainly break his promise.

Because these two things are manifestly obvious to anyone paying the slightest bit of attention to Congressional politics, many people quite understandably feel like the Democrats made a bad deal for no reason.

But there is one big reason, as Newell notes (emphasis mine):

No one could really say the truth about why Democrats accepted this offer from McConnell: that it was the best they were going to get.

This shutdown was always going to be decided by the "blame game," as annoying as that is to say. As each side made their arguments in recent days, Republicans had the more straightforward one — Democrats were responsible for the shutdown because they filibustered a funding bill in order to secure something else. A DACA fix is popular; shutting down the government over one is much less so, especially in many of the states Senate Democrats are trying to hold in November. The polling was beginning to gravitate in Republicans' favor.

"I hear our numbers are dropping like a rock," Democratic Rep. Louise Slaughter of New York told Bloomberg on Monday.

There is no compelling evidence that rejecting McConnell's offer would have resulted in a better outcome for Democrats.
That is: The Democrats had lost before they even began. The question was only how much they were going to lose.

As far as I can tell, the Democrats got the best they could, which was nothing. And they would have gotten worse than nothing otherwise, because every Republican in Congress would have been jumping in front of every mic and camera they could find to blame the Democrats, and because Donald Trump would have spent all day every day tweeting that the Democrats were at fault, and because our political press is fucking garbage, and would have breathlessly reported each one of those tweets, without the context that Trump is a liar and that's not how responsibility works when your party rules the executive and legislative branches of the government.

Sure, I get it. Be angry at the Democrats, who constantly make strategic errors. But they are, truly, the least of our problems in this situation. The Republicans are primarily at fault, because they are actively trying to destroy the federal government. And the second largest share of the blame goes to the political press, who still insist on covering this president and his loathsome party like business as usual.

"Both sides" was always wrong. But it is wrong in a way that is complicit when one side has all the power and opts to use that power to pursue an agenda of white supremacist, nativist authoritarianism.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 335

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: Thieves Came in the Night.

So, here's where we are: The GOP doesn't care at all about passing a historically unpopular piece of legislation, right after losing a Senate seat in Alabama and control of the Virginia legislature. They are truly governing like they know they will never face voters in free and fair elections again.

And Mike Pence's "prayer" for Trump sounded like a benediction or a eulogy. They don't care if he goes. The coup is well under way, and Pence is ready to step in and play pretend (small-d) democratic president while actually being a vicious, aggressive autocrat.

The $1.5 trillion the GOP and their donor class is stealing with this bill will be used to enact austerity programs that will turn this country into a Social Darwinian hellscape. Good luck to all of us finding ways to organize dissent now that Net Neutrality is no more.

And meanwhile our foreign policy is a garbage disaster: We've got no functional diplomatic system anymore; the president is a reckless provocateur; and the Republican Party is a bunch of sickening traitors who don't give a fuck that Russia continues to meddle in our business and subvert our democracy, and will probably mount a major attack on our infrastructure in the near future.

And I don't know how we're going to mount a meaningful resistance to this onslaught, but I will promise you that I'll be here resisting as mightily as I can for as long as I'm able.

Anyway...

Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: The GOP Tax Bill Hurts K-12 Schools and the Quality of Higher Education. "Experts on K-12 and higher education policy say the tax bill is a giveaway to corporations and could hamper public investment in K-12 schools and public universities. The finally bill doesn't include a change to teacher tax deductions — which was eliminated in a House bill last month — so teachers can still deduct $250 for supplies they buy out of their own pockets. The provision on a tax on tuition waivers for graduate students was also removed. But the overall picture for students is grim, said Ben Miller, senior director for Postsecondary Education at the Center for American Progress. 'You're definitely seeing folks breathe a sigh of relief because these narrow provisions are gone,' Miller said. 'But it's like saying, 'Thank god my paper cut healed while someone cut off my arm.' The long-term damage of the overall bill is quite bad.'"

Akiba Solomon at Colorlines: Patrisse Cullors Discusses How the Tax Bill May Impact the Reproductive Health of Women of Color, Particularly Black Women. "Paul Ryan has blatantly said that he will make cuts to entitlements after the tax bill passes. This tax bill will add more than a trillion dollars to the national deficit, and we can guess that they're going to use that to justify these cuts to entitlements. We know that the first thing to cut — by both parties — are programs for poor and working class people, particularly those [identified with] people of color. So the first cuts will likely be from programs like Medicaid, Medicare, and SNAP. Women's reproductive health care will be among the first to be cut."


Sarah O'Brien at CNBC: These Changes Under the GOP Tax Plan Affect Homeowners. "After the many twists and turns that the Republican tax-overhaul legislation has taken thus far, it might be unclear to homeowners what's in store for them. In a nutshell, not much that will help them save more on taxes. ...On top of making modifications to the mortgage interest deduction, the bill limits the deductibility of property taxes and state and local income taxes to a combined $10,000. In states such as New York and California where home prices and property taxes are high, this change means some homeowners could face bigger tax bills beginning next year. And if you were thinking about prepaying some of your 2018 state and local income taxes to take advantage of current law, which is more generous, forget about it. The bill specifically disallows it."

Tim Fernholz at Quartz: The GOP Tax Bill Is a Massive Victory for Globalization. "Critics, even those who favor lower corporate rates, fear this bill will increase existing incentives for companies to employ tax havens. Under the new law, companies pay a minimum tax on global income, designed to prevent them from shifting intellectual property (and profits) to low-tax jurisdictions overseas. But the hastily written new rules create a loophole for companies to skirt that minimum tax by investing in factories and other routine operations outside the United States. ...Even if the loopholes can be fixed, many experts expect the move to empower multinationals to demand new tax concessions in other jurisdictions, driving a global race to the bottom."

Will Wilkinson at the New York Times: The Tax Bill Shows the G.O.P.'s Contempt for Democracy. "[T]he open contempt for democracy displayed in the Senate's slapdash rush to pass the tax bill ought to trouble us as much as, if not more than, what's in it. In its great haste, the 'world's greatest deliberative body' held no hearings or debate on tax reform. The Senate's Republicans made sloppy math mistakes, crossed out and rewrote whole sections of the bill by hand at the 11th hour, and forced a vote on it before anyone could conceivably read it. ...At a time when America's faith in democracy is flagging, the Republicans elected to treat the United States Senate, and the citizens it represents, with all the respect college guys accord public restrooms."

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[Content Note: Sexual assault; child abuse. Covers entire section.]

Jason Wilson at the Guardian: The Texas Boys Were Beaten, Abused, Raped; Now All They Want Is an Apology. "Rick, Steve, and six other men the Guardian spoke to named staff members responsible for the abuse, which lasted from the 1950s until at least the early 1990s. They say the abuse went beyond them, and was systemic, affecting hundreds of others who went through the ranch. They say Lamont Waldrip, a long-serving superintendent, was one of the worst abusers. Last month, at the behest of a wealthy donor who wrote a cheque for $1m to build a new dormitory, the ranch named the new building Waldrip House. ...For the survivors who want to make the ranch accountable for the abuse — and have been encouraged to break their silence after Steve Smith brought them together in a Facebook group — this is an unbearable affront."

Dawn C. Chmielewski at Deadline: Gary Goddard Accused of Sexual Misconduct by 8 Former Child Actors. "Eight former child actors from a Santa Barbara theater group have come forward to accuse their former mentor, Broadway producer and theme park designer Gary Goddard, of molestation or attempted molestation in the 1970s. Since actor Anthony Edwards wrote a painful first-person account of his abuse on Medium, describing how Goddard allegedly preyed on him and other young aspiring actors in the theater troupe, others have came forward to support his account, including Mark Driscoll and Bret Nighman. A total of eight people described Goddard's advances — straying hands on thighs, fondling on darkened Disneyland rides, sexual abuse during overnight stays — and the psychological aftermath."

Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Paul Ryan Was Asked If Trump's Accusers Are Liars; His Response Was Abysmal. "'Look, I don't even know what all these accusations are,' Ryan said, when asked whether he agreed with the White House's claim that all the women were liars. 'I'm focused on fixing Congress. I'm focused on my job, where I work, making this institution safe. I want my daughter to be able to grow up in an economy, to go into work — public or private sector work — she's not being harassed, she's being empowered. That's what I'm focused on, I'm not focused on this other stuff.'" There's more at the link, and it's just as shitty.

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Ed O'Keefe at the Washington Post: Democrats Unlikely to Force DACA Vote This Week, Probably Averting Shutdown.
Democrats are backing away from a pledge to force a vote this month over the fate of thousands of undocumented immigrants brought to this country as children, angering activists but probably averting the threat of a government shutdown at a critical moment in spending negotiations with Republicans and President Trump.

With a deadline of midnight Friday to pass spending legislation, dozens of Democrats had vowed to withhold support if Republicans refused to allow a vote on a measure, known as the Dream Act, that would allow roughly 1.2 million immigrants to stay legally in the United States.

But a group of vulnerable Democratic senators facing reelection in conservative states next year aren't willing to go that far — meaning the party is unlikely to muster the votes to block the spending bill.

"We've got to get it done, but I'm not drawing a line in the sand that it has to be this week versus two weeks from now," said Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), who faces reelection next year in a state that Trump won by more than 18 points. Other Democrats facing similar head winds echoed that sentiment, including Sens. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) and Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.). Trump won those states by 42 and 19 percentage points, respectively.
Okay, but the point of it being this week is that the threat of a shutdown provided immense leverage to Democrats, who are the minority party. In a week when the Republicans can put aside all their differences to universally pass their grotesque tax bill, Democrats should be more inclined than ever to do the same to protect millions of the nation's most vulnerable members. Fuck this.

Bob Dreyfuss at the Nation: Maxine Waters Connects the Dots on Trump, Deutsche Bank, and Russia. "For Waters, and perhaps for Mueller, too, the question is: Are these two things related? Did Trump, Kushner, and their partners — along with others in Trump World, including Paul Manafort, Gen. Michael Flynn, and Wilbur Ross, the billionaire who serves as Trump's commerce secretary — benefit from illegal Russian money that flowed through Deutsche Bank? If so, does [Donald] Trump have a hidden obligation to Russia or to Russian oligarchs? And why did the official US investigation of Deutsche Bank's illegal transactions, conducted under the auspices of Jeff Sessions's Justice Department, go 'dormant' earlier this year? Those questions are especially relevant because of two major, recent transactions between Deutsche Bank, Trump, and Kushner."

Peter Beaumont at the Guardian: U.S. Will 'Take Names of Those Who Vote to Reject Jerusalem Recognition'. "The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, has warned UN members she will be 'taking names' of countries that vote to reject Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. In a letter seen by the Guardian, Haley told countries — including European delegations — that she will report back to the US president with the names of those who support a draft resolution rejecting the US move at the UN general assembly on Thursday, adding that Trump took the issue personally. Haley writes: 'As you consider your vote, I encourage you to know the president and the U.S. take this vote personally. The president will be watching this vote carefully and has requested I report back on those who voted against us,' she continued."

Jonathan Capehart at the Washington Post: 'Trump's Benghazi': Frederica Wilson Wants the Truth About What Happened to La David Johnson in Niger. "'The American people need to know what happened to Sgt. La David Johnson. And I think that his family needs to know what happened to Sgt. La David Johnson.' Two months after Johnson was killed during a mission in Niger, Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.) still has questions. 'It's sort of like a coverup,' she said in the latest episode of 'Cape Up.' 'And from the very beginning, I was calling it 'Mr. Trump's Benghazi.'' This episode with Wilson comes just before Johnson's mother complained about not being properly briefed by the Pentagon during a CNN interview on Monday. Wilson told me the family is being given information 'that's not matching' information being reported in the press, which has led to many questions."


[CN: Trans hatred; child abuse] Amy Littlefield at Rewire: 'Medical Malpractice': Catholic Bishops Urge Parents, Doctors to Withhold Care for Transgender Kids.
Acceptance can be a matter of life and death for transgender people. When they are accepted by their families, trans people are less likely to face a range of negative experiences, including attempting suicide. That hasn't stopped the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and other religious leaders from issuing an open letter that effectively encourages parents to reject their transgender children, and deny them access to gender-affirming care.

The letter, entitled "Created Male and Female: An Open Letter from Religious Leaders," denies the existence of transgender people, claiming that "human beings are male or female and that the socio-cultural reality of gender cannot be separated from one's sex as male or female."

It appears to urge medical institutions to withhold gender-affirming care for children.

"Children especially are harmed when they are told that they can 'change' their sex or, further, given hormones that will affect their development and possibly render them infertile as adults," the letter claims. "Parents deserve better guidance on these important decisions, and we urge our medical institutions to honor the basic medical principle of 'first, do no harm.'"

Harper Jean Tobin, director of policy for the National Center for Transgender Equality, criticized the intrusion of religious judgment in medical care.

"They are urging parents and medical providers to withhold affirming psychological and medical care and to put off limits even the consideration of affirming psychological or medical care," Tobin told Rewire. "That is medical malpractice."
Samantha Cooney at Time: Model Lauren Wasser Faces Another Leg Amputation Because of Toxic Shock Syndrome. "Model Lauren Wasser will likely lose both of her legs to toxic shock syndrome — and she wants other women to be more aware of what they're putting in their bodies. ...Now, the model is advocating for legislation, introduced in May by Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney, that will require the National Institutes of Health to conduct or support research to determine the safety of ingredients in feminine hygiene products. ...New York University microbiology professor Philip Tierno told TIME last year that there's little scientific research on the health risks related to tampon use." Because misogyny.

Sarah Roberts, Ashish Premkumar, and Monica McLemore at Rewire: The CDC's Language Ban Is More Than an Attack on Words — It's an Attack on Basic Public Health Values. "Last Friday, the Washington Post reported that senior members of the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) counseled analysts to avoid using seven words in future budget and supporting documents that would be disseminated to CDC partners and to Congress: 'evidence-based,' 'science-based,' 'vulnerable,' 'entitlement,' 'diversity,' 'transgender,' and 'fetus.' Two days later, CDC Director Brenda Fitzgerald and a spokesperson from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) — which oversees the CDC — both argued that no bans on words existed and that the entire story was a 'mischaracterization of discussions regarding the budget formulation process.' Despite the seeming about-face from both the HHS and CDC, the concern among the medical and public health community still remains..."

In a terrific act of resistance... Andy Towle at Towleroad: Human Rights Campaign Projects CDC's Banned Word List on Facade of Trump Hotel. LOL ROCK THE FUCK ON.


I'm gonna end it on a high note!

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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