Showing posts with label Ryan Zinke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ryan Zinke. Show all posts

We Resist: Day 697

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: A Letter from the Woman Who Should Be President and Senate Report Details Vast Scope of Russian Election Interference and Trump Again Threatens War on Dissidents.

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

Late Friday, District Judge Reed O'Connor issued an absolutely ridiculous and heinous ruling striking down the Affordable Care Act.

Jonathan H. Adler, professor of law at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law, and Abbe R. Gluck, professor of law and the faculty director of the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy at Yale Law School, penned a scathing op-ed for the New York Times, "What the Lawless Obamacare Ruling Means," the viciously blunt subhead of which reads: "It's not based on a solid legal argument. It's an exercise in raw judicial power." An excerpt:
In a shocking legal ruling, a federal judge in Texas wiped Obamacare off the books Friday night. The decision, issued after business hours on the eve of the deadline to enroll for health insurance for 2019, focuses on the so-called individual mandate. Yet it purports to declare the entire law unconstitutional — everything from the Medicaid expansion, the ban on pre-existing conditions, Medicare and pharmaceutical reforms to much, much more.

A ruling this consequential had better be based on rock-solid legal argument. Instead, the opinion by Judge Reed O'Connor is an exercise of raw judicial power, unmoored from the relevant doctrines concerning when judges may strike down a whole law because of a single alleged legal infirmity buried within.

We were on opposing sides of the 2012 and 2015 Supreme Court challenges to the Affordable Care Act, and we have different views of the merits of the act itself. But as experts in the field of statutory law, we agree that this decision makes a mockery of the rule of law and basic principles of democracy — especially Congress's constitutional power to amend its own statutes and do so in accord with its own internal rules.

...Friday was another sad day for the rule of law — the deployment of judicial opinions employing questionable legal arguments to support a political agenda. This is not how judges are supposed to act.
I encourage you to read the whole thing. Meanwhile, over at ThinkProgress, Ian Millhiser explains one of the primary reasons that O'Connor's ruling is unlikely to stand: Alito Cut the Legs Out of the Latest Attack on Obamacare — and Didn't Even Know He Did It.
[A] passage in Justice Samuel Alito's opinion for the Court in Hobby Lobby could — or at least, should — take on an entirely unexpected significance after Reed O'Connor, a partisan operative turned federal judge, struck down the entire Affordable Care Act on Friday in a case called Texas v. United States.

Judge O'Connor's opinion is a jurisprudential trainwreck. It misreads the text of the law, draws distinctions that the Supreme Court explicitly rejected, and it feigns ignorance regarding the outcome of a year-long debate where congressional Republicans tried and failed to repeal Obamacare. O'Connor's opinion is such an embarrassment to the judiciary that even Jonathan Adler, one of the architects of the last partisan lawsuit seeking to undermine Obamacare, called the opinion "strained and implausible."

But you don't have to take my or Adler's word for it. You can also take Justice Alito's.

O'Connor's opinion, to the extent that it engages in anything that can be described as legal reasoning, rests largely on statements of fact that Congress wrote into the Affordable Care Act's text when it enacted the law in 2010. Yet Hobby Lobby rejected O'Connor's use of such fact-finding statements. Indeed, the methodology O'Connor used in his opinion is so inconsistent with the methodology Alito used in Hobby Lobby that the two opinions cannot coexist.
There is much more at the link.

The long and the short of it is that O'Connor's ruling is being almost universally received as trash by legal experts. That doesn't guarantee it won't be upheld, but it is much more likely to be overturned. Even this conservative Supreme Court isn't going to be inclined to allow a judge to use faulty reasoning to eradicate the Affordable Care Act with a stroke of his pen.

* * *

Addy Baird at ThinkProgress: As Shutdown Looms, House Republicans Decline to Show Up for Votes. "With just days left before a possible partial government shutdown, a number of retiring House Republicans have been failing to show up for votes in the weeks since the midterms, the New York Times reported Sunday. [Donald] Trump vowed last week that he would 'own' a possible government shutdown in an effort to secure funding for a wall on the country's southern border. ...[But] even if Trump ultimately agrees to a package that will avoid a shutdown, the fact that many retiring Republicans are simply not showing up for votes means GOP House leadership doesn't know if they will have the votes to pass it." Good grief.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is the latest Trump official to hit the road and will leave his cabinet position by the end of the year. Good riddance to corrupt rubbish. Trump tweeted that Zinke's replacement will be announced sometime this week, and I'm sure whoever it is will be even worse than Zinke. Shiver.

Rachel Weiner, Carol D. Leonnig, and Matt Zapotosky at the Washington Post: Michael Flynn's Business Partner Charged with Illegally Lobbying for Turkey.
A former business partner of Michael Flynn has been charged with acting as an agent of a foreign government and conspiracy for his efforts to get Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen extradited from the United States.

Bijan Kian made his first appearance in Alexandria federal court Monday morning. According to the indictment, Kian, who ran a lobbying firm with Flynn, conspired with a Turkish businessman to illegally influence government officials and public opinion in the United States against Gulen.

The indictment demonstrates the extent to which Flynn was secretly working to advance the interests of his Turkish clients while publicly serving as a key surrogate to Donald Trump and auditioning for a role in his administration. According to the newly-unsealed court document, Flynn was texting and emailing frequently about how to advance the Turkish agenda throughout the final weeks of the presidential campaign.
[Content Note: Nativism; white supremacy] Frank Dale at ThinkProgress: Stephen Miller Uses White Nationalist Dogwhistle to Push Trump's Border Wall. "White House senior adviser Stephen Miller echoed white nationalist rhetoric to advocate for [Donald] Trump's proposed border wall during a rare television appearance on Sunday. Miller told CBS' Margaret Brennan that Trump is 'absolutely' willing to shut down the government this week if he doesn't receive funding for his border wall, calling it 'a fundamental issue' that will determine 'whether or not the United States remains a sovereign country.' The term 'sovereignty' has been used as a white nationalist dogwhistle for decades." These fucking assholes, pretending to care about the nation's sovereignty while undermining it by colluding with a foreign adversary. JFC.

[CN: Nativism; Islamophobia] Erin Allday at the San Francisco Chronicle: Trump Travel Ban Keeps Yemeni Mother from Seeing Dying 2-Year-Old Son in Oakland. "Abdullah Hassan was born in Yemen with a rare brain disease that initially affected his ability to walk and talk but quickly worsened. He is no longer able to breathe on his own. His father, a U.S. citizen who lives in Stockton, brought him to UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital Oakland for care about five months ago, and Abdullah is not expected to live much longer. The parents are ready to take Abdullah off life support, but they want his mother to have one more moment to hold him. So far, the U.S. State Department has ignored their pleas for a waiver to get her into the United States, they say." I hate this fucking cruel administration with the fiery power of ten thousand suns.

[CN: Nativism; death; video may autoplay at link] Anne Flaherty and Wil Cruz at ABC News: Border Patrol Head Didn't Tell Congress About Jakelin Caal Maquin to Avoid 'Politicizing' Girl's Death. "The head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection said he did not disclose the death of a 7-year-old girl at the border during his testimony to Congress because he wasn't sure that the mother had been notified and because he didn't want to 'risk politicizing the death of a child.' ...[Kevin McAleenan], who provided a detailed timeline of the events, called Jakelin's death a 'tragedy.' He went on to defend his agents' actions." Of course he did.

* * *

[CN: Homophobia] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Cory Booker Again Addresses Sexual Orientation: 'I'm Heterosexual'. "Cory Booker addressed his sexual orientation in a profile with the Philadelphia Inquirer, which mulled the New Jersey senator's possible 2020 presidential run as a bachelor. Wrote the Inquirer: 'But there's one factor that might be unique among the two dozen or so Democrats eyeing a 2020 run: He's single. America hasn't elected an unmarried president since 1884 — and only two have ever taken office without having been married first. If he runs, Booker, 49, would try to be the third.' ...Said Booker, who has addressed his orientation multiple times in the past: 'I'm heterosexual. Every candidate should run on their authentic self, tell their truth, and more importantly, or mostly importantly, talk about their vision for the country.'"

To be clear, I'm not including this item in the We Resist thread because I find something objectionable about Booker's response, but because I find it objectionable that he was obliged to respond at all. No one should be forced to announce their sexuality, for any reason, and for fuck's sake in the year of our lord Jesus Jones two thousand and eighteen no one's sexuality should even matter. It's irrelevant to whether someone is capable of doing the job of president.

Relatedly, Democrats may have their first openly gay presidential candidate in 2020, as South Bend, Indiana, mayor Pete Buttigieg is reportedly contemplating a run.

For the record, I have nothing against Buttigieg, but I don't think he's got nearly enough experience to run for president. And he's not the only person contemplating a run about whom I feel similarly. It's certainly interesting to me how, following the defeat of the most qualified candidate ever, who happened to be a woman, the field is now rife with wildly unqualified men. Cough.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 659

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: The Thousand Oaks Shooting: Updates and Bernie Sanders, What Are You Even Doing This Time? And ICYMI late yesterday: Mueller's Investigation Is in Big Trouble, Folks.

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

In good news:


[Content Note: Nativism] And in very fucking bad news:


In sum: Trump has issued a proclamation that basically says he can deny refugees asylum as long as he demonizes them as a threat to national security. This is so fucking bad.

Meanwhile, if any reporters try to question him on this nativist nightmare:


We are so fucked.

* * *

Katie Benner at the New York Times: Sessions, in Last-Minute Act, Sharply Limits Use of Consent Decrees to Curb Police Abuses. "Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions has drastically limited the ability of federal law enforcement officials to use court-enforced agreements to overhaul local police departments accused of abuses and civil rights violations, the Justice Department announced on Thursday. In a major last-minute act, Mr. Sessions signed a memorandum on Wednesday before [Donald] Trump fired him sharply curtailing the use of so-called consent decrees, court-approved deals between the Justice Department and local governments that create a road map of changes for law enforcement and other institutions. The move means that the decrees, used aggressively by Obama-era Justice Department officials to fight police abuses, will be more difficult to enact." A racist asshole to the last!

Kate Riga at TPM: The Endangered Zinke Is Casting About for a Life Raft, Maybe at Fox News. "Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has his irons in the fire, casting about for potential employment opportunities as it becomes increasingly likely that he'll fall under [Donald] Trump's post-midterm axe. According to a Thursday Politico report, Zinke has inquired into positions at Fox News, boards of directors at energy companies, and private equity firms. Zinke's spokesperson derided the rumors as 'laughably false' and belonging on the satirical website 'The Onion.' A Fox News spokesperson denied the reports." And they're always honest, so.

Ed Mazza at the Huffington Post: Lindsey Graham Awkwardly Tries to Walk Back Vow to Unleash 'Holy Hell' on Trump. "Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is attempting to explain his reversal on a 2017 threat that there would be 'holy hell to pay' if [Donald] Trump fired Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Although Sessions got the boot this week, Graham vowed instead to work with Trump 'to find a confirmable, worthy successor.' When confronted with his previous comments on Thursday, Graham chuckled. 'When was that? What year?' he asked." What a fucking shitwheel he is.

* * *

In continuing election news...

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Staff at CBS News with the AP: Democrat Kyrsten Sinema Pulls Ahead in Razor-Close Arizona Senate Race. "Democrat Kyrsten Sinema pulled ahead of Republican Martha McSally on Thursday in the Arizona Senate race by a margin of 2,000 votes. This marked the first time that Sinema has pulled ahead of McSally in the days since the election. An additional 120,000 outstanding ballots were made available from Maricopa County Thursday. The county encompasses Phoenix and some of the state's liberal enclaves. There are an 345,000 ballots that needed to be counted per a knowledgeable source with the Arizona Secretary of State's office."

Will Sommer at the Daily Beast: Republicans Freak Out as New Ballots Threaten Florida Senate Win. "As the Republican margin in Florida's U.S. Senate race narrowed and the contest headed toward a manual recount...Florida Gov. Rick Scott, who is clinging to a roughly 34,000-vote lead over Sen. Bill Nelson (D), held a press conference at the Florida governor's mansion in which he called on law enforcement to launch an investigation and announced that he and the National Republican Senate Committee were bringing a lawsuit against officials in Broward County, where many votes are still being counted. In other words, the state governor used his state-funded official residence to launch legal action against his own state's election officials about an election he was a candidate in."


Rage. Seethe. Boil.

Tom Dart at the Guardian: Black Girl Magic: 19 Black Women Ran for Judge in Texas County — and All 19 Won. "While Beto O'Rourke's bid to oust Ted Cruz for a U.S. Senate seat may have stolen midterms headlines this week, another 'Texas miracle' was under way in Harris county, where 19 African American women ran for judge — and all won. They campaigned together under the slogan 'Black Girl Magic' with the support of the Harris county Democratic party, and united for a pre-election photograph inside a courtroom. Their victories marked an unprecedented level of success for black female judicial candidates in the county, which includes Houston." YES!

Jason Burke and Abdalle Ahmed Mumin at the Guardian: 'She's Made Us Proud': Ilhan Omar's Journey from Somali Refugee to U.S. Congresswoman. "In 1995, Omar arrived in the U.S. as a refugee, settling first in Arlington, Virginia, before moving to Minneapolis in 1997. She won a seat in the state's legislature in 2016, becoming the first Somali-American lawmaker in the country. She had previously worked as a community organiser, a policy wonk for city leaders in Minneapolis, and as a leader in her local chapter of the African-American civil rights group NAACP. 'I saw her on the television last night when her election victory was projected. Well done I can say. She tried her best. Thank God she has won now,' said [Fadumo Kuusow, who still lives in a refugee settlements near the remote Kenyan town of Dadaab, where Omar was once her neighbor]."

* * *

[CN: Wildfires.] Kyla Mandel at ThinkProgress: Adding to Historic Wildfire Season, California Suffers Three Rapid Growing, Late-Season Fires.
The rapidly-spreading Camp Fire erupted Thursday and overnight effectively devastated the entire town of Paradise, home to 27,000 people northeast of San Francisco. First reported at 6:30 in the morning, by noon the fire was spreading an astonishing 80 acres per minute. As of Friday morning it had burned 20,000 acres.

"Pretty much the community of Paradise is destroyed, it's that kind of devastation," the AP reported CALFIRE Captain Scott McLean saying. "The wind that was predicted came and just wiped it out."

...At the same time as the Camp Fire, some 75,000 homes were also evacuated due to the Woolsey Fire just north of Los Angeles. Spreading across 8,000 acres, the evacuations have been described as "unprecedented for the area," LA Bureau chief Jon Passantino tweeted.

At the same time, it took just 12 minutes for the Hill Fire — burning just 9 miles away from the Woolsey Fire — to jump Highway 101, consuming 10,000 acres.

The full extent of the damage is still being assessed and as of Friday morning the fires were "zero percent contained." The three fires, all fueled by intense seasonal winds, add to an already unprecedented fire season this year.

This summer saw 16 different fires in California alone.
My god. The threat is still nowhere near over. And this is going to be our new normal, because of climate change that our president and his party refuse to even acknowledge is real.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 575

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: And Then This Happened and An Observation.

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

Shane Harris at the Washington Post: Signs of Trump-Putin Collaboration, Starting Years Before the Campaign?
The precise nature and location of that "intelligence exchange" have never been fully explained. But journalist Craig Unger thinks he may have found it, running out of the offices of Bayrock Group, a real estate development company that operated in Trump Tower in Manhattan in the early 2000s and partnered with the Trump Organization.

Based on his own reporting and the investigative work of a former federal prosecutor, Unger posits that through Bayrock, Trump was "indirectly providing Putin with a regular flow of intelligence on what the oligarchs were doing with their money in the U.S."

As the theory goes, Putin wanted to keep tabs on the billionaires — some of them former mobsters — who had made their post-Cold War fortunes on the backs of industries once owned by the state. The oligarchs, as well as other new-moneyed elites, were stashing their money in foreign real estate, including Trump properties, presumably beyond Putin's reach.

Trump, knowingly or otherwise, may have struck a side deal with the Kremlin, Unger argues: He would secretly rat out his customers to Putin, who would allow them to keep buying Trump properties. Trump got rich. Putin got eyes on where the oligarchs had hidden their wealth. Everybody won.
NB: This is just a theory, but it is a compelling one. Related Reading: Donald Trump, Wilbur Ross, and the Russians.

Meanwhile, over at the Manafort trial...

Nancy Gertner at the Washington Post: The Extraordinary Bias of the Judge in the Manafort Trial. "The performance of U.S. District Court Judge T.S. Ellis III in the trial of Paul Manafort on bank fraud and tax evasion charges has been decidedly unusual. During the trial, Ellis intervened regularly, and mainly against one side: the prosecution. The judge's interruptions occurred in the presence of the jury and on matters of substance, not courtroom conduct. He disparaged the prosecution's evidence, misstated its legal theories, even implied that prosecutors had disobeyed his orders when they had not."

FYI: Ellis was the judge in two Blackwater trials, and dismissed both of them, while seeming weirdly pally with Erik Prince (Seychelles backchanneler and brother of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos). In both cases, Ellis expressed the interesting judicial perspective that a mercenary couldn't have bad intentions. Huh.

Katelyn Polantz, Dan Berman, Marshall Cohen, Liz Stark, and Kara Scannell at CNN: Manafort Jury Returns for Day Two of Deliberations; Trump Calls Trial 'Very Sad'. "After a full day Thursday, the jury hadn't yet reached a verdict on the 18 counts of tax evasion, bank fraud and hiding foreign bank accounts brought by special counsel Robert Mueller as part of the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 US election. ...At the White House Friday, Trump decried the trial and Mueller probe. 'I think the whole Manafort trial is very sad... I think it's a very sad day for our country,' Trump said. 'He happens to be a very good person, and I think it's very sad what they've done to Paul Manafort.'"


Wildly inappropriate. And, as Andy Towle notes at Towleroad, Trump also used the occasion to predict that "the 2018 midterms would be very good for Republicans."

Nothing to worry about there. Just the United States president who was elected because his campaign and his party and the NRA and conservative Christian groups conspired with Russia to steal the election stating with confidence that the midterm elections will yield another good result for them.

I continue to be very worried about the midterms.

* * *

Kate Riga at TPM: At White House Meeting with Vets, Trump Digressed to Fight About Apocalypse Now. "Trump started normally enough, going around the room to ask for ways he could improve veterans' services. However, when one representative brought up Agent Orange, an herbicide used during the Vietnam War which has left lasting health problems for soldiers poisoned with it, Trump got off track. He asked if Agent Orange was 'that stuff from that movie.' Though he did not name the film, per the Daily Beast, attendees soon realized he was talking about the Vietnam War film Apocalypse Now. When the representatives caught on and tried to tell Trump that the film depicts the use of napalm, not Agent Orange, he dug in his heels. 'No, I think it's that stuff from that movie,' he reportedly kept saying. He then made everyone in the room voice their opinion on if he was right or not."


I have so many problems with that framing that I hardly know where to begin. This guy is reportedly thinking of running for president. If he believes we could pray Donald Trump into being a decent leader, I'm gonna take a hard pass.

[Content Note: Nativism; carcerality; self-harm] Priyanka Bhatt and Azadeh Shahshahani at Colorlines: It's Time for Atlanta to Stop Colluding with ICE. "Over the last year, dozens of detained immigrants shared harrowing stories of fleeing persecution and violence only to find themselves locked away and subjected to more inhumane treatment at [the Atlanta City Detention Center (ACDC)]. 'It was so horrible, I almost hurt myself. If I had a blade I would've cut myself,' one man said after being held in solitary confinement at ACDC for 48 hours. These stories are documented in a report from Project South and Georgia Detention Watch that was released last week. Titled 'Inside Atlanta's Immigrant Cages,' it is the result of interviewing 38 detained immigrants, speaking with a number of local immigration attorneys, touring the ACDC facility, and inspecting scores of documents obtained from the city."

[CN: Guns; white supremacy; death] Angela Helm at the Root: 'Stand Your Ground' Is for White People: Markeis McGlockton's Lawyer Says the Statute May Be Legal But It's Not Moral. "Since the Trayvon Martin case, the controversial 'stand your ground' law has actually been amended, but not in the way most opponents would like. Last June, the Republican-led Florida legislature, backed by the NRA, actually strengthened the law, shifting the burden of proof to prosecutors, making it even more difficult to indict killers who claim self-defense. ...''Stand your ground' was already inconsistently applied,' said Michele Rayner, a civil rights and defense attorney representing the McGlockton family. 'And now it's even more inconsistently applied because you have attorneys who are in court, and all the defense has to do is make a prima facie case … meaning on its face, stand your ground is applicable. And then the burden shifts to the state.' Rayner, who has practiced criminal defense in Clearwater for six years, says that in her own practice, she's seen how black clients are rarely given the option of using 'stand your ground' — especially by law enforcement."

[CN: Class warfare] Abby Baird at ThinkProgress: Trump Administration Reportedly Poised to approve Restrictive Changes to Medicaid. "The Trump administration is preparing to approve a number of changes to Medicaid — the government health care program that provides coverage to low-income people — that could leave tens of thousands of people without coverage. As Politico first reported Friday, the administration is set to approve waivers from some states that would impose work restrictions and allow questions about illegal drug use to be included on applications for Medicaid. The report comes two days after numbers out of Arkansas showed more than 5,000 people could be in jeopardy of losing their Medicaid coverage after failing to meet the state's work requirements."


Joe Romm at ThinkProgress: Fracking Is Destroying U.S. Water Supply, Warns Shocking New Study. "An alarming new study reveals fracking is quite simply destroying America's water supply. That means we are losing potable water forever in many semi-arid regions of the country, while simultaneously producing more carbon pollution that in turn is driving ever-worsening droughts in those same regions, as fracking expert Anthony Ingraffea, a professor at Cornell University, explained to ThinkProgress. The game-changing study from Duke University found that 'from 2011 to 2016, the water use per well increased up to 770 percent.' In addition, the toxic wastewater produced in the first year of production jumped up to 1440 percent."

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 453

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: On the "Trump Pulitzers" and The Collusion Continues to Be Right Out in the Open.

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

Just a perfectly normal tweet from Russian state propaganda outlet Sputnik:


Everything is fine. (Everything is not fine.)

[Content Note: Domestic violence; gang violence; nativism] Julia Preston at Politico: Trump Administration Wants to Shut Door on Abused Women.
Women in an exodus from Central America since 2014 have succeeded in winning asylum or other protections in the United States as victims of a pandemic of domestic abuse in that region. Because of recent cases that established fear of domestic violence as a legitimate basis for asylum, those claims often found more solid legal grounding in U.S. immigration court than claims of people who said they were escaping from killer gangs.

Now the Trump administration, determined to stop the stream of people to the border from Central America, is moving to curtail or close the legal avenues to protection for abused women like L.C. ...Attorney General Jeff Sessions, from his position as the top official in charge of the immigration courts, is leading a broad review to question whether domestic or sexual violence should ever be recognized as persecution that would justify protection in the United States.

...Sessions has expressed his suspicion of asylum claims based on domestic abuse or gang predation. In a speech in October to immigration judges, Sessions said asylum was meant to protect people who fled their home countries "because of persecution based on fundamental things like their religion or nationality." He said the immigration courts were "overloaded with fake claims."
Rage. Seethe. Boil. Sending women back to countries where husbands and/or gangs who want to kill them await is one of the lowest policies in an administration defined by low policies. And I never, ever, want to get pushback again from trifling men who accuse me of "hysteria" when I say that the Trump administration is killing women. The Trump administration is killing women.

[CN: Threats of violence] Staff at the Daily Beast: Stormy Daniels' Lawyer Reveals Sketch of Man Who Allegedly Threatened Her. "Stormy Daniels and her lawyer, Michael Avenatti, on Tuesday unveiled a sketch of the man who allegedly threatened the adult-film star in a parking lot in 2011. The man is purported to have warned Daniels to not speak out about her alleged affair with [Donald] Trump, she said during a recent 60 Minutes interview. 'And then he leaned around and looked at my daughter and said, 'That's a beautiful little girl. It'd be a shame if something happened to her mom.' And then he was gone,' she said."


Nick Statt at the Verge: Broadband Adviser Picked by FCC Chairman Ajit Pai Arrested on Fraud Charges. "A broadband adviser selected by Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai to run a federal advisory committee was arrested last week on claims she tricked investors into pouring money into a multimillion-dollar investment fraud scheme, according to the Wall Street Journal. The adviser, Elizabeth Pierce, is the former chief executive of Quintillion, an Alaska-based fiber optic cable provider operating out of Anchorage. In her capacity as CEO, Pierce allegedly raised more than $250 million from two New York-based investment companies using forged contracts with other companies guaranteeing hundreds of millions of dollars in future revenue. Pierce resigned from Quintillion in August of last year, and she stepped down from her role in Pai's Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee the following month." They're all corrupt.

Sara Ganim at CNN: Ryan Zinke Refers to Himself as a Geologist; That's a Job He's Never Held. "Since becoming leader of the 70,000-employee agency, Zinke has suggested that he was a geologist or former geologist at least 40 times in public settings, including many under oath before Congress. ...Zinke, however, has never held a job as a geologist. ...Interior spokeswoman Heather Swift provided this statement to CNN: 'Ryan Zinke graduated with honors with a B.S. in Geology.' ...Several geologists who CNN has spoken with have flagged his comments as disingenuous, saying that someone with a 34-year-old degree who never worked in the field is not considered a geologist." They're all liars.

Addy Baird at ThinkProgress: GOP Congressman Charlie Dent Announces His Resignation. "Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA) announced this week that he would be resigning from the House of Representatives in May, according to a statement his office released Tuesday morning. ...Dent previously served as the chairman of the House Ethics Committee. Last September, he announced his retirement, but his announcement Tuesday means he will not even serve out his term." They're all cowards.

Apart from the fact that the new districts in Pennsylvania mean Dent (and Ryan Costello) will have an uphill reelection battle, all the Republicans who have decided not to seek reelection are clearly worried that Trump is going to do something they can't ignore, and instead of doing the right thing before they abandon ship, they're jumping ship even earlier so they don't even have to face the expectation. Weasels.

I mean, what's going to happen when Trump fires Rosenstein after all these dudes have called that the line in the sand, or the red line, or whatever? They're definitely not going to do anything about it! I guess they're hoping that the media won't remember their earlier statements, and the media will probably oblige.


Staff at CBS News: Cambridge Analytica Boss Pulls out of Parliamentary Grilling. It's definitely newsworthy that Alexander Nix continues to try to evade accountability, but this may be the even bigger news item, buried deep in the piece: "But on Tuesday, former Cambridge Analytica employee Brittany Kaiser told British lawmakers in written testimony that it wasn't just one app that harvested the data eventually handed over to her former company, but in fact 'a wide range of surveys which were done by CA or its partners.' Until Tuesday, all of the misused data was believed to have come from Facebook users who filled out the questionnaire on the 'This Is Your Digital Life' app. ...But Kaiser said Tuesday that, given Cambridge Analytica's use of at least two other separate personality quiz apps, 'it can be inferred or implied that there were many additional individuals as opposed to just the ones through Aleksandr Kogan's test (This Is Your Digital Life) whose (data) may have been compromised.'"

[CN: Nativism; exploitation] Esther Yu Hsi Lee at ThinkProgress: Immigrants Allegedly Forced to Work in Detention Centers for $1 a Day.
Detainees held at a privately-operated immigration detention center in Georgia are forced to work at the facility for pitiful pay and are threatened with serious harm if they refuse to "volunteer" to work, according to a class-action lawsuit filed Tuesday against the private prison operator CoreCivic.

According to the lawsuit filed on behalf of current and formerly detained immigrants, the CoreCivic-operated Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin solicits "volunteers," or immigrants detainees, to "mop, sweep, and wax floors; scrub toilets and showers; wash dishes; do laundry, clean medical facilities; and cook and prepare food and beverages" for the nearly 2,000-detainee population.

Detainees are then paid between $1 and $4 per day and occasionally slightly more for double shifts. The lawsuit states that immigrant detainees reportedly do not have a choice to refuse because the facility has a "policy of threatening detained immigrants until they comply."
[CN: Nativism] Sheila Burke at the AP: Lawyers: Journalist Was Detained by ICE Because of Reporting. "Lawyers for a journalist who was arrested in Tennessee and then placed in an immigration detention facility said Monday that the government was trying to suppress his reporting and violated his rights of freedom of speech and the press. Attorneys with the Southern Poverty Law Center have asked a federal court to release Manuel Duran Ortega, a reporter who was arrested earlier this month in Memphis... Duran, 42, was working for Spanish-language media outlet Memphis Noticias and has written stories raising questions about local police and their cooperation with federal immigration officials, one of his attorneys at the SPLC said."

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 440

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: Yesterday Was a Troubling Day in Mueller News and On Trump Being an Anonymous Source and the Political Press Being Stenographers for an Authoritarian Liar and The Trade War Is Escalating Quickly.

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

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated 50 years ago today. Given his prominent role in United States social justice movements and resistance, I want to lead off today's We Resist thread with this beautiful, wrenching, must-read piece by Kirsten West Savali at the Root, accompanying a must-watch video: 'We've Gotta March Again': Sanitation Workers Remember Martin Luther King Jr.'s Last Battle Cry.
Despite the relentless antagonism and mockery he faced, he came back to Memphis because he had made a promise to the sanitation strikers.

Dr. King had committed himself to their struggle, because within it, he saw the struggle of every black person in this nation: the dehumanizing, back-breaking, soul-destroying realization that white supremacy demanded that they remain in poverty, in servitude, and, if all else failed, dead and buried.

So, despite his bone-deep weariness, he spoke before a crowd of thousands on the night before the day he would be assassinated on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, getting them ready for the next march in solidarity with the sanitation strikers scheduled to take place on April 8, 1968.
And here is another recommended piece by Senator Kamala Harris at the Grio: On Martin Luther King's Dream and Continuing Fight for Equality. "The genius of Dr. King was that he was both aspirational and a realist. He had the deep faith to believe that we could live up to the ideals embodied in the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, that we are all and should be treated as equals. But he also understood that we would not get there overnight or through faith alone. And he was able to help people appreciate how his cause was theirs as well."

And Rev. Jesse Jackson, who was on the balcony with Rev. King when he was killed, writes in a New York Times op-ed:
As the nation prepares to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., we should dwell not merely on how Dr. King died but also on how he lived.

He mobilized mass action to win a public accommodations bill and the right to vote. He led the Montgomery bus boycott and navigated police terror in Birmingham. He got us over the bloodstained bridge in Selma and survived the rocks and bottles and hatred in Chicago. He globalized our struggle to end the war in Vietnam.

How he lived is why he died.

...America loathes marchers but loves martyrs. The bullet in Memphis made Dr. King a martyr for the ages.

We owe it to Dr. King — and to our children and grandchildren — to commemorate the man in full: a radical, ecumenical, antiwar, pro-immigrant, and scholarly champion of the poor who spent much more time marching and going to jail for liberation and justice than he ever spent dreaming about it.

...We are in a battle for the soul of America, and it's not enough to admire Dr. King. To admire him is to reduce him to a mere celebrity. It requires no commitment, no action. Those who value justice and equality must have the will and courage to follow him. They must be ready to sacrifice.

The struggle continues.
I'm all in.

* * *

Esther Yu Hsi Lee at ThinkProgress: 'I Just Didn't Think That Our Legislature Would Hate Us This Much': Oklahoma Teachers Speak Out. "'I didn't go into [teaching] for money or anything like that, but I just didn't think that our legislature would hate us this much,' Barger said. She had waited three hours in line earlier in the day along with thousands of other rallygoers to get into the State Capitol Building while being 'whipped around' by gusty 20 to 30 mph winds. 'I just feel like in the 19 years I've been teaching, that the Oklahoma government has systematically just cut and cut and cut and given us no respect. We're almost a hated profession in this state.'"

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Thomas Novelly, Mandy McLaren, and Morgan Watkins at USA Today: All 120 County School Districts Close in Kentucky as Teachers Rally Against Bill That Would Hurt Their Pensions. "All of Kentucky's public schools were closed Monday as thousands of teachers protested a surprise pension reform bill at the state Capitol. ...Many parents brought their children — babies, preteens, high-schoolers — with them to the protest. A trio of young girls were part of the chanting crowd, excitedly yelling, 'This is what democracy looks like!' Late Thursday, the Kentucky Legislature passed Senate Bill 151 to overhaul the state's pension system. Teachers say they were not allowed public access to the process that produced the 291-page bill, and more than 500 teachers flooded the Capitol the next day to protest."

Dana Goldstein at the New York Times: Why Teachers Are Walking Out and What to Expect. "Teachers in multiple states have walked off the job or are making plans to do so after a statewide teachers' strike in West Virginia last month yielded a pay raise and significant public support. Oklahoma teachers clogged the State Capitol on Tuesday, protesting budget cuts and demanding higher wages. It was the second day of a widespread walkout. At least 50 school districts were closed across the state, including those in Oklahoma City and Tulsa. The protests continued in Kentucky, too, where many teachers are on spring break but have swarmed their own Capitol to denounce a pension reform bill. In Arizona, teacher organizers have mounted a grass-roots effort to recruit school representatives across the state, and are particularly interested in building support in rural areas for a potential statewide walkout."

I take up space in solidarity with public educators across the country who want a livable wage in exchange for their labor and the benefits they have been promised as part of their contracts.

* * *

Frank Bajak at the AP: U.S. Suspects Cellphone Spying Devices in D.C.
For the first time, the U.S. government has publicly acknowledged the existence in Washington of what appear to be rogue devices that foreign spies and criminals could be using to track individual cellphones and intercept calls and messages.

The use of what are known as cellphone-site simulators by foreign powers has long been a concern, but American intelligence and law enforcement agencies — which use such eavesdropping equipment themselves — have been silent on the issue until now.

In a March 26 letter to Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the Department of Homeland Security acknowledged that last year it identified suspected unauthorized cell-site simulators in the nation's capital. The agency said it had not determined the type of devices in use or who might have been operating them. Nor did it say how many it detected or where.

The agency's response, obtained by The Associated Press from Wyden's office, suggests little has been done about such equipment, known popularly as Stingrays after a brand common among U.S. police departments. The Federal Communications Commission, which regulates the nation's airwaves, formed a task force on the subject four years ago, but it never produced a report and no longer meets regularly.
Oh.


Meanwhile... Joe Uchill at Axios: Outgoing White House Emails Not Protected by Verification System. "The security advocacy group Global Cyber Alliance tested the 26 email domains managed by the Executive Office of the President and found that only one fully implements a security protocol that verifies the emails as genuinely from the White House. Of the 26 domains, 18 are not in compliance with a Department of Homeland Security directive to implement that protocol. Why it matters: Imagine the havoc someone could cause sending misinformation from a presidential aide's account: Such fraudulent messages could be used in phishing campaigns, to spread misinformation to careless reporters, or to embarrass White House employees by sending fake tirades under their names."

I can imagine that! In fact, I imagined precisely that scenario when Hope Hicks casually testified that her email was hacked. Cough.

* * *

[CN: Gun violence] Yesterday, a 39-year-old woman named Nasim Aghdam entered YouTube's headquarters with a gun and began shooting. She shot three people, none fatally, before killing herself. Although early reports suggested she had shot "her boyfriend," San Bruno police later stated that "at this time there is no evidence that the shooter knew the victims of this shooting or that individuals were specifically targeted."

Aghdam's family had reported her missing, and her father "told the Mercury News that he informed authorities his daughter might be going to YouTube because she 'hated' the company."

The police located her in a Mountain View parking lot, sleeping in her car. In a statement, they say: "The woman confirmed her identity to us and answered subsequent questions. At the conclusion of our discussion, her family was notified that she had been located."

After the police told them where she had been located, her brother Googled the location and discovered it was near YouTube HQ, prompting him to quickly call back the police with another warning:
"I Googled 'Mountain View' and it was close to YouTube headquarters, and she had a problem with YouTube," her brother said. "So I called that cop again and told him there's a reason she went all the way from San Diego to there, so she might do something."

He said police told the family they would keep an eye on her, but 12 hours later, the shooting happened.

"So they didn't do anything and she got killed," her brother said. "And three or four more people got hurt."
There absolutely must be an investigation into whether the police should have done more, given Aghdam's family's multiple warnings and her plethoric posts on social media detailing her grievances with YouTube.

But still this is another situation in which perhaps the police did all they were legally able to do. Again what we're left with is this: Perhaps the only crack through which Nasim Aghdam fell was legal gun access.

I hope that her victims have access to the resources they need to make full recoveries. I am so sad and so angry that they were harmed.

* * *


[CN: Nativism; carcerality] Tina Vasquez at Rewire: ICE Held Teen Girl in Majority-Male Detention Center for More Than a Month. "On the afternoon of March 23, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) released a 15-year-old girl and her father from the Berks County Residential Facility, one of three remaining family detention centers in the nation. Berks held the pair for 32 days and for a bulk of the young girl's detainment, she told Rewire.News, she was the only female in an otherwise all-male facility. ...Astrid turned 15 while in Berks and for her birthday, two of her teachers from Easton Area Middle School came to visit her bearing gifts. Anticipating she needed personal items in detention, one of her teachers brought her a large bath towel. According to Donohoe, the teen was thrilled to have a towel that 'covered her body.'" Rage seethe boil.

[CN: Nativism] Alfonso Serrano at Colorlines: Department of Justice Sets Quotas for Immigration Judges to Speed Up Deportations. "On Friday (March 30), the Department of Justice (DOJ) unveiled new production quotas for immigration judges aimed at expediting deportations. The directive will require judges to clear 700 cases a year or face negative performance reviews. The announcement comes as the Trump administration weighs other measures that would speed up deportations of children arrested at the border. ...[I]mmigration judges — and the union that represents them — expressed concern that immigration cases, which vary in complexity, will be rushed through the court system, jeopardizing judicial independence and integrity. 'This is a recipe for disaster,' A. Ashley Tabaddor, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges, told the The Journal." Fucking hell.

[CN: Birtherism] Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: Trump Appointee Resigns for Promoting Conspiracy Theory Trump Popularized. "A Trump administration appointee at the Department of Defense announced his resignation Tuesday after a CNN report revealed that he posted conspiracy theories about President Barack Obama's place of birth and shared a video that claimed Obama was the Antichrist. The appointee, Todd Johnson, is a former Trump campaign New Mexico state director who joined the Defense Department as an advanced officer in 2017." Jesus fucking Jones, this administration.

[CN: Animal endangerment] Darryl Fears at the Washington Post: A Fierce Opponent of the Endangered Species Act Is Picked to Oversee Interior's Wildlife Policy. "Susan Combs, a former Texas state official who compared proposed endangered species listings to 'incoming Scud missiles' and continued to fight the Endangered Species Act after she left government, now has a role in overseeing federal wildlife policy. Combs was selected by Interior Department Secretary Ryan Zinke as acting secretary for fish, wildlife, and parks. Zinke made the move after his bid to make her an assistant secretary for policy, management, and budget stalled in the Senate."

Maggie Fox at NBC News: 'Nightmare Bacteria' Are Trying to Spread in the U.S., CDC Says. "A new program for testing suspect bacteria turned up unusual antibiotic-resistance genes 221 times in 2017, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. And 11 percent of people screened for these superbugs carried them, even though they had no symptoms, the CDC said. 'CDC's study found several dangerous pathogens, hiding in plain sight, that can cause infections that are difficult or impossible to treat,' said the CDC's Dr. Anne Schuchat. 'While they are appearing all over the place, an aggressive approach can snuff them out.'" If only we had a government that would actually support that! Oh well. Time to become a doomsday prepper.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 435

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: On Roseanne and People Are Shocked, Confused That Trump Occasionally Agrees to Look Like He Cares About Russian Aggression.

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

Daniel Dale at the Toronto Star: Minute by Minute at Donald Trump's Rambling Ohio 'Infrastructure' Speech. "He had a lot to say. And most of it was false, strange, outlandish, or confusing. The speech, to Ohio workers, was supposed to be about infrastructure, but we know by now that Trump's supposed infrastructure events are almost never actually about infrastructure. As usual, he meandered freely — to make dramatic statements about the Middle East and the Koreas, to disparage Hillary Clinton, to declare his ignorance of what a community college is, and, eventually, to express excitement about the ratings of the sitcom Roseanne. Here's what happened..." A must-read.

John Light at TPM: Trial Run for a Purge? "Yesterday morning, we published a scoop by Alice Ollstein: Congressional Democrats, she reported, are demanding an investigation into Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke's order last summer to reassign dozens of top-level DOI career employees. His choice of who to reassign, Democrats allege, may have been racially discriminatory, in addition to being politically motivated. Government investigators are also currently looking into whether these reassignments may have broken laws protecting civil servants. ...If investigators uphold Zinke's decision to reassign and marginalize DOI employees, one whistleblower told her, it could give the green light for a government-wide purge. 'The concern is that if you let this one fly, they won't hold back,' Joel Clement, a DOI climate scientist who was reassigned to the accounting office, told Alice."

Stephanie Kirchgaessner at the Guardian: FBI Questions Ted Malloch, Trump Campaign Figure and Farage Ally.
A controversial London-based academic with close ties to Nigel Farage has been detained by the FBI upon arrival in the U.S. and issued a subpoena to testify before Robert Mueller, the special counsel who is investigating possible collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.

Ted Malloch, an American touted last year as a possible candidate to serve as U.S. ambassador to the E.U., said he was interrogated by the FBI at Boston's Logan airport on Wednesday following a flight from London and questioned about his involvement in the Trump campaign.

In a statement sent to the Guardian, Malloch, who described himself as a policy wonk and defender of Trump, said the FBI also asked him about his relationship with Roger Stone, the Republican strategist, and whether he had ever visited the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where the Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has resided for nearly six years.

In a detailed statement about the experience, which he described as bewildering and intimidating at times, Malloch said the federal agents who stopped him and separated him from his wife "seemed to know everything about me" and warned him that lying to the FBI was a felony. In the statement Malloch denied having any Russia contacts.

...News of Malloch's detention by the FBI and subpoena was first reported by the far-right conspiracy theory website InfoWars after the controversial contributor Jerome Corsi said an alarmed Malloch had called him during the FBI interview.
Imagine being a person who is detained by the FBI and questioned about possible collusion with Russia, and the first person you call is a dipshit who works for Infowars. Good grief.

Jeremy Kahn at Bloomberg: Cambridge Analytica Affiliate Gave John Bolton Facebook Data, Documents Indicate. "A British company at the heart of the Facebook Inc. data-privacy scandal agreed to give a political action committee founded by John Bolton, [Donald] Trump's newly appointed national security adviser, data harvested from millions of Facebook users, documents released by Parliament show." So, the new National Security Advisor may have conspired illegally to influence the outcome of the election. Cool.

Ryan Mac, Charlie Warzel, and Alex Kantrowitz at BuzzFeed: Growth at Any Cost: Top Facebook Executive Defended Data Collection in 2016 Memo — and Warned That Facebook Could Get People Killed.
On June 18, 2016, one of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's most trusted lieutenants circulated an extraordinary memo weighing the costs of the company's relentless quest for growth.

"We connect people. Period. That's why all the work we do in growth is justified. All the questionable contact importing practices. All the subtle language that helps people stay searchable by friends. All of the work we do to bring more communication in. The work we will likely have to do in China some day. All of it," VP Andrew 'Boz' Bosworth wrote.

"So we connect more people," he wrote in another section of the memo. "That can be bad if they make it negative. Maybe it costs someone a life by exposing someone to bullies."

"Maybe someone dies in a terrorist attack coordinated on our tools."

The explosive internal memo is titled "The Ugly," and has not been previously circulated outside the Silicon Valley social media giant.

The Bosworth memo reveals the extent to which Facebook's leadership understood the physical and social risks the platform's products carried — even as the company downplayed those risks in public.
Fucking hell.

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism] Tal Kopan at CNN: U.S. to Require Would-Be Immigrants to Turn over Social Media Handles. "The Trump administration plans to require immigrants applying to come to the United States to submit five years of social media history, it announced Thursday, setting up a potential scouring of their Twitter and Facebook histories. ...According to notices submitted by the State Department on Thursday, set for formal publication on Friday, the government plans to require nearly all visa applicants to the U.S. to submit five years of social media handles for specific platforms identified by the government — and with an option to list handles for other platforms not explicitly required. The administration expects the move to affect nearly 15 million would-be immigrants to the United States, according to the documents."

If you're thinking, "This is fucking terrible — but haven't I heard this before?" you are correct! Back in June of last year, I covered the proposal of this policy. At the time, there was an enormous amount of pushback from civil rights groups, but now, nearly a year later, the administration is moving ahead with the plan, and today's announcement includes the disclosure of a 60-day public comment period.


So, basically: They proposed the rule last year, let everyone get super pissed about it, and now are quietly opening the 60-day comment period, while hopefully no one is looking.

Comments can be sent to PRA_BurdenComments@state.gov.

* * *


Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: The Chief Justice of the United States Has No Clue How Elections Work. "The Chief Justice of the United States is allergic to political science. He harbors numerous misconceptions about how voters behave and how they think. And these misconceptions often form the basis for his judicial decisions. With Chief Justice John Roberts poised to become the Supreme Court's crucial 'swing vote' if any of the five justices to his left leave Court, these misconceptions could soon weave themselves into the way the court interprets the Constitution. The laws governing America's elections — our right to choose our own leaders, rather than having them chosen for us — could soon bend to one man's weak understanding of how elections work."

[CN: War on agency] Teddy Wilson at Rewire: Kentucky Republicans Ignore Court Decisions, Ban Common Abortion Procedure. "The Kentucky legislature on Tuesday gave final approval for a ban on the most common type of second trimester abortion care, as similar laws have been blocked by federal and state courts. ...HB 454, sponsored by Rep. Addia Wuchner (R-Florence), prohibits a physician from performing an abortion procedure known as dilation and evacuation (D and E), the most common method of performing second-trimester abortions. The provisions were based on copycat legislation drafted by the National Right to Life Committee, an anti-choice organization that has lobbied GOP lawmakers in eight states to pass similar bills."

Natasha Geiling at ThinkProgress: Trump Administration Determined to Move Ahead with Arctic Drilling. "On Thursday, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) officially began soliciting comments from the oil and gas industry for areas of the Beaufort Sea that might be open to lease late next year, following the release of the administration's finalized offshore plan. But environmental and conservation groups warn that the call for potential lease areas is premature, since the administration hasn't even released its final five-year proposal. Soliciting industry advice on what areas are of interest, they contend, proves that the administration has a predetermined outcome for the Arctic Ocean."

* * *

And finally, I am tired.


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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 363

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: Maybe Let's Not Empower Trump to Use Nukes and Trump Administration Revives the "Conscience Clause".

Remember how Steve Bannon was scheduled to testify yesterday before the House Intelligence Committee as part of its inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 election? Yeah, well, it went great! (It did not go great.)


I love how 13 days ago, Trump issued a statement that said, in part, "Steve was a staffer who worked for me after I had already won the nomination." Now that lowly "staffer" is so important that the White House has to control his response to Congressional questioning!

Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Steve Bannon Will Tell All to Robert Mueller, Source Says. "Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon broke some bad news to House investigators Tuesday, announcing that the White House had invoked executive privilege to keep him from answering many of their questions. But executive privilege — the president's right to keep certain information from the public so he can have frank conversations with aides — will not keep Steve Bannon from sharing information with special counsel Robert Mueller's team, according to a person familiar with the situation. 'Mueller will hear everything Bannon has to say,' said the source, who is familiar with Bannon's thinking."

I'll believe that when I read about it in actual unredacted transcripts issued by Bob Mueller's office.

* * *

Eric Trump is famously not very bright. But this was pretty disastrous even by the rock bottom standards he's set for himself:


Presumably not a complete list of everyone Eric Trump has ever met in his entire life.

* * *

In yet another example of how decent and competent people don't want to work for or with the Trump administration, so we're increasingly governed by unethical shitheads... Juliet Eilperin at the Washington Post: Nearly All Members of National Park Service Advisory Panel Resign in Frustration. "More than three-quarters of the members of a federally chartered board advising the National Park Service have quit out of frustration that Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke had refused to meet with them or convene a single meeting last year. The resignation of 10 out of 12 National Park System Advisory Board members leaves the federal government without a functioning body to designate national historic or natural landmarks." Welp.

Jason Leopold and Anthony Cormier at BuzzFeed: Investigators Are Scrutinizing Newly Uncovered Payments by the Russian Embassy.
Officials investigating the Kremlin's interference in the 2016 US presidential election are scrutinizing newly uncovered financial transactions between the Russian government and people or businesses inside the United States.

Records exclusively reviewed by BuzzFeed News also show years of Russian financial activity within the US that bankers and federal law enforcement officials deemed suspicious, raising concerns about how the Kremlin's diplomats operated here long before the 2016 election.

Special counsel Robert Mueller's team, charged with investigating Russian election interference and possible collusion by the Trump campaign, is examining these transactions and others by Russian diplomatic personnel, according to a US official with knowledge of the inquiry. The special counsel has broad authority to investigate "any matters" that "may arise" from his investigation, and the official said Mueller's probe is following leads on suspicious Russian financial activity that may range far beyond the election.
One of the transactions being investigated is a $120,000 payment made to former Russian Ambassador to the U.S. Sergey Kislyak ten days after the election of Donald Trump. JFC.

In Touch has published a report that Stormy Daniels, the woman whom Donald Trump is alleged to have paid off to keep silent, had an affair with Trump soon after First Lady Melania Trump gave birth to their son, Barron. At ThinkProgress, Judd Legum explains why this story matters, and, to my mind, this is the most important point: "The story suggests Trump is vulnerable to blackmail and extortion. According to reports, Daniels was able to extract a $130,000 payment to keep quiet about her affair with Trump. How many other women have stories about Trump that he does not want told? This is potentially a very dangerous predicament for a sitting president. ...Trump, reportedly, has things to hide and is willing to go to substantial lengths to hide them."

[Content Note: Misogyny; class warfare] Heidi Shierholz, David Cooper, Julia Wolfe, and Ben Zipperer at the Economic Policy Institute: Women Would Lose $4.6 Billion in Earned Tips If the Administration's 'Tip Stealing' Rule Is Finalized. "The Department of Labor (DOL) has proposed a rule that would make it legal for employers to pocket their workers' tips, as long as they pay those workers at least the minimum wage. The proposed rule rescinds portions of longstanding DOL regulations that prohibit employers from taking tips. We estimate that if the rule is finalized, every year workers will lose $5.8 billion in tips, as tips are shifted from workers to employers. Of the $5.8 billion, nearly 80 percent — $4.6 billion — would be taken from women who are working in tipped jobs."

[CN: Nativism; white supremacy] Adrienne Mahsa Varkiani at ThinkProgress: Media Coverage of Trump's Claim That He Wants Immigrants from 'Everywhere' Is Laughable. "On Tuesday, Trump was asked by CNN's Jim Acosta whether he wants more immigrants from Norway. He replied that he actually wants immigrants from 'everywhere.' ...But without any actual evidence to support his claim, much of the media decided to take Trump's new comments on face value. 'Trump says he wants immigrants from 'everywhere,'' Reuters reported Tuesday, with no context of the president's previous rhetoric or policies before last week's report. CNN published another piece with the exact same headline, and again mentioned none of the president's previous rhetoric or policies. Even publications that offered some context published nearly identical headlines, which made it seem like a president who ran a virulently anti-immigration campaign and has implemented anti-immigrant and anti-refugee policies as president, does indeed want to accept them now."

[CN: Nativism; abuse] Rory Carroll at the Guardian: U.S. Border Patrol Routinely Sabotages Water Left for Migrants, Report Says. "United States border patrol agents routinely vandalise containers of water and other supplies left in the Arizona desert for migrants, condemning people to die of thirst in baking temperatures, according to two humanitarian groups. In a report published Wednesday, the Tucson-based groups said the agents committed the alleged sabotage with impunity in an attempt to deter and punish people who illegally cross from Mexico. Volunteers found water gallons vandalised 415 times, on average twice a week, in an 800 sq mile patch of Sonoran desert south-west of Tucson, from March 2012 to December 2015, the report said. The damage affected 3,586 gallons. The report also accused border patrol agents of vandalising food and blankets and harassing volunteers in the field."

[CN: Nativism; sexual assault; self-harm] Tina Vasquez at Rewire: Migrant Attempts Suicide After Forced to Interact with Alleged Abuser. "An asylum-seeking Salvadoran woman, whose allegations of repeated sexual assault by a guard at the T. Don Hutto Detention Center in Texas went largely ignored, has attempted suicide. Laura Monterrosa, who has been detained at Hutto since May 2017 and alleges her abuse began in June, first went public with her allegations in November, leading to a supposed investigation by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Williamson County Sheriff's Office. In the days that followed, other women detained inside Hutto came forward with allegations of abuse. But after two interviews with officials from ICE and Williamson County in which there was a language barrier and Monterrosa initially wasn't allowed access to counsel, ICE unceremoniously announced that it found Monterrosa's allegations to be 'unsubstantiated.' The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) has since confirmed it intervened in the investigation of sexual assault allegations emerging from the long-troubled detention center."

* * *

[CN: Fat hatred; body shaming] Finally, this is a very good piece by Addy Baird at ThinkProgress: Stop Talking About Trump's Weight. "Focusing on his size is a distraction from all of the other pressing issues with his presidency, and doesn't hurt Trump nearly as much as it hurts anyone else who is fat, uncomfortable in their own skin, or struggling with their body image in any way."

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

Open Wide...