Showing posts with label Steve Bannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Bannon. Show all posts

House Judiciary Committee Will Subpoena Mueller Report

Today, Democratic chair of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Jerry Nadler, announced that the committee has scheduled a vote for Wednesday which would authorize subpoenas to obtain Special Counsel Bob Mueller's complete report.

Tomorrow marks the deadline the committee set for Attorney General Bill Barr to deliver the report to them. If that deadline passes without delivery of the report, they'll subpoena it — along with five former White House aides.

John Wagner at the Washington Post reports:

Barr pledged last week to release a redacted version by mid-April, well after Nadler's deadline. Nadler's committee is seeking to obtain the "full and complete report," which spans nearly 400 pages, as well as underlying evidence.

"As I have made clear, Congress requires the full and complete Special Counsel report, without redactions, as well as access to the underlying evidence," Nadler said in a statement Monday, in which he urged Barr to reconsider meeting his Tuesday deadline, which Republicans have criticized as arbitrary. "The full and complete report must be released to Congress without delay."

...At a news conference last week, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) expressed frustration with the way Barr has handled the report, calling it "condescending" and "arrogant."

"We do not need your interpretation. Show us the report," she said.

Nadler said Monday that his Democratic-led panel also plans to vote to authorize subpoenas for five former White House aides who might have received documents relevant to the special counsel's investigation: former White House counsel Donald McGahn; former chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon; former communications director Hope Hicks; former chief of staff Reince Priebus; and Ann Donaldson, McGahn's former chief of staff.

The five were among 81 individuals and entities to whom Nadler sent requests for documents last month as part of a larger probe into potential abuse of power by Trump.

"I am grateful to the many individuals who have cooperated with our initial request for documents," Nadler said in his statement. "Regrettably, not everyone has chosen to voluntarily cooperate with the Committee at this time. ...To this end, I have asked the Committee to authorize me to issue subpoenas, if necessary, to compel the production of documents and testimony."
The Republicans are going to stonewall House Democrats as long as they can, which may well be forever. The Democrats know that; they're doing their jobs, anyway. As well they should.

And let us note that the Republicans are stonewalling the Democrats in contravention of the will of the people, a majority of whom not only want Congress to have the full report, but want the full report to be made public.

The Republicans continue to behave as if they're not going to be accountable to voters ever again, which is notable — and deeply troubling.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me looking at Twitter on my mobile phone and reacting with horror, while standing in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

If you're like me, you CAN'T WAIT until the Democratic debates start literally a year and a half before Election Day, so you'll be super excited to hear that we've finally got some BIG NEWS on that subject! "The first Democratic debate of the 2020 presidential primary will be held on June 26 and 27 in Miami, NBC News, the host of the debate, announced on Thursday. MSNBC and Telemundo will also host. Details on the venue, moderators, and timing will be announced at a later date, NBC News said in a release."

Yep, that's right! It will be held over the course of two nights, because there are so many people running! I bet you're wondering how they'll pick who will be on the debate stage which night, and that's where things get really terrific!
The Democratic National Committee previously said the lineups for each debate will be chosen at random, not strictly from how candidates are ranked in polls. To qualify, a candidate will need to either have at least 1 percent support in three qualifying polls, or provide evidence of at least 65,000 unique donors, with a minimum of 200 different donors in at least 20 states. Already, more than a dozen Democratic candidates have launched presidential bid while other big names, like former Vice President Joe Biden, appear poised to enter the race.

If more than 20 candidates reach one of those two qualifications, the top 20 will be selected by using a separate method that rewards contenders for meeting both thresholds, followed by highest polling averages, and then the most unique donors.
DEMOCRACY!

*jumps into Christmas tree*

* * *

Yesterday, Wells Fargo CEO Tim Sloan, who oversaw the bank through a series of scams and frauds, resigned. Senator Elizabeth Warren responded to the news by tweeting: "About damn time." LOL!


Hey, speaking of Warren, her proposal to take on Big Agriculture was so good that Senator Bernie Sanders decided to push the party left by making the same case she did, except not as well and without the detailed proposal. Thanks, Bernie!

I appreciate Julián Castro's willingness to say forthrightly that Donald Trump is a liar: "The American people deserve to see what is in that report. And the truth is, unfortunately, that this administration has fudged the truth or outright lied or made exaggerations so many times that why would we believe them on this most blockbuster report about the president." Good point!

Oh boy, Mayor Pete Buttigieg is really not endearing himself to me with more of this stuff:


There is a lot wrong with that — like the fact that many marginalized people have no interest in "talking through" with Trump voters why they hate us, and that is a valid choice — but I can't even abide listening to someone suggest that people on the coasts don't believe Trump voters actually exist, because FUCK YOU my next door neighbor is a Trump voter, and I had to look at his Trump yard sign and be reminded that my next door neighbor thinks sexual assault is A-OK for months. I couldn't forget or disbelieve that Trump voters exist if I wanted to.

This type of "unity" politics in which people who are targeted by conservatives' cruel policies and interpersonal hatred are admonished to try to better understand the people who hate us has just never resonated with me, and it is even less appealing in an age of reemergent Nazism.

And, yes, I realize that Buttigieg is himself targeted by the same folks as a gay man, and he is welcome to want to "reach out" to his oppressors if that's his choice, but I'm not interested and that is my choice.

Speaking of Nazis, Politico thought it was a good idea to publish a piece about who Steve Bannon thinks would make for the strongest Democratic ticket. (Kamala Harris and Beto O'Rourke.) So, you know, that's where the political press is. Really learned a lot of good lessons from 2016.

Senators Kamala Harris and Cory Booker will address LGBTQ activists at a major Human Rights Campaign dinner in Los Angeles this weekend.

And Beto O'Rourke stood on some more stuff:


John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 686

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: Hannah Gadsby Is Very Smart and Very Good at Her Job and Democrats to Propose Gun Control Measures and Trump's Ego Makes Him So Daft About Pence.

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


Stephanie Kirchgaessner and Jon Swaine at the Guardian: Trump Aide's Appearances on RT Channel Are Focus for Russia Inquiry. "Robert Mueller is allegedly examining a Trump campaign adviser's appearances on the Kremlin-controlled broadcaster RT, offering new hints about the investigation into possible collusion between Moscow and Donald Trump's associates. Mueller's investigators have asked Ted Malloch, the London-based American academic who is also close to Nigel Farage, about his frequent appearances on RT, which U.S. intelligence authorities have called Russia's principal propaganda arm."

Elaina Plott at the Atlantic: The White House Has No Plan for Confronting the Mueller Report. "According to a half-dozen current and former White House officials, the administration has no plans in place for responding to the special counsel's findings — save for expecting a Twitter spree. The one thing they do know, Rudy Giuliani told me, is that they're going to fight. If Robert Mueller's team tries to subpoena the president, 'we're ready to resist that,' Trump's attorney said. Giuliani said it's been difficult in the past few months to even consider drafting response plans, or devote time to the 'counter-report' he claimed they were working on this summer as he and Trump confronted Mueller's written questions about the 2016 campaign. 'Answering those questions was a nightmare,' he told me. 'It took him about three weeks to do what would normally take two days.'" There is so much there to unpack. Woo.

Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Senate Intelligence Committee Grilled Steve Bannon About Cambridge Analytica. "The sources said [Senate Intelligence Committee] investigators asked [Steve Bannon] about Cambridge Analytica, the controversial and now defunct data firm he co-founded. ...The company's former chief, Alexander Nix, once offered to help WikiLeaks distribute emails stolen from Hillary Clinton, as The Daily Beast first reported. Julian Assange confirmed the overture and said he turned it down. Later, a Channel 4 News hidden-camera sting captured Nix admitting his firm used prostitutes and blackmail to try to damage its clients' political opponents. Bannon had close connections to the firm. His former patron, heiress Rebekah Mercer, was on its board and also helped fund Breitbart."


Philip Bump at the Washington Post: The Man at the Center of Fraud Probe in North Carolina May Have Been Doing This for Eight Years.
Bladen County was the only county in the 9th District in which Republican candidate Mark Harris won a majority of mailed-in absentee votes last month. As was the case with Pope's race in 2010, Harris's support in mailed-in absentee votes was more than 20 percentage points higher than his performance in the rest of the district. It was in the primary, too, when Harris earned a stunning 98 percent of the mailed-in absentee votes in Bladen.

In each election, Harris's campaign was working with a consulting firm called Red Dome Group, which hired [Leslie McCrae Dowless] for an absentee-ballot outreach program. Dowless's effort, as The Washington Post has reported, included hiring people out of an office in Bladen County to encourage voters to request absentee ballots and then allegedly collecting those ballots from voters. Dowless staffers appear to have frequently signed as witnesses to the voters' vote choices and then submitted the ballots to the state.

According to campaign finance records and data from the Federal Election Commission and the state of North Carolina, Dowless has worked on at least five campaigns since 2010 in which his candidates earned much more of the vote in Bladen County than the candidates earned elsewhere. In three races, the candidate earned less support in Bladen than outside the county.
That voter fraud that Republicans have been looking for all these years? Oh it's right in their party. Quelle surprise.

Addy Baird at ThinkProgress: All the Ways Republicans Are Working to Undermine Voters, from Wisconsin to Pennsylvania to Utah. "Republicans across the country are undermining voters, with lame duck legislatures aiming to strip power from incoming Democratic governors, threatening not to seat a state senator-elect in Pennsylvania, and refusing to implement a ballot initiative in Utah. ...A little further east, in Pennsylvania, state Sen.-elect Lindsey Williams (D) was required to provide copies of her driver's licenses, employment history, tax information, and home purchase or rental agreements, among any other documents she thinks are relevant, as Republicans claim she's lying about meeting residency requirements. Williams was given just one week, as the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette recently reported, to produce the paperwork, and Republicans are threatening not to seat her, despite the fact that she repeatedly has said that she has lived in the state for at least four years, a requirement for state senators outlined in the state constitution. Just weeks before the election, Republicans unsuccessfully tried to get her removed from the ballot."

Matt Shuham at TPM: Baldwin: Wisconsin GOP Legislators Are 'Disrespecting the Voters' with Power Grab. "Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) on Thursday excoriated Republican state lawmakers in Wisconsin for their last-minute power grab after a Democrat was elected governor. 'I do believe that the legislature is overreaching and really just disrespecting the voters of my state,' the senator said. She added later, referring to House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), who is retiring from that chamber soon: 'I hope that Speaker Ryan is still as invested as he ever was in the success of Wisconsin, so I think he absolutely should speak up about this.'" Oh, I'm pretty sure that Paul Ryan is exactly as invested as he ever was in the success of Wisconsin, lolsob.

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse] Colleen Long at the AP: 81 Migrant Children Separated from Families Since June. "The Trump administration separated 81 migrant children from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border since the June executive order that stopped the general practice amid a crackdown on illegal crossings, according to data provided by the government to The Associated Press. Despite the order and a federal judge's later ruling, immigration officials are allowed to separate a child from a parent in certain cases — serious criminal charges against a parent, concerns over the health and welfare of a child, or medical concerns. ...The government decides whether a child fits into the areas of concern, worrying advocates of the families and immigrant rights groups that are afraid parents are being falsely labeled as criminals."

[Related Reading: "Wilder, I wish you well."]

[CN: Sexual assault and harassment] Azeen Ghorayshi at BuzzFeed: Nobody Believed Neil deGrasse Tyson's First Accuser; Now There Are Three More. "With three women now making allegations on the record, the Patheos article spread far and wide, prompting Fox Broadcasting Company, which produces [Cosmos], and National Geographic, which airs it, to announce an official investigation. ...Now a fourth woman has told BuzzFeed News her experience of sexual harassment from Tyson. In January 2010, she recalled, she joined her then-boyfriend at a holiday party for employees of the American Museum of Natural History. Tyson, its most famous employee, drunkenly approached her, she said, making sexual jokes and propositioning her to join him alone in his office. ...Over the course of nearly three years, BuzzFeed News has spoken with more than 30 people for this story, including the alleged victims and their families, Cosmos crew members, and graduate students and professors who were at UT Austin 30 years ago."

[CN: Anti-choicery]


[CN: LGBTQ hatred] Staff at Towleroad: The Justice Dept's New Spokesperson Came Directly from a Leading Anti-LGBTQ Hate Group. "Kerri Kupec, new top spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Justice, came directly from anti-LGBTQ hate group Alliance Defending Freedom. Kupec was just hired as director of the DOJ's Office of Public Affairs. At ADF, she was responsible for East Coast and Supreme Court media operations. According to the Daily Beast, 'she also spent time at the White House helping with Justice Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation to the Supreme Court.'" JFC.

[CN: Carcerality] Myaisha Hayes at Colorlines: #NoMoreShackles: Why Electronic Monitoring Devices Are Another Form of Prison. "At this time, there are 5 million people under some version of correctional control — usually within the form of probation or parole. This expansion of parole in particular is ushering in a new wave of technological incarceration with a heavy reliance on electronic monitors. Electronic monitors are hardly a new invention and have been in use for at least the past 30 years. However, their usage has increased by 140 percent in the last decade. Our research shows that four large private corporations control a majority of the contracts for electronic monitoring for people on parole across the country. They make at least $200 million a year just from these contracts, and the market continues to grow."

[CN: Climate change] Staff at Yale Environment 360: Greenland Ice Sheet Melting at Fastest Rate in 350 Years. "The Greenland ice sheet is melting faster today than at any point in the last 350 years, according to a new study published in the journal Nature. The research is the first continuous, multi-century analysis of melting and runoff on the ice sheet, one of the largest drivers of sea level rise globally. ...'From a historical perspective, today's melt rates are off the charts,' Sarah Das, a glaciologist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and co-author of the new study, said in a statement. 'We found a 50 percent increase in total ice sheet meltwater runoff versus the start of the industrial era, and a 30 percent increase since the 20th century alone.'"

[CN: Animal harm]


Joseph Morton at the Omaha World-Herald: Trade Conflicts Have Cost Nebraska Economy More Than $1 Billion, Farm Bureau Says.
Nebraska farmers have lost upward of a billion dollars in revenue from ongoing trade conflicts, according to a new report issued Monday by the Nebraska Farm Bureau.

The hit to agriculture from the ongoing tariff wars has been clear for some time, but the new report uses some eye-popping numbers to illustrate the pain.

"Retaliatory tariffs make our U.S. products more expensive for international customers, meaning they buy less or buy from someplace else," Nebraska Farm Bureau President Steve Nelson said in a press release. "This report provides a clear picture of how much we've lost due to those tariffs and the need to improve our trade relations."

[Donald] Trump continues to tout the tariffs imposed, saying, in particular, that they have benefited American steel interests and rejecting the suggestion that they have contributed to problems for U.S. automakers.

..."To put a $1.2 billion loss into perspective, every person in the state of Nebraska would need to contribute $632 to cover that volume of lost dollars. That's a significant hit to our state's economy," [Jay Rempe, Nebraska Farm Bureau senior economist] said.
Goddamn.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 593

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: Brett Kavanaugh's Confirmation Hearing Begins Today and Trump's Contempt for the Law Is Boundless.

Because today is the Kavanaugh hearing, and I'm listening to that, it's impossible to research and write at the same time, so today's We Resist thread will be truncated. As always, please share whatever you've been reading in comments. Below are a few other items in the news today...

Sopan Deb and Jeremy W. Peters at the New York Times: New Yorker Festival Pulls Steve Bannon as Headliner Following High-Profile Dropouts. "Stephen K. Bannon, [Donald] Trump's former chief strategist, will no longer appear as a headliner at this year's New Yorker Festival, David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, announced in an email to the magazine's staff on Monday evening. The announcement followed several scathing rebukes and high-profile dropouts after the festival's lineup, with Mr. Bannon featured, was announced. Within 30 minutes of one another, John Mulaney, Judd Apatow, Jack Antonoff, and Jim Carrey said on social media that they would be pulling out of scheduled events at the festival."

That didn't stop a whole lot of people, including some notable New Yorker journalists, from covering themselves in disglory by defending Remnick's decision to invite Bannon in the first place.

And of course the hottest of all hot takes was how Bannon deserved to be there because liberals can't hide from ideas they don't like blah blah fart yawwwwwwwn.


Honest to Maude, the mendacious premise that right-wing ideas are censored from the public sphere has been so profoundly exploited by conservatives and their pants-shitting liberal abettors that it's one of the primary reasons we're in the situation in which we now find ourselves. It's not true, and it's never been true. It was a lie stated with the objective of getting more than their fair share of the public conversation, and I despair that there are still ostensibly smart people repeating this hogwash.

* * *


* * *

[Content Note: Nativism; family separation] Emilio Gutiérrez Soto at the Columbia Journalism Review: A Reporter Detained: On Life Inside ICE Camps. "Last year, my son and I were ordered deported from the United States. It has been a difficult time, and it is no easier to write now in the first person — something I have never done before. Until now, it has only been my role to write other people's stories. Today is different. I need to spell out some of my recent experiences, so that others will not go through these extremely degrading hardships in a foreign place where universal liberties are proclaimed and then inhumanely denied to those who would seek protection."

[CN: Nativism; family separation; sex abuse] Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: Three Salvadoran Children Experienced Sexual Violence in Arizona Shelters, Official Tells Media. "After experiencing the trauma of being separated by their families at the border, three Salvadoran children were subjected to further trauma when workers at their shelter sexually abused them, a government official from El Salvador said. The Associated Press reported that Liduvina Magarin, deputy foreign relations minister for Salvadorans overseas, told journalists of the alleged abuse of children from ages 12 to 17 on Thursday. The Salvadoran government is providing lawyers for the families should they decide to use them. These abuses allegedly took place in Arizona shelters but the shelters were not named."

[CN: Child abuse by clergy; video may autoplay at link] Frances D'Emilio at the AP/ABC News: Pope's Remedy to Those Seeking Scandal: Prayer and Silence. "Pope Francis on Monday recommended silence and prayer to counter those who 'only seek scandal,' division, and destruction in what appeared to be an indirect response to allegations that he had covered up for a U.S. cardinal embroiled in sex abuse scandals. Italian Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a former papal envoy in Washington, stunned the faithful last month by claiming Francis allegedly lifted unconfirmed Vatican sanctions against disgraced U.S. prelate Theodore McCarrick and demanding that the pope resign. 'With people lacking good will, with people who only seek scandal, who seek only division, who seek only destruction, even within the family — silence, prayer' is the path to take, Francis said in his homily during morning Mass at the Vatican hotel where he lives."

That Pope Francis imagines silence is the solution to sexual abuse and the search for accountability tells you everything you need to know about this guy.

[CN: Authoritarianism; misogyny; abuse] Davey Alba at BuzzFeed: How Duterte Used Facebook to Fuel the Philippine Drug War.
If you want to know what happens to a country that has opened itself entirely to Facebook, look to the Philippines. What happened there — what continues to happen there — is both an origin story for the weaponization of social media and a peek at its dystopian future. It's a society where, increasingly, the truth no longer matters, propaganda is ubiquitous, and lives are wrecked and people die as a result — half a world away from the Silicon Valley engineers who'd promised to connect their world.

...Duterte and his administration have railed against the mainstream media in the Philippines. Duterte has repeatedly called local news outlets "fake news." He's suggested murdered journalists must have "done something" to deserve their fate. Such statements are chilling in a country where as many as 177 media workers have been killed since 1986, according to the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines.

This miasma of inflammatory rhetoric, propaganda, and real and fake news has made a mess of the Filipino political discourse and the Philippines itself. And it's a mess we've seen before.

"The parallels between the US and the Philippines are striking ...We are a small country to Facebook. When Filipinos were being bullied and threatened systematically on their platform, there was nothing to be done," Clarissa David, a professor at the University of the Philippines who studies political communication and public opinion, told BuzzFeed News. "It was not until the same machinery was exposed in the US, linked directly to election-related activities, that the company was forced to face what it had enabled and answer for it."
Related Reading: Trump and Duterte: A Match Made in Authoritarian Hell.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 502

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: Mueller Says Manafort Attempted Witness Tampering and Trump Disinvites Eagles from White House Because He Is a Petty Little Tyrant and Children Forcibly Separated from Parents Stuck at Border Facilities; HHS Contemplates Military Sites.

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

Will Bunch at the Philly Inquirer: When Trump Went Full Dictator and No One Tried to Stop Him.
The main reason that Trump violates long-standing norms and established rules, or tells so many easily disprovable lies from the presidential podium, is because he knows that no one will stop him. And that exercise of unchallenged power isn't just a weird quirk of the Trump presidency. It is, rather, its driving force.

...Trump is wearing down the American people, one lie at a time. He is chipping away at our notion of what constitutes American justice, one crony pardon at a time. And he is eroding the foundation of our democracy, to make it so weak that by the time he makes his inevitable moves to nullify the Mueller investigation, the remaining frayed house of cards may be too weak to fight back.

Trump is doing very little with his presidency but to dictate things. He wakes up every morning and dictates lies, then he dictates arbitrary justice, and then he dictates unilateral policies — trade wars with our allies in Canada or in Europe, requiring power plants to burn dirty fuels like coal, or ripping little kids from their mommies and daddies at the border — that could never win political or legislative support, because they lack common sense or morality, or both.

Hour by hour, lie by lie, dictate by dictate, Donald Trump is becoming an American dictator. And recent days have proved what many of us have long feared: That no one knows how to stop this.
Worse yet: That no one who has the power to stop this is willing to do it. (I'm looking at you, Congressional Republicans, you fucking cowards.)

* * *

[Content Note: Child abuse] Rebekah Entralgo at ThinkProgress: United Nations Says U.S. Policy of Separating Families at the Border 'Runs Counter to Human Rights'. "Ravina Shamdasani, a spokesperson for the U.N. human rights office, said Tuesday that she had received information from U.S. civil society groups that indicated several hundred children had been separated from their parents at the border since October. 'The United States should immediately halt this practice,' she told reporters in Geneva. 'The practice of separating families amounts to arbitrary and unlawful interference in family life, and is a serious violation of the rights of the child.' She added, 'The use of immigration detention and family separation as a deterrent runs counter to human rights standards and principles.'"

[CN: White supremacy] Patrick Kingsley at the New York Times: Safe in Hungary, Viktor Orban Pushes His Message Across Europe. With the help of Steve Bannon. "In consolidating power in Hungary, Mr. Orban has recognized the huge power of media and now seems intent on trying to expand his sphere of influence. Last year, one of his closest advisers, Arpad Habony, met with Stephen K. Bannon, [Donald] Trump's former chief strategist, in Washington. The purpose of the visit, according to a person familiar with the meeting, was to discuss starting an outlet in Eastern Europe like Breitbart News, a platform often used to promote hard-edge nationalist ideas."

And, as I mentioned yesterday, this as Richard Grenell, the U.S. ambassador to Germany, gave an interview to Bannon's outlet Breitbart about how excited he is to empower the right-wing in Europe and announcing his plan to host a lunch with Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, whom Grenell called a "rock star." All of which is having the intended effect of sowing discord in Germany and further undermining the U.S.-German alliance — which, as I've been noting for more than a year, has been an explicit objective of the Krelim since WWII.

Staff at AFP: Calls Grow in Germany for Expulsion of Disputed U.S. Envoy. "'What this man is doing, is unheard of in international diplomacy,' Martin Schulz, former chief of the Social Democratic Party, told national news agency DPA. 'If a German ambassador were to say in Washington that he is there to boost the Democrats, he would have been kicked out immediately. I hope that the Kurz visit leads to Mr Grenell's short tenure as ambassador in Germany,' added Schulz... [T]he opposition far-left Linke party's chief Sahra Wagenknecht said Berlin would do better to immediately expel Grenell rather than invite him in for talks. 'Someone like U.S. ambassador Richard Grenell, who thinks he can lord over Europe and determine who is governing here, he can no longer stay in Germany as a diplomat,' Wagenknecht told Die Welt Daily. 'If the government takes the democratic sovereignty of our country seriously, then it shouldn't just invite Grenell to a chat over coffee, but expel him immediately,' she added."

And Putin smirks contentedly.

* * *

First Lady Melania Trump made her first public appearance yesterday after being out of public view for over three weeks. At least, that's what we've been told, based on some crappy cell phone video and a photo which may be her or may be Walton Goggins in a wig, for all I can tell.


But let's concede it's her. Okay. So that's reason to now ignore that the First Lady wasn't seen for three weeks without reasonable explanation?! "There she is! Let's move on!" I disagree. Because I remain worried about her safety, and her son's.

* * *


Joe Romm at ThinkProgress: Former Fox News Reporter Says Russians Colluded with Trump Campaign Through Roger Stone. No shit. "In a series of exclusive interviews, former Fox News Channel chief political correspondent Carl Cameron explained to ThinkProgress how the Russians coordinated their cyber attack on the 2016 election with the Trump campaign. 'Trump confidant Roger Stone's success was having the connections and creating the opportunities for [Russian intelligence officer] Guccifer2.0 and other Russian groups to really start taking advantage of social media and pounding these negative memes that Hillary's a crook, et cetera,' Cameron explained to ThinkProgress' Joe Romm — as related in the new book, How to Go Viral and Reach Millions." Okay.

[CN: White supremacy] Kelly Weill at the Daily Beast: Charlottesville Hate Marcher Elected by Republican Party. "An affiliate of a 'pro-white' group who marched in Charlottesville last year was elected to a Republican Party post in Washington state last week, part of his campaign to take over the GOP for the alt-right. James Allsup, 22, attended the 'Unite the Right' rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where white supremacists chanted anti-Semitic slogans and one allegedly drove a car into a crowd, killing a protester and injuring more. Allsup was filmed marching with Identity Evropa, an anti-immigrant alt-right group. ...The piece of paper certified that Allsup was now a precinct committee officer for the Whitman County, Washington Republican Party. Allsup's certificate declares that he was awarded the post after his candidacy remained uncontested for four days."

[CN: Class warfare] Alice Ollstein at TPM: Arkansas Pulls the Trigger on Nation's First-Ever Medicaid Work Requirement. "This week, Arkansas becomes the first state in the nation, and in the nation's history, to require its non-disabled adult Medicaid expansion population to work or volunteer 80 hours a month to maintain their health care benefits. Starting Tuesday, Arkansans on Medicaid have to prove that they've worked 80 hours over the previous month or that they qualify for an exemption. If they fail to do so, they'll be booted from the rolls after three months. Health care advocates in the state say they expect thousands of low-income people to lose coverage — both those who can't find work and those who can't navigate the state's online-only system for documenting their hours." Rage seethe boil.

Lawrence Hurley at Reuters: [CN: Homophobia] Gay Adoption Fight Looms after Supreme Court's Cake Ruling. "A major legal fight similar to the blockbuster Christian baker case decided by the Supreme Court on Monday is already brewing in several U.S. states over laws allowing private agencies to block gay couples from adoptions or taking in foster children. ...Nine states have laws allowing state-funded, religiously affiliated adoption agencies to refuse to place children with gay people based on religious beliefs. Republican-governed Kansas and Oklahoma passed such laws this year. Alabama, Mississippi, Michigan, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, and Virginia all have similar laws. Legal challenges to those laws, some pending in lower courts, eventually could come to the Supreme Court."

[CN: Transphobia; child abuse]


More on that: Dispatches from the Conservative Legislation Lab.

By the way, that was one of the programs objected to by Democratic Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz, whose office then-Governor Mike Pence neutered in a gross abuse of power.

[CN: Guns] Anne Branigin at the Root: This Is America: Pennsylvania School Gifts Graduating 8th-Graders with Bulletproof School Accessories. "Nationwide, graduations are an opportunity to reflect and savor accomplishments and to brightly anticipate the future. One Catholic school in Chadd's Ford, PA, in the spirit of preparing and protecting their graduating students, went a more macabre route: Gifting eighth-graders with bulletproof inserts to help keep them safe in the event of a school shooter. According to NBC News, the removable ballistic shields given to Saint Cornelius Catholic School students could turn their backpacks into bulletproof vests." Fucking hell.

[CN: Swatting; violence; guns] Bryan Menegus at Gizmodo: Home of Parkland Survivor and Activist David Hogg Swatted. "The family home of outspoken Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg was the target of a 'swatting' hoax this morning when a caller falsely claimed the address was the site of a hostage situation. Emergency services responded to the call and found there was no hostage situation, a local ABC affiliate reports. Several sheriff's office units and a police helicopter were also reportedly sent to the scene. Hogg was in Washington, D.C. at the time to accept the RFK Human Rights award."

Staff at the Daily Beast: Hackers Stole 92M User Emails from DNA Testing Site. "Hackers obtained the email addresses and hashed passwords of more than 92 million users of a genealogy and DNA testing site last October, according to a company blog post. MyHeritage officials say they learned of the breach after a security researcher informed them Monday afternoon that he had found the file on a private server. As a result of the breach, hackers obtained the email addresses of everyone who signed up for the service before Oct. 26, 2017 — but the company took care to note that user passwords remained safe." How reassuring. Just another reason to not do one of these DNA tests: The companies who offer them can't even guarantee your DNA won't be hacked!

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

Open Wide...

A Whole Lotta News, Some of Which Will Hopefully Matter Someday

There was just a whole lot of breaking news late yesterday around sundry corruption, collusion, and general trash in the Trump administration. Following is a recap of the major stories, some of which will hopefully matter at some point, as Special Counsel Bob Mueller's investigation enters its second year. Happy anniversary.

Ronan Farrow at the New Yorker: Missing Files Motivated the Leak of Michael Cohen's Financial Records.

Last week, several news outlets obtained financial records showing that Michael Cohen, [Donald] Trump's personal attorney, had used a shell company to receive payments from various firms with business before the Trump Administration. In the days since, there has been much speculation about who leaked the confidential documents, and the Treasury Department's inspector general has launched a probe to find the source. That source, a law-enforcement official, is speaking publicly for the first time, to The New Yorker, to explain the motivation: The official had grown alarmed after being unable to find two important reports on Cohen's financial activity in a government database. The official, worried that the information was being withheld from law enforcement, released the remaining documents.

The payments to Cohen that have emerged in the past week come primarily from a single document, a "suspicious-activity report" filed by First Republic Bank, where Cohen's shell company, Essential Consultants, L.L.C., maintained an account. The document detailed sums in the hundreds of thousands of dollars paid to Cohen by the pharmaceutical company Novartis, the telecommunications giant A.T. & T., and an investment firm with ties to the Russian oligarch Viktor Vekselberg.

The report also refers to two previous suspicious-activity reports, or sars, that the bank had filed, which documented even larger flows of questionable money into Cohen's account. Those two reports detail more than three million dollars in additional transactions — triple the amount in the report released last week. Which individuals or corporations were involved remains a mystery. But, according to the official who leaked the report, these sars were absent from the database maintained by the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or fincen. The official, who has spent a career in law enforcement, told me, "I have never seen something pulled off the system. ...That system is a safeguard for the bank. It's a stockpile of information. When something's not there that should be, I immediately became concerned." The official added, "That's why I came forward."

Seven former government officials and other experts familiar with the Treasury Department's fincen database expressed varying levels of concern about the missing reports. Some speculated that fincen may have restricted access to the reports due to the sensitivity of their content, which they said would be nearly unprecedented. One called the possibility "explosive." A record-retention policy on fincen's Web site notes that false documents or those "deemed highly sensitive" and "requiring strict limitations on access" may be transferred out of its master file. Nevertheless, a former prosecutor who spent years working with the fincen database said that she knew of no mechanism for restricting access to sars. She speculated that fincen may have taken the extraordinary step of restricting access "because of the highly sensitive nature of a potential investigation. It may be that someone reached out to fincento ask to limit disclosure of certain sars related to an investigation, whether it was the special counsel or the Southern District of New York." (The special counsel, Robert Mueller, is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 Presidential election. The Southern District is investigating Cohen, and the F.B.I. raided his office and hotel room last month.)

Whatever the explanation for the missing reports, the appearance that some, but not all, had been removed or restricted troubled the official who released the report last week. "Why just those two missing?" the official, who feared that the contents of those two reports might be permanently withheld, said. "That's what alarms me the most."
There is much more at the link. Clearly, there is the possibility that someone acting on orders from Donald Trump removed the reports, which would certainly constitute an attempt to obstruct justice.

Hunter Walker and Brett Arnold at Yahoo News: Michael Cohen's Efforts to Build a Trump Tower in Moscow Went on Longer Than He Has Previously Acknowledged. "Prosecutors and congressional investigators have obtained text messages and emails showing that [Donald] Trump's personal attorney, Michael Cohen, was working on a deal for a Trump Tower in Moscow far later than Cohen has previously acknowledged. The communications show that as late as May 2016, around the time Trump was clinching the Republican nomination, Cohen was considering a trip to Russia to meet about the project with high-level government officials, business leaders, and bankers. ...In a statement to Congress, Cohen claimed he gave up on the project in late January 2016, when he determined the 'proposal was not feasible for a variety of business reasons and should not be pursued further.' However, Yahoo News has learned that text messages and emails that Sater provided to the government seem to contradict Cohen's version of events."

Karen DeYoung, Josh Dawsey, and Rosalind S. Helderman at the Washington Post: Trump's Personal Attorney Solicited $1 Million from Government of Qatar. "Michael Cohen, [Donald] Trump's personal attorney, solicited a payment of at least $1 million from the government of Qatar in late 2016, in exchange for access to and advice about the then-incoming administration, according to the recipient of the offer and several others with knowledge of the episode. The offer, which Qatar declined, came on the margins of a Dec. 12 meeting that year at Trump Tower between the Persian Gulf state's foreign minister and Michael Flynn, who became Trump's first national security adviser. Stephen K. Bannon, who became White House chief strategist, also attended."

Shawn Boburg and Aaron C. Davis at the Washington Post: FBI Agents Said to Be Probing Michael Cohen's Deal with Korean Firm. "A California man who says he served as a translator last year for Michael Cohen and a South Korean aerospace firm that paid Cohen's company $150,000 said Tuesday that FBI agents recently interviewed him. Mark Ko said in an email to The Washington Post that he spoke with the FBI about the arrangement 'a few weeks ago.' Ko declined to provide details about investigators' inquiries and said he was unsure whether the agents were part of the probe led by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. Ko's statement is the first indication that federal authorities are examining Cohen's contract with Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) — one of several companies with substantial business before the U.S. government that hired Cohen, [Donald] Trump's personal attorney and longtime legal fixer, after the 2016 election."

Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, and Nicholas Fandos at the New York Times: Code Name Crossfire Hurricane: The Secret Origins of the Trump Investigation. "Within hours of opening an investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia in the summer of 2016, the F.B.I. dispatched a pair of agents to London on a mission so secretive that all but a handful of officials were kept in the dark. ...[A] small group of F.B.I. officials knew it by its code name: Crossfire Hurricane. ...Those decisions [regarding the investigation of Hillary Clinton's email server] stand in contrast to the F.B.I.'s handling of Crossfire Hurricane. Not only did agents in that case fall back to their typical policy of silence, but interviews with a dozen current and former government officials and a review of documents show that the F.B.I. was even more circumspect in that case than has been previously known."

Dana Bash at CNN: Giuliani: Mueller's Team Told Trump's Lawyers They Can't Indict a President.

In totally unsurprising news, that was bullshit.


Mark Hosenball at Reuters: Mueller Issues Grand Jury Subpoenas to Trump Adviser's Social Media Consultant. "The subpoenas were delivered late last week to lawyers representing Jason Sullivan, a social media and Twitter specialist [longtime Donald Trump adviser Roger Stone] hired to work for an independent political action committee he set up to support Trump, Knut Johnson, a lawyer for Sullivan, told Reuters on Tuesday. The subpoenas suggest that Mueller, who is probing Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, is focusing in part on Stone and whether he might have had advance knowledge of material allegedly hacked by Russian intelligence and sent to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who published it."

Olivia Solon at the Guardian: Cambridge Analytica Whistleblower Says Bannon Wanted to Suppress Voters. "Former White House senior strategist Steve Bannon and billionaire Robert Mercer sought Cambridge Analytica's political ad targeting technology as part of an 'arsenal of weapons to fight a culture war,' according to whistleblower Christopher Wylie. ...During his testimony to the Senate judiciary committee, Wylie also confirmed that he believed one of the goals of Steve Bannon while he was vice-president of Cambridge Analytica was voter suppression. 'One of the things that provoked me to leave was discussions about 'voter disengagement' and the idea of targeting African Americans,' he said, noting he had seen documents referencing this."

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW): CREW Files Criminal Complaint over Trump Financial Disclosures. "Following the release of [Donald] Trump's 2018 public financial disclosures, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) today filed a criminal complaint against the president, calling for an investigation into whether he knowingly and willfully failed to report Michael Cohen's payment to Stormy Daniels as a liability on his 2017 public financial disclosures. After much reporting and multiple complaints from CREW, [Donald] Trump disclosed the liability to Cohen on his just-released 2018 disclosures, as he was legally required to do, which raises the question of whether he knowingly kept the loan secret, in violation of federal law, before it was public knowledge."

Note: All of these items are things which Mike Pence is willing to abet in his quest for power.

* * *

So much corruption; so much unethical and possible illegal behavior. This is one day's worth of news about the Trump administration and associated figures.

Not even one day, as all of this was late-breaking news yesterday.

And it's not all the news about the Trump administration, either. There's plenty more going on, like Donald Trump calling undocumented immigrants "animals."

It's just a relentless onslaught of terrible fucking news. I have no idea how the average person, who hasn't immersed themselves in politics and history and law and foreign policy for their entire adult lives and who doesn't have hours and hours to understand the details of each of these stories every day, has any hope of following and understanding and piecing together everything that is happening.

All of it is overwhelming.

And of course Donald Trump knows that better than anyone. If everything you do is corruption and chaos, you'll leave people scrambling to figure out what your last three or thirteen or thirty-seven scams were while you're already onto the next dozen, each one bigger (more harmful) and better (worse) than the ones before.

That, among many reasons, is why I keep saying the time to resist Donald Trump was before the election. It's exponentially more difficult to stop a conman after you give him virtually limitless power.

Fuck.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 448

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 Media Abetted Trump — and Not Just the Tabloids and F#@k Paul Ryan.

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

Maggie Astor at the New York Times: Holocaust Is Fading From Memory, Survey Finds.
For seven decades, "never forget" has been a rallying cry of the Holocaust remembrance movement.

But a survey released Thursday, on Holocaust Remembrance Day, found that many adults lack basic knowledge of what happened — and this lack of knowledge is more pronounced among millennials, whom the survey defined as people ages 18 to 34.

Thirty-one percent of Americans, and 41 percent of millennials, believe that two million or fewer Jews were killed in the Holocaust; the actual number is around six million. Forty-one percent of Americans, and 66 percent of millennials, cannot say what Auschwitz was. Only 39 percent of Americans know that Hitler was democratically elected.

"As we get farther away from the actual events, 70-plus years now, it becomes less forefront of what people are talking about or thinking about or discussing or learning," said Matthew Bronfman, a board member of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, which commissioned the study. "If we wait another generation before you start trying to take remedial action, I think we're really going to be behind the eight ball."
Part of this is, of course, a function of younger generations having fewer organic opportunities to interact with Holocaust survivors. I'm 43, and I worked for a Holocaust survivor for many years. He was a child while in the camp, and he is now retired. To work closely with a survivor as I did is something that people younger than I are vanishingly unlikely to experience.

And part of it is also that Republicans' decades-long erosion of public education has consequences. Among them is diminished knowledge of history, even events as significant — and necessary to understand — as the Holocaust.

Which is naturally part of the objective. It's not a bug of subverting education, but a feature, to create a populace ignorant of historical details that might raise alarms regarding your own social abuses.

On this Holocaust Remembrance Day, let us remember that institutional forgetting abets the replication of horrors that never should have been tolerated in the first place.

* * *

Donald Trump is a terrible president and a terrible human being, part wev in a nightmarishly endless series:


What a fucking ghoul he is.

* * *

Robert Costa at the Washington Post: Bannon Pitches White House on Plan to Cripple Mueller Probe and Protect Trump.
Stephen K. Bannon, who was ousted as White House chief strategist last summer but has remained in touch with some members of [Donald] Trump's circle, is pitching a plan to West Wing aides and congressional allies to cripple the federal probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election, according to four people familiar with the discussions.

The first step, these people say, would be for Trump to fire Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, who oversees the work of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and in recent days signed off on a search warrant of Trump's longtime personal lawyer, Michael D. Cohen.

Bannon is also recommending the White House cease its cooperation with Mueller, reversing the policy of Trump's legal team to provide information to the special counsel's team and to allow staff members to sit for interviews.

And he is telling associates inside and outside the administration that the president should create a new legal battleground to protect himself from the investigation by asserting executive privilege — and arguing that Mueller's interviews with White House officials over the past year should now be null and void.
So glad (cough) that guy's back. Not that he ever really left.

(And hey — remember when I was like, "Bannon's not really going anywhere; he and Trump are still BFFs, and Bannon's just escaping the scrutiny of the White House," and a bunch of people screamed at me on Twitter that I was crazy and wrong and SHUT UP CUNT, but now here we are and the WaPo, which — among many other publications, totally bought the "Bannon and Trump are OVER!" narrative hook, line, and sinker — publishes a line like "Bannon...has remained in touch with some members of [Donald] Trump's circle" like no big whoop, we all knew that was happening, right? ANYWAY.)


I mean, these are dots that are not hard to connect. Yesterday comes the news that the Senate is preparing bipartisan legislation to limit Donald Trump's ability to fire Special Counsel Bob Mueller. Today comes the news that Steve Bannon is advising Trump to fire Rod Rosenstein instead. Welp.

* * *

[Content Note: White supremacy] Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: Trump Judicial Nominee Won't Say She's Opposed to School Segregation. "Wendy Vitter, a lawyer nominated by [Donald] Trump for district judge of the Eastern District of Louisiana, would not tell senators she believed Brown v. Board of Education was correctly decided. During her Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) asked her whether she agreed with the 1954 landmark case that declared state laws allowing school segregation were unconstitutional. Vitter, counsel for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans, said, 'I don't mean to be coy, but I think I get into a difficult area when I start commenting on Supreme Court decisions, which are correctly decided and which I may disagree with.' When Blumenthal asked again, 'Do you believe it was correctly decided?' Vitter answered, 'My personal, political, or religious views I would set aside.'" Wow.

[CN: Anti-choicery] Jennifer Bendery at the Huffington Post: Trump Court Pick Thinks Planned Parenthood 'Kills Over 150,000 Females a Year'. "Vitter, a New Orleans lawyer and Trump's choice for a lifetime seat on the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, [claimed in a May 2013 speech in protest of a new Planned Parenthood clinic in New Orleans that Planned Parenthood kills more than 150,000 women every year]. ...[W]hen Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) asked her if she stands by that claim, she avoided answering over and over again. ...'My personal views in this role, I need to a make a conscious effort and will do so to set this aside…' Blumenthal cut her off. 'I'm really not asking you about setting aside personal views,' he said. 'I'm asking you, very simply, you said Planned Parenthood kills 150,000 females a year. 150,000 people. Do you stand by that statement? It's a yes or no.'" Wow the Squeakquel.

[CN: Sexual violence; assault; description of sexual assault] Addy Baird at ThinkProgress: Woman Testifies That Missouri Governor Hit Her, Sexually Assaulted Her. "A Missouri House committee released a report Wednesday regarding allegations of sexual assault against Gov. Eric Greitens (R), saying in the report that they believe the woman who made the allegations is credible. Greitens called the investigation a 'political witch hunt' and has refused to step down as governor or as a candidate for reelection. The 25-page report marks the first time the public has heard sworn testimony from the woman who has said Greitens assaulted her. In her testimony, the woman told a graphic story in which Greitens invited her to his home in 2015 while his wife was away, tied her up in the basement, and ripped open her clothes, all without her consent. Greitens then allegedly blindfolded the woman and took photos of her, called her 'a little whore,' and threatened to make the photos public if she ever spoke about the incident. Greitens attacked the woman when she tried to leave the basement and forced his penis into her mouth."

[CN continued from above] This is an act of sexual violence, and yet the headlines and various descriptions of what happened have been shockingly inadequate. Greitens did not merely "sexually harass" her or "force her to give him oral sex." It's not sex. Of any kind. Sex is consensual. What he did was sexual assault. And even outlets that don't completely soft-pedal it are still stumbling badly. I mean:


The failure to call sexual violence what it is, bluntly, will never stop enraging me. Never.

* * *

[CN: Privacy violations; video may autoplay at link] Brian X. Chen at the New York Times: I Downloaded the Information That Facebook Has on Me: Yikes. "When I downloaded a copy of my Facebook data last week, I didn't expect to see much. My profile is sparse, I rarely post anything on the site, and I seldom click on ads. (I'm what some call a Facebook 'lurker.') But when I opened my file, it was like opening Pandora's box. With a few clicks, I learned that about 500 advertisers — many that I had never heard of, like Bad Dad, a motorcycle parts store, and Space Jesus, an electronica band — had my contact information, which could include my email address, phone number, and full name. Facebook also had my entire phone book, including the number to ring my apartment buzzer. The social network had even kept a permanent record of the roughly 100 people I had deleted from my friends list over the last 14 years, including my exes."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] This isn't so much as a resistance item, but a heads-up about precautions you may need to take, depending on where you live... Sean Rossman at USA Today: What You Need to Know About the E. Coli Outbreak, Now in 7 States. "An e. coli outbreak with no known source has spread to seven states, infecting 17 people and prompting an investigation by state and federal health officials. The state hit hardest by the outbreak is New Jersey, which has six cases that led to the investigation of a Panera Bread. Other states include: Idaho, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Missouri, and Washington. The cases resulted in six hospitalizations and started between March 22 and March 31, affecting mostly women. Those sick range in age from 12 to 84, notes the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. However, there is no known source at the time. ...To avoid E. coli, wash your hands regularly and thoroughly, cook meat completely, wash fruits and vegetables, avoid raw milk, and don't prepare food when you're sick."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Ricardo Cano, Lily Altavena, Lorraine Longhi, and Kaila White at the Republic: Thousands of Teachers, Parents, Students Participate in #RedForEd Walk-Ins. "Thousands of parents and students across Arizona joined teachers walking into their schools Wednesday morning as a show of solidarity for the #RedForEd effort to boost education funding in the state. Participants wore red and carried signs during the rallies scheduled before the first school bell rings. The walk-ins were planned so as not to disrupt class time." Seriously, Betsy DeVos or anyone else who wants to accuse teachers of not caring about their students during these protests can kiss my fat ass. They're fighting for themselves and their students while planning that fight "so as not to disrupt class time." Goddammit. Blub.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 426

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 Austin Bomber Has Been Stopped and Trump Disgorges More Contempt for the Rule of Law — and the Media Continues to Fail Us and Joe Biden, What Are You Even Doing?

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

[Content Note: Anti-Semitism.]


Alice Ollstein at TPM: House Dem: Plot to Oust Broadcast Board CEO 'Our Worst Nightmare'.
The top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee says whistleblowers have detailed a plot by the Trump administration to oust the CEO of the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) and replace him with someone favored by the White House.

Rep. Eliot Engel (D-NY) warned in a letter to the BBG, obtained by TPM, that that candidate, André Mendes, then plans to dismiss the existing Board of Governors, according to the whistleblowers.

In a statement to TPM, Engel called the alleged plot "our worst nightmare coming true."

"This action would violate current law and represent what these whistleblowers have described as 'a coup at the BBG,' presumably with the aim of pushing the BBG's journalism toward a viewpoint favorable of (sic) the Trump Administration," Engel wrote to the BBG. "I view these claims as credible and this scenario as outrageous and unacceptable."
This isn't creeping authoritarianism; it's stomping through the house and taking a huge shit in the middle of the living room.

Carol D. Leonnig, David Nakamura, and Josh Dawsey at the Washington Post: Trump's National Security Advisers Warned Him Not to Congratulate Putin; He Did It Anyway. "Trump did not follow specific warnings from his national security advisers Tuesday when he congratulated Russian President Vladi­mir Putin on his reelection — including a section in his briefing materials in all-capital letters stating 'DO NOT CONGRATULATE,' according to officials familiar with the call. Trump also chose not to heed talking points from aides instructing him to condemn the recent poisoning of a former Russian spy in Britain with a powerful nerve agent, a case that both the British and U.S. governments have blamed on Moscow."

The collusion, said the brokenest of broken records, is and has always been right out in the open.

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Kaitlan Collins and Jeff Zeleny at CNN: Trump Furious over Leak of Warning to Not Congratulate Putin. "Donald Trump was infuriated after it quickly leaked that he had been directly instructed by his national security advisers in briefing materials not to congratulate [Putin]. Trump was fuming Tuesday night, asking his allies and outside advisers who they thought had leaked the information... According to the source, the incident resurfaces his long-held belief there are individuals inside his administration — especially in the national security realm — who are actively working to undermine him. White House chief of staff John Kelly also is furious that a confidential presidential briefing became public knowledge, a White House official said, and intends to address the matter Wednesday as aides try to figure out who disclosed the warning."

Someone who cares about this country more than the president does. That's a long list. At least Kelly can rule out Mike Pence.

Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann at NBC News: Trump, Master of the Political Insult, Declines to Chide Putin. "In his nearly three years as president or a presidential candidate, Donald Trump has never been shy about openly criticizing others, including foreign leaders. He ripped into London's mayor. He fired back at British Prime Minister Theresa May (initially tweeting at the wrong Theresa May). And he's hurled insults at North Korea's Kim Jong-Un. Which all makes Trump's reluctance to forcefully criticize Vladimir Putin — after the election interference in 2016, after the poisoning in Britain, and after the voting irregularities in Russia — all the more striking. Even when the president is instructed NOT to congratulate Putin." Yup.

Greg Sargent at the Washington Post: A GOP Senator's Remarkable Admission about Trump and Mueller. (Emphases original.)
[Republicans'] stance is that of course Mueller should be allowed to finish his investigation, but they will not act legislatively to protect the probe, because this is not at all necessary, as Trump would never dream of taking action against it, since he would face severe consequences that Republicans will not enunciate in advance.

But a Republican lawmaker has just given away the real game behind this carefully crafted straddle. Sen. Bob Corker (Tenn.) was pressed by the Washington Examiner on why Republicans are hesitant to protect Mueller, and this is what happened:
Republicans in Congress are hesitant to antagonize [Donald] Trump ahead of ahead of difficult midterm elections, wary of sparking a backlash from a committed grassroots base more loyal to the White House.

Amid sky-high Democratic enthusiasm and a developing "blue wave," Republicans can't afford a war with Trump that depresses GOP turnout. Republicans might be worried about Trump's attacks on special counsel Robert Mueller, but they are reluctant to push back, much less support legislation to curtail the president's ability to fire Mueller and sideline the federal probe…

"The president is, as you know — you've seen his numbers among the Republican base — it's very strong. It's more than strong, it's tribal in nature," said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., who decided to retire when his second term concludes at year's end, after periodically sparring with Trump.

"People who tell me, who are out on trail, say, look, people don't ask about issues anymore. They don't care about issues. They want to know if you're with Trump or not," Corker added.
This is a candid glimpse from a leading GOP lawmaker into what’s really driving the Republican straddle on Mueller.
Authoritarians love their authoritarian god-king.

Rep. Adam Schiff at USA Today: Republicans Leading Russia Probe Ignored Every Lesson I Learned as a Prosecutor. "Investigations have a certain rhythm: You begin with solid leads, use subpoenas to compel testimony or documents from reticent witnesses, interview lower-level witnesses first, and then move on to higher-level targets. Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee did none of these things before shutting down their Russia investigation last week."

Of course not. And see the preceding item as to why. See also: Many of them are probably compromised, too.

* * *

Craig Timberg, Karla Adam, and Michael Kranish at the Washington Post: Bannon Oversaw Cambridge Analytica's Collection of Facebook Data, According to Former Employee. "Conservative strategist Stephen K. Bannon oversaw Cambridge Analytica's early efforts to collect troves of Facebook data as part of an ambitious program to build detailed profiles of millions of American voters, a former employee of the data-science firm said Tuesday. ...Wylie said that Bannon — while he was a top executive at Cambridge Analytica and head of Breitbart News — was deeply involved in the company's strategy and approved spending nearly $1 million to acquire data, including Facebook profiles, in 2014. ...It is unclear whether Bannon knew how Cambridge Analytica was obtaining the data, which allegedly was collected through an app that was portrayed as a tool for psychological research but was then transferred to the company." I can guess.


Aaron Rupar at ThinkProgress: Trump Accidentally Touts Key Role of Cambridge Analytica in 2016 Campaign. "They had this expression 'drain the swamp.' And I hated it, I thought it was so hokey. I said, 'That is the hokiest, give me a break, I am embarrassed to say it.' [But] every time I said it I got the biggest applause. And after four or five times, I said, 'Boy, what a great expression, I love saying it, it's amazing.'" Coincidentally, Trump's remarks about his infamous catchphrase came on the same night the Washington Post provided more detail than ever before about how it originated with Cambridge Analytica and Steve Bannon, who became Trump's campaign chairman two months before he debuted 'drain the swamp.'"

Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Cambridge Analytica Looked to Pounce on Russian Hacks, Email Shows. "Cambridge Analytica hoped to capitalize on Russian hacking of Hillary Clinton and her ally, an email written by one of its employees indicates. Emily Cornell, the employee, sent the email on July 29, 2016. It went out to people working with Make America Number One, the pro-Trump super PAC funded by Republican super-donors Robert and Rebekah Mercer. After noting some of the firm's work for the super PAC, Cornell wrote: 'With her campaign getting hacked, I can only imagine what a new swatch [sic] of emails will do to her already fractured base!' ...On July 22, seven days before Cornell's email, WikiLeaks had published almost 20,000 emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee."

Which were stolen by Russian hackers allegedly working on behalf of the Kremlin. Bear that in mind as you consider the information in the following two tweets:


Yeah.

* * *


[CN: Nativism; video may autoplay at link] Rebecca Savransky at the Hill: GOP Lawmaker: 'We Might Need to Build a Wall Between California and Arizona'. "Rep. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) proposed building a border wall between California and Arizona to protect the state. 'As we look in Arizona, we often look into the dangers of the southern border,' McSally said during a round-table discussion about 'sanctuary cities' Tuesday at the White House. ...'But if these dangerous policies continue out of California, we might need to build a wall between California and Arizona as well to keep these dangerous criminals out of our state,' she said, smiling."


[CN: Police brutality; white supremacy] Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Unarmed Black Man Shot by Sacramento Police Officers Because He Was Holding a Cell Phone.
A unarmed Black man was shot by two police officers in Sacramento, California this weekend, after officers said they believed their lives were in danger because the man was holding a cell phone they thought was a gun.

Stephan Clark, 22, was in the backyard of his grandparents' house, where he had been living, when officers approached him on Sunday. Police said they were responding to reports that a man had been breaking into cars with a 'toolbar'; deputies in a Sacramento County Sheriff's Department helicopter had informed them that the suspect was allegedly hiding in a backyard and pointed them in Clark's direction.

When officers confronted Clark, they saw the cellphone in his hand and opened fire, discharging their weapons at least 20 times.

"The officers believed the suspect was pointing a firearm at them," Sacramento police said in a statement afterward. "Fearing for their safety, the officers fired their duty weapons striking the suspect multiple times."

Clark was pronounced dead at the scene. Police found a pair of headphones and a iPhone 6 Plus with a rose gold case and black card holder adhered to the back — which reportedly belonged to his girlfriend — but no gun.

"He was at the wrong place at the wrong time in his own backyard?" said Clark's grandmother, Sequita Thompson, speaking with the Sacramento Bee.
Fucking hell. Rage seethe boil.

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

Open Wide...