Showing posts with label clergy abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clergy abuse. Show all posts

We Resist: Day 748

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: State of the Union Recap and 2020 Whispers: Senator Amy Klobuchar and Beto O'Rourke. And ICYMI late yesterday: It's Awful That Trump Is Still in Office; It Might Get Even Worse When He Isn't.

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

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Kate Feldman at the New York Daily News: Trump Calls for Investigations into Him to End During State of the Union — Just Like Nixon Did.
Echoing President Nixon's 1974 State of the Union, [Donald] Trump called for an end of investigations into him during Tuesday night's address.

"An economic miracle is taking place in the United States and the only thing that can stop it are foolish wars, politics, or ridiculous partisan investigations," Trump said during his State of the Union speech. "If there is going to be peace and legislation, there cannot be war and investigation. It just doesn't work that way."

...More than 40 years ago, Nixon lashed out similarly amid an investigation into the Watergate scandal and the cover-up of the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters.

"I believe the time has come to bring that investigation and the other investigations of this matter to an end," he said in his 1974 address. "One year of Watergate is enough."

Two weeks later, the House overwhelmingly voted to give the Judiciary Committee the authority to look into impeachment charges.
From Tricky Dick to Don the Con: 44 Years of Republican Corruption.

Justin Elliott and Ilya Marritz at ProPublica: Confidential Memo: Company of Trump Inaugural Chair Sought to Profit from Connections to Administration, Foreigners. "The investment firm founded by the chairman of Donald Trump's inaugural committee, Tom Barrack, developed a plan to profit off its connections to the incoming administration and foreign dignitaries, according to a confidential memo obtained by WNYC and ProPublica. 'The key is to strategically cultivate domestic and international relations while avoiding any appearance of lobbying,' the memo says." LOL oh that's the key, is it? Good grief, these goddamned grifters.

Erica Orden and Cristina Alesci at CNN: New York Federal Prosecutors Seek Interviews with Trump Organization Executives. "Federal prosecutors in New York have requested interviews in recent weeks with executives at the Trump Organization, according to people familiar with the matter, signaling a growing potential threat to [Donald] Trump and those in his orbit from criminal investigations by the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office. Trump and his legal team have long harbored concerns that investigations by New York federal prosecutors — which could last throughout his presidency — may ultimately pose more danger to him, his family, and his allies than the inquiry by special counsel Robert Mueller, according to people close to Trump. Prosecutors' recent interest in executives at Trump's family company may intensify those fears." Good. The least he deserves is to be afraid.

Paul Waldman at the Washington Post: We May Finally See Trump's Tax Returns, and Republicans Are Panicking. "While Trump's refusal to release his returns — something nearly every major-party nominee and president has done for the past half-century — has been controversial since 2016, once Democrats demand the returns it will become an intense controversy playing out on television and the front pages of newspapers. That means that Republican officeholders will be forced to take a position, which they haven't really had to do before. And they'll be expected to defend the president's refusal to allow the public to know where he's getting money from, whom he owes money to, and how far his financial interests extend."

Chris Riotta at the Independent: Trump Shown 'Meeting with Russians in Moscow in 1995' over 'Building Project' in Newly Unearthed Video. "The former mayor of Moscow has confirmed Donald Trump met with officials in Russia in the 1990s to discuss a possible building project after archival footage of the meeting was posted online. The video, allegedly aired by Russian state television in 1995, shows the U.S. president meeting with members of the former mayor's administration. 'Trump was in Moscow,' Yury Luzhkov, the mayor of Moscow from 1992 through 2010, told the Interfax news agency. 'He had contacts…on matters related to the construction of the Okhotny Ryad underground mall on Manezh Square.'"

That should not be surprising, of course. Sarah Kendzior has extensively documented (here, for instance) that Trump's ties to Russia date back to the 1980s.

Ellie Hall at BuzzFeed: Customs and Border Protection Apologized After an Agent Questioned a BuzzFeed News Reporter About Trump Coverage.
A top Customs and Border Protection official apologized Tuesday to a BuzzFeed News reporter who was aggressively questioned by an agent about articles regarding President Donald Trump at a passport control checkpoint in a New York City airport.

"On behalf of the agency, I would like to extend our apologies to Mr. David Mack for the inappropriate remarks made to him during his CBP processing upon his arrival to the United States," CBP Assistant Commissioner for Public Affairs Andrew Meehan said in a statement to BuzzFeed News. "The officer's comments do not reflect CBP's commitment to integrity and professionalism of its workforce. In response to this incident, CBP immediately reviewed the event and has initiated the appropriate personnel inquiry and action."

Mack, BuzzFeed News' deputy breaking news director, landed at JFK Airport Sunday night after a brief trip to the United Kingdom to renew his US work visa. After waiting in line with other non-US residents — Mack is an Australian citizen — he was called to approach the CBP agent at passport control.

Mack said that the agent saw BuzzFeed listed as his employer on his visa and began to ask him questions about the outlet's reporting on special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia.

"The immigration agent at JFK just saw that I work for BuzzFeed and just grilled me for 10 minutes about the Cohen story, which was fun given he gets to decide whether to let me back into the country," Mack wrote Sunday night in a Twitter thread.

...Mack said the agent repeatedly questioned him about BuzzFeed News' response to the outlet's report that Trump instructed lawyer Michael Cohen to lie to Congress, and appeared unsatisfied when Mack said that the outlet stood by its reporting.

...As he walked away, Mack said that he heard the agent tell the next person in line that that Mack worked for BuzzFeed.
Absolutely chilling.

* * *

[CN: Sexual violence; clergy sex abuse] Jason Horowitz and Elizabeth Dias at the New York Times: Pope Acknowledges Nuns Were Sexually Abused by Priests and Bishops.
Pope Francis said on Tuesday that the Roman Catholic Church had faced a persistent problem of sexual abuse of nuns by priests and even bishops, the first time he has publicly acknowledged the issue.

Catholic nuns have accused clerics of sexual abuse in recent years in India, Africa, Latin America, and in Italy, and a Vatican magazine last week mentioned nuns having abortions or giving birth to the children of priests. But Francis has never raised the issue until he was asked to comment during a news conference aboard the papal plane returning to Rome from his trip to the United Arab Emirates.

"It's true," Francis said. "There are priests and bishops who have done that."

The pope's admission opens a new front in the long-running scandal of sexual abuse by priests, recognizing nuns who have tried for years to call attention to their plight. With the #MeToo movement going strong, and Francis under pressure for neglecting the victims of child abuse, the nuns' pleas have gained traction.

...Asked about these developments on Tuesday, Francis said that it was a continuing problem and that the Vatican was working on the issue. Some priests, he said, have been suspended.

"Should more be done? Yes," Francis said. "Do we have the will? Yes. But it is a path that we have already begun."

Francis recalled that his predecessor, Benedict XVI, had been "a strong man" who he said had sought to remove priests who committed sexual abuse and even "sexual slavery."

Francis spoke about a case in which Benedict dissolved an order of nuns "because a certain slavery of women had crept in, slavery to the point of sexual slavery on the part of clergy or the founder."
Oh, so obviously the solution was to dissolve the order of nuns. It's no wonder the Catholic Church continues to have profound and ubiquitous problems with sexual violence. When leadership isn't ignoring it altogether, or blaming it on homosexuality, they're coming up with "solutions" that punish the victims. Disgusting.

There is much more at the link, including this: "A top official in the Vatican office that handles sexual abuse allegations resigned last month after a former nun accused him of making sexual advances during confession." Fucking hell.

* * *

Jodi Jacobson at Rewire.News: Reporters Must Do Better on Abortion: Six Facts You Should Know. "Media coverage of abortion care in the United States is — to be blunt — abysmal. Too much news coverage and analysis of abortion is devoid of fact, and instead relies on the faulty premise that the abortion debate involves two sides arguing in good faith, when in reality one side is rooted in evidence and clinical experience and the other in flat-out lies and ideology. ...[J]ournalism and journalists are — by definition — supposed to report facts and base their arguments on facts. Reputable newspapers and TV news outlets (omitting by definition Fox News, Breitbart, and the like) are supposed to care about facts and evidence to help inform the public. And they continue to fail miserably. Here are six facts any responsible reporter should know about abortion..."

In good news... Savas Abadsidis at Towleroad: Newly Passed Law Will Require New Jersey Schools to Teach LGBT History. "New Jersey has become the second state in the nation after California to require public schools to teach LGBT history. The measure was signed by Gov. Phil Murphy on Thursday and modeled after the law that passed in California in 2011 according to KATC3 in New Jersey. The law says that New Jersey boards of education 'must adopt instruction that accurately portrays the political, economic, and social contributions of persons with disabilities and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, where appropriate.' The law also includes a requirement for schools to teach about people with disabilities and their historical contributions."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] And finally, this is an excellent bit of resistance, right here... Sarah Ruiz-Grossman at the Huffington Post: Chef José Andrés Wears 'Immigrants Feed America' Shirt to State of the Union. "Celebrity chef José Andrés, famous for providing free meals to disaster victims, attended [Donald] Trump's State of the Union speech on Tuesday ― and made a point of silently advocating for immigrants through his outfit. The world-renowned chef, invited by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), reportedly wore a shirt that read 'Immigrants feed America.' Ahead of Trump's speech, Andrés also tweeted his own thoughts about the state of the union, calling for 'longer tables, not higher walls!'"


Right on!

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 743

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: Cory Booker Announces Candidacy for President and Trump Officially Pulls U.S. out of INF Treaty and Black History Month. And ICYMI late yesterday: Things That Make Me Go Hmm.

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

One thing in the news today is that Donald Trump did a big interview with the New York Times and said a bunch of heinous shit, and I am not going to link to it and I am not going to quote it, because fuck him.

[Content Note: Nativism; video may autoplay at link] Kate Smith at CBS News: Immigrants Drove Hours for Fake, ICE-Issued Court Dates on Thursday. "Immigration attorneys told CBS News that there was confusion, crowds, and long lines at immigration courts around the country on Thursday morning. ICE agents had issued thousands of Notice to Appear documents — essentially a court summons for immigration court — telling immigrants to appear in court or risk permanent removal from the U.S. It wasn't until hundreds of those people arrived at court Thursday morning that they realized those dates weren't real." Sickening.


[CN: Nativism] Tina Vasquez at Rewire.News: 'We Have No Stability Right Now': When Your Husband's Freedom Is at ICE Agent's Discretion.
"¿Cómo estás, mi amor?" This is how Berenilsse Marcial greets her son Louis after picking him up from his after-school program the evening of January 23. She has been going out of her way to seem chipper in front of the second grader, who has been having trouble concentrating at school and won't sleep alone anymore. Marcial doesn't have the words to explain why his step-father has been absent for nearly a month because he is being held in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, or that their family's fate rests in the hands of two immigration officials they've never even seen before.

On January 4, ICE agents detained Marcial's husband, Hector Baca Gutierrez, in New York at a scheduled appointment. Back in November, Baca Gutierrez received a letter from Thomas Decker, the field office director of the District of New York's Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) for ICE, telling him to appear on the tenth floor of 26 Federal Plaza on December 13 to meet with "Officer Almodovar." The reason for the appointment simply said "interview."

"We knew it couldn't be good," said Neal Datta, Baca Gutierrez's attorney. "The ninth floor of 26 Federal Plaza is where you go to report [to ICE]; the tenth floor is where you go and don't come back out."

Baca Gutierrez has been detained for 26 days. His family has struggled over the past four weeks with the emotional and financial impact of his departure.

"This has been devastating to my family," said Marcial. "I don't know what we're going to do."
Sob. I am so fucking angry at this regime's vile nativist agenda and their relentless malice. And I am so frustrated by how little sustained front-page press this issue is getting, despite the fact that it's still destroying families every day. We talk about "the wall," but not about the people whose lives are being affected by the nativism underwriting Donald Trump's policies, including a border wall, which he justifies by demonizing those people.

I know there is a lot about which to be angry, every day, but it's like people think this issue is solved, because Trump signed a bullshit executive order last summer. It isn't over. Goddammit.

* * *

[CN: Extreme weather; death] Jessica Glenza at the Guardian: Polar Vortex: Cold That Has Killed at Least 16 to Give Way to 'Spring-Like' Weather. And not a moment too soon. Not that such a huge swing in temperature will be a unilaterally good thing. "The bitter cold gripping the American midwest is expected to turn into spring-like weather by early next week, according to forecasters. Just days after arctic conditions, temperatures are expected to climb by as much as 80 degrees Fahrenheit in some regions. Experts said the rapid thaw is unprecedented, and could create its own problems — bursting pipes, flooding rivers, and crumbling roads." It can also cause enormous sinkholes.

[CN: White supremacy] Christopher Mathias at the Huffington Post: Congressman Alerts Ethics Committee over Steve King's Continued White Nationalism. "Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) alerted the House Ethics Committee this week that racist Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) continues to use his official government website to promote a white nationalist blog — potentially reviving Ryan's effort to censure King or even expel him from Congress. Ryan sent a letter to the Ethics Committee on Tuesday stating he wanted to 'make the Committee aware of the continued use of government resources on the part of Rep. King to promote and advance white nationalism.' 'A HuffPost report published today, January 29, details how King is continuing to use his government website to promote the white nationalist website VDare.com,' the letter reads, referring to this HuffPost report."

[CN: Right-wing terrorism] Sam Levin at the Guardian: FBI Investigated Civil Rights Group as 'Terrorism' Threat and Viewed KKK as Victims.
The FBI opened a "domestic terrorism" investigation into a civil rights group in California, labeling the activists "extremists" after they protested against neo-Nazis in 2016, new documents reveal.

Federal authorities ran a surveillance operation on By Any Means Necessary (BAMN), spying on the leftist group's movements in an inquiry that came after one of BAMN's members was stabbed at the white supremacist rally, according to documents obtained by the Guardian. The FBI's BAMN files reveal:

  • The FBI investigated Bamn for potential "conspiracy" against the "rights" of the "Ku Klux Klan" and white supremacists.

  • The FBI considered the KKK as victims and the leftist protesters as potential terror threats, and downplayed the threats of the Klan, writing: "The KKK consisted of members that some perceived to be supportive of a white supremacist agenda."

  • The FBI's monitoring included in-person surveillance, and the agency cited BAMN's advocacy against "rape and sexual assault" and "police brutality" as evidence in the terrorism inquiry.

The FBI's 46-page report on Bamn, obtained by the government transparency non-profit Property of the People through a records request, presented an "astonishing" description of the KKK, said Mike German, a former FBI agent and far-right expert who reviewed the documents for the Guardian.
JFC. Meanwhile... Sarada Peri at the Daily Beast: Powerful Men Can't Stop Complaining That They're Being Bullied. "For the most part, what Schultz has faced is not bullying but questioning and criticism. ...It was the Wall Street Journal editorial page, which has frequently railed against liberal 'snowflakes,' which called the treatment of Schultz bullying. But it's not alone in using the term as a catch-all for any and all criticism directed at the wealthy and political elite. ...The pattern first took shape with the Victim-in-Chief, Donald Trump, whose insecurity and paranoia lead him to see a world that is pitted against him. The Democrats are unfair. The media is fake. The rules are rigged. The Deep State is out to get him. 'No politician in history has been treated worse or more unfairly,' he once said — never mind the time they shot Lincoln."

My heart bleeds. Meanwhile... [CN: Violent misogyny; gun violence; toxic masculinity] Will Bunch at the Philly Inquirer: A Domestic Terrorist Slaughtered 5 Women in a Florida Bank and Hardly Anyone Noticed. "If you watched TV news over the last week, it's all but guaranteed that you never heard the names of these female victims or even the despicable shooter, even as the name of another alleged Florida criminal, a huckster named Roger Stone, was uttered thousands of times. But not only that — you also probably saw next to nothing about another mass gun murder of five Americans that took place just three days later, when a different 21-year-old white male killed his girlfriend, her parents, and his own parents. ...The way these shootings are all happening — the almost robotic similarity of these young and male and alienated and isolated killers, the recurring links to domestic violence or repressed sexuality and the large number of female victims, and the fact that these killings happen in everyday locales like a bank or a motel bar — scream out one word to me. Terrorism."

[CN: Gun violence] Vivian Ho at the Guardian: 'An Indelible Mark': Effects Related to Gun Violence Are Widespread and Lasting. "Fifty-eight percent of American adults have experienced trauma related to gun violence in their lifetime, according to a report released on Friday by Everytown for Gun Safety, a non-profit for gun policy reform. More people are killed in the U.S. with guns within the first month of the year than are killed in any of the nation's high-income peer countries in an entire calendar year. Each year, more than 100,000 Americans survive a gunshot wound and 15,600 children and teens are shot and injured, the report states. The violence doesn't only alter the lives of the victims, but those of their entire network, the report stresses. 'Gun violence in any form leaves an indelible mark on the lives of those who are affected,' said Christopher Kocher, director of the Everytown Survivor Network."

[CN: Sexual assault; sex abuse by clergy] Staff at AP/NBC News: Hundreds of Accused Abusers Named by Catholic Leaders in Texas. "Catholic leaders in Texas on Thursday identified 286 priests and others accused of sexually abusing children, a number that represents one of the largest collections of names to be released since an explosive grand jury report last year in Pennsylvania. Fourteen dioceses in Texas named those credibly accused of abuse." 286. Fucking hell.

* * *

Allegra Kirkland at TPM: All the Reasons the 2020 Census Is Shaping Up to Be a Disaster. "Inadequate funds, insufficient outreach, a wave of high-profile data breaches, and a deep mistrust of the Trump administration among minority communities compound the bureaucratic challenge inherent in moving the census online for the first time. Even if the Trump administration fails in what experts say would be a catastrophic bid to add a citizenship question to the census, advocates fear that this potent combination of factors will lead to a significant miscount of the state population figures used to divvy up congressional and legislative districts and allocate tens of billions of dollars in federal resources. The anticipated undercount of vulnerable populations in the 2020 Census will have consequences that shape national politics and reverberate through Americans' day to day lives for the next decade." This is so, so bad.

Jessica M. Goldstein at ThinkProgress: The Weaponization of 'Learn to Code'. "'Learn to code' is a linguistic dog whistle. ...Its origins are in an overblown and willfully misremembered spate of news stories about a man named Rusty Justice (yes, his real name) teaching web development to out-of-work coal miners in Kentucky. ...Its current usage, as formally documented by Know Your Meme, is as 'an expression used to mock journalists who were laid off from their jobs, encouraging them to learn software development as an alternate career path.'" Such assholes.

Lauren Thomas at CNBC: The CEO of the Biggest Mall Owner in the U.S. Says He's 'Nervous' About More Retail Bankruptcies This Year. "The biggest mall owner in the U.S. is warning of more store closures and even bankruptcies to rattle the retail industry in 2019. 'There are some retailers out there that we're nervous about,' Simon Property Group CEO David Simon said Friday during a call with analysts after the company reported earnings, though he didn't name those companies. 'We are concerned about a few [retail bankruptcies] that should shake out in the first quarter. ...The days of a rising economic tide...don't lift all retail boats. You've got a lot of out-performance and a lot of under-performance.'" Yikes.

And let us end on a hopeful note! Andy Towle at Towleroad: Joy Behar to Pete Buttigieg: 'Do You Think This Country Is Ready for a Gay President?'. "South Bend, Indiana, mayor Pete Buttigieg, who last week announced his intention to explore a run for president in 2020, sat down with the ladies of The View on Thursday. Buttigieg talked about his experience as a mayor, his time serving in Afghanistan, his position on Israel, and why he thinks someone from his generation (he's 37) is qualified to be Commander-in-Chief. He was also asked whether or not America's ready for a gay president. Replied Buttigieg: 'Well, there's only one way to find out.'" Right on, Mayor Pete!

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 691

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: Help Wanted: Vile Person to Facilitate Agenda of Malice and "It's about undermining key pillars of democracy and the rule of law."

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


There are many journalists who are doing crucial resistance work (even those whose work is not explicitly positioned as part of the resistance), and I support them mightily.

* * *

44 Former U.S. Senators at the Washington Post: We Are Former Senators; the Senate Has Long Stood in Defense of Democracy — and Must Again. "We are at an inflection point in which the foundational principles of our democracy and our national security interests are at stake, and the rule of law and the ability of our institutions to function freely and independently must be upheld. ...At other critical moments in our history, when constitutional crises have threatened our foundations, it has been the Senate that has stood in defense of our democracy. Today is once again such a time. Regardless of party affiliation, ideological leanings, or geography, as former members of this great body, we urge current and future senators to be steadfast and zealous guardians of our democracy by ensuring that partisanship or self-interest not replace national interest."

Okay. Sounds good! But what does that mean? What constitutes being "steadfast and zealous guardians of our democracy"? And why is this letter coming now and not in, say, October of 2016?

I'll also note that, despite the fact that this letter from 44 former U.S. Senators is being lauded as bipartisan, the actual composition of its signers is: 32 Democrats, 10 Republicans, and 2 Independents.

Which, I've got to be honest, sounds a lot more to me like a handful of opportunistic Republicans piggybacked onto a bunch of principled Democrats in order to try to distance themselves from Trump. Because I see 10 names of Republicans who happily participated in the conservative movement in ways that made Trump inevitable.

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism; video may autoplay at link] Mariam Khan at ABC News: Trump Says Military Will Build Border Wall If Pelosi, Schumer Don't Agree to Pay for It.
Trump drew some rhetorical lines in the sand in early morning tweets Tuesday — repeating a series of questionable claims.

He again pushed to make good on his campaign promise to build what he's now calling a "Great Wall." He continued to attack Democrats for wanting "open borders," despite Democrats agreeing to spend billions of dollars for border security to repair or replace existing fencing — but not for Trump's proposed wall.

He claimed that "large new sections" of his wall had been built although that is not the case, and he touted success in barring the "large Caravans" of Central American migrants seeking refugee that Trump used to gin up fears about illegal immigration leading up to the 2018 midterm elections.

In another tweet, he claimed that if Democrats don't agree to funding, the military will build the wall. "If the Democrats do not give us the votes to secure our Country, the Military will build the remaining sections of the Wall. They know how important it is!" Trump tweeted.
Fucking hell. Trump then met with House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer, where he behaved like an absolute shitwheel, as usual, in front of the press, despite Pelosi's requests to meet privately.


[Video Description: Trump screams about shutting down the government while Chuck Schumer smiles and nods in the way that you humor someone who has totally lost the plot, simultaneously communicating to everyone else that it's obviously impossible to have a serious conversation with the screaming dipshit.]

Trump is almost impossible to manage in those situations (which is precisely why he orchestrates them that way), but, in my estimation, Pelosi and Schumer handled themselves well given circumstances that favor Trump's cacophonous unprofessionalism.


* * *

[CN: War; death; injury; trauma; starvation; self-harm] Marwan Al-Sabri, Ali Al-Makhaathi, and Hadil Al-Senwi at the Guardian: Yemenis Are Left So Poor They Kill Themselves Before the Hunger Does. "More than 10,000 people in Yemen have been killed and 3 million forced to flee their homes as a result of almost four years of fighting. An estimated 22 million people are now in need of aid and up to 13 million face starvation. As talks to end the conflict continue in Sweden, three Yemeni aid workers from the Norwegian Refugee Council talk of the physical and emotional destruction the fighting has brought to their country. ...'War brings out the worst in a society. People are subjected to extortion, threats, and detention at checkpoints. The violence has destroyed our social fabric and created smaller conflicts. It has eroded us materially and morally; we have lost the right to live safely and with dignity.'"


[CN: White supremacy; misogyny; anti-choice terrorism; fascism] Elizabeth King and Erin Corbett at Rewire.News: Fascists Find Fertile Recruitment Ground in Anti-Choice Movement. "Attacks on reproductive rights are nothing new, but fascist groups' infiltration of anti-choice groups and recruiting around anti-choice organizing in their genocidal agenda is an escalation. Leaked conversations between white supremacist groups using the Discord messaging site show users discussing recruiting members based on their opposition to abortion rights. ...Under the Trump administration, a surge in white nationalist organizing and policies has meant an uptick in threats against abortion providers and clinics, creating an even more unsafe environment for patients as Republican lawmakers further erode their rights. Threats of violence against abortion clinics have nearly doubled since 2017, and trespassing incidents have more than tripled, according to data compiled by the National Abortion Federation."

[CN: Sexual violence; abuse by clergy]


Gary Fineout at the AP: Thousands of Mailed Ballots in Florida Were Not Counted. "Florida officials say thousands of mailed ballots were not counted because they were delivered too late to state election offices. The Department of State late last week informed a federal judge that 6,670 ballots were mailed ahead of the Nov. 6 election but were not counted because they were not received by Election Day. The tally prepared by state officials includes totals from 65 of Florida's 67 counties. The two counties yet to report their totals are Palm Beach, a Democratic stronghold in south Florida, and Polk in central Florida. Three statewide Florida races, including the contest for governor, went to state-mandated recounts because the margins were so close."

Zoe Tillman at BuzzFeed: A Former Trump Campaign Staffer Was Ordered to Pay $25,000 for Violating Her Nondisclosure Agreement. "Jessica Denson, a former staffer for [Donald] Trump's campaign, is fighting an order to pay nearly $25,000 for violating a nondisclosure agreement, according to court papers. The award to the Trump campaign came out of arbitration — nonpublic proceedings the campaign pursued against Denson after she filed two lawsuits against it. ...Denson sued the campaign in New York County Supreme Court in November 2017, claiming that officials discriminated against her, cyberbullied her, and were otherwise hostile toward her... But the Trump campaign claimed Denson's lawsuit violated the terms of her nondisclosure agreement, which prohibited her from disclosing confidential information, disparaging the campaign, competing with the campaign, or violating its intellectual property." Chilling.

Richard Partington at the Guardian: IMF Warns Storm Clouds Are Gathering for Next Financial Crisis. "The storm clouds of the next global financial crisis are gathering despite the world financial system being unprepared for the next downturn, the deputy head of the International Monetary Fund has warned. David Lipton, the first deputy managing director of the IMF, said that 'crisis prevention is incomplete' more than a decade on from the last meltdown in the global banking system. 'As we have put it, 'fix the roof while the sun shines.' But like many of you, I see storm clouds building, and fear the work on crisis prevention is incomplete.'" Swell.

Paul Kiel and Jesse Eisinger at ProPublica: How the IRS Was Gutted. "Had the billions in budget reductions occurred all at once, with tens of thousands of auditors, collectors, and customer service representatives streaming out of government buildings in a single day, the collapse of the IRS might have gotten more attention. But there have been no mass layoffs or dramatic announcements. Instead, it's taken eight years to bring the agency that funds the government this low. Over time, the IRS has slowly transformed, one employee departure at a time. The result is a bureaucracy on life support and tens of billions in lost government revenue. ProPublica estimates a toll of at least $18 billion every year, but the true cost could easily run tens of billions of dollars higher. ...The last time the IRS had fewer than 10,000 revenue agents was 1953, when the economy was a seventh of its current size. And the IRS is still shrinking. Almost a third of its remaining employees will be eligible to retire in the next year, and with morale plummeting, many of them will."

* * *

[CN: Environmental neglect and climate change. Covers entire section.]

Coral Davenport at the New York Times: Trump Prepares to Unveil a Vast Reworking of Clean Water Protections. "The Trump administration is expected on Tuesday to unveil a plan that would weaken federal clean water rules designed to protect millions of acres of wetlands and thousands of miles of streams nationwide from pesticide runoff and other pollutants. Environmentalists say the proposal represents a historic assault on wetlands regulation at a moment when Mr. Trump has repeatedly voiced a commitment to 'crystal-clean water.' The proposed new rule would chip away at safeguards put in place a quarter century ago... The clean water rollback is the latest in a series of actions by the Trump administration to weaken or undo major environmental rules, including proposals to weaken regulations on planet-warming emissions from cars, power plants, and oil and gas drilling rigs; a series of moves designed to speed new drilling in the vast Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; and efforts to weaken protections under the Endangered Species Act."

Yessenia Funes at Earther: The Trump Administration Is Spinning Its Latest Pro-Coal Policy as Good for People of Color.
The Environmental Protection Agency is using energy affordability among low-income communities and people of color as an argument to bring back coal. Yes, the same coal responsible for an estimated 3,000 American deaths a year.

Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler announced a new proposal Thursday that would repeal Obama-era regulations aimed at reducing carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired power plants.

...What's perhaps most misleading about Thursday's announcement, however, is the EPA's framing around how deregulating coal plants will somehow make energy more affordable and, in doing so, help disadvantaged communities. The administration loves to tout fossil fuels as a pathway to freedom and prosperity, and today's announcement was no different.

"Affordable energy benefits low and middle-income Americans the most, particularly disadvantaged and underserved communities," Wheeler said, during the announcement.

...Energy poverty is a very real thing, especially in low-income, black, and Latinx communities. Families that make $25,000 a year will spend more than 7 percent of their annual earnings on electricity bills, according to a 2016 report from the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. A household earning $90,000 a year, on the other hand, will spend just 2 percent on energy. Latinx and black homes especially feel this burden, per the report.

However, more coal won't fix this, especially in a world of cheap natural gas. If the U.S. government really wanted to save people money, it would develop policies that offer bill assistance and encourage retrofitting housing stock to make buildings more energy efficient. Old, dilapidated apartment units with poor insulation are the problem, per that report. So are inefficient household appliances, like fridges and dishwashers. People who rent don't always decide what fridge comes with their apartment.

Investing in renewable energy can also help give low-income communities a boost, said Mustafa Ali, former EPA environmental justice chair, to Earther. Solar and wind don't add to health costs or the detriment of our planet. Instead, they create new jobs.

"By moving in a different direction and a direction focused on renewable energy, we can actually help our most vulnerable communities move to a thriving position," Ali told Earther.

Wheeler's proposal, meanwhile, could cause the air quality in and around many of impoverished communities to take a hit.
Chris Mooney at the Washington Post: The Arctic Is in Even Worse Shape Than You Realize. "Over the past three decades of global warming, the oldest and thickest ice in the Arctic has declined by a stunning 95 percent, according the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's annual Arctic Report Card. The finding suggests that the sea at the top of the world has already morphed into a new and very different state, with major implications not only for creatures such as walruses and polar bears but, in the long term, perhaps for the pace of global warming itself." Goddamn.

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 662

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: Trump Is a Cruel, Traitorous Disgrace and Veterans' Day and California Wildfires: The Latest and How to Help.

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

[Content Note: Gun violence; misogyny; toxic masculinity] On Friday, I noted that Ian David Long, who opened fire in a bar in Thousand Oaks, California on Thursday, killing 12 people and injuring others before killing himself, had a history of misogynistic abuse. Since then, even more information has come out about Long and his abuse of women.

A second female coach "recalled him on Sunday as volatile and intimidating, and said that repeated complaints to school administrators about his behavior failed to prompt any discipline." Additionally, investigators are looking into the possibility that Long "believed his former girlfriend would be at the bar."

There were a lot of warning signs about this guy for many years. At every turn, authorities decided to ignore the people urgently raising flags, because they didn't want to ruin his life.

His life.

* * *

[CN: Gun violence; images of blood at link] In related news: Laurel Wamsley at NPR: After NRA Mocks Doctors, Physicians Reply: 'This Is Our Lane'.
A mocking tweet from the National Rifle Association has stirred many physicians to post on social media about their tragically frequent experiences treating patients in the aftermath of gun violence.

"Someone should tell self-important anti-gun doctors to stay in their lane," the NRA tweeted on Thursday. "Half of the articles in Annals of Internal Medicine are pushing for gun control. Most upsetting, however, the medical community seems to have consulted NO ONE but themselves."

The NRA was criticizing the American College of Physicians' (ACP) new position paper, in which the physicians' group outlines its public health approach to reducing deaths and injuries from firearms.

"We are not anti-gun: we are anti-bullet holes in our patients," Esther Choo, a doctor and professor of emergency medicine at Oregon Health & Science University, replied on Twitter. "Most upsetting, actually, is death and disability from gun violence that is unparalleled in the world."

The NRA posted its tweet just hours before a man shot and killed 12 people at a country music bar in Thousand Oaks, Calif.

"I would like to graciously extend the invitation to the author of this tweet and anyone else from the NRA to join me at the hospital the next time I care for a child who has been hurt or killed by a gun that wasn't safely stored or was an innocent bystander," tweeted Jeannie Moorjani, a pediatric doctor in Orlando.

More physicians weighed in, often using the hashtag #ThisIsOurLane.

"Do you have any idea how many bullets I pull out of corpses weekly? This isn't just my lane. It's my fucking highway," wrote forensic pathologist Judy Melinek, in a tweet that has gone viral.

A trauma surgeon in Utah tweeted a photo of his blue scrubs covered in blood. "Can't post a patient photo," he wrote, "so this is a selfie. This is what it looks like to #stayinmylane."
The Republican Party is a death cult, and the NRA is their primary sponsor.

* * *

[CN: Authoritarianism; video may autoplay at link] Cheyenne Haslett at ABC News: Trump, Without Evidence, Calls Florida Ballots 'Massively Infected,' Demands End to Recounts.
Donald Trump weighed in on the battle over counting ballots in Florida's Senate and governor's race Monday and, as he has done before, claimed without evidence that the integrity of the election had been compromised.

The president said the results from Election Night should be accepted and declared both Republican candidates should be declared the winners of their respective races.

He tweeted: "The Florida Election should be called in favor of Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis in that large numbers of new ballots showed up out of nowhere, and many ballots are missing or forged. An honest vote count is no longer possible-ballots massively infected. Must go with Election Night!"

The president's desire to use results from Election Night, which he tweeted on Veterans Day, would disenfranchise many votes that are counted after Election Day, including voters serving overseas in the military. Overseas and military ballots can arrive until Nov. 16 and will be counted, as long as they're postmarked on or before Election Day.

Additionally, there is no evidence that ballots "showed up out of nowhere," but rather ballots continued to be counted days after the election — largely mail-in, absentee, and provisional ballots in slow counties like Broward and Palm Beach, which lean Democrat. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has no open investigations into any claims of potential fraud, ABC News confirmed Sunday afternoon.
Disenfranchising servicemembers is quite a way to celebrate Veterans' Day.

Yvonne Wingett Sanchez and Ronald J. Hansen at the Arizona Republic: Kyrsten Sinema Widens Lead Again over Martha McSally in Pivotal Day for Arizona's U.S. Senate Race. "Democrat Kyrsten Sinema widened her lead again over Republican Martha McSally on Sunday, a pivotal day in the U.S. Senate race as the number of uncounted ballots dwindled. Sinema expanded her lead to 32,292 votes — a 1.5 percentage-point lead — as of 6:20 p.m. Sunday, according to updated counts posted by the Arizona Secretary of State. Her campaign manager predicted her victory was inevitable. The lengthy vote-count process, which has continued long after the polls closed Nov. 6, is mostly due to the need to verify signatures for voters who vote by mail. The Arizona Republic estimates about 215,000 ballots remain to be counted statewide. To remain competitive, McSally needs to outperform all of her previous showings in Maricopa County, the state's most populous area and one that Sinema has dominated."

[CN: Racism; eliminationist imagery] Michael Brice-Saddler at the Washington Post: A Senator from Mississippi Joked About 'Public Hanging'; Her Black Opponent Called It 'Reprehensible'. "Drawing cheers from a gaggle of supporters, the line appeared to be a throwaway one. 'If he invited me to a public hanging, I'd be on the front row,' Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss) is heard saying in a video posted to Twitter on Sunday morning. ...In a statement Sunday, [Democrat Mike Espy] called Hyde-Smith's comments 'reprehensible.' He added, 'They have no place in our political discourse, in Mississippi, or our country. We need leaders, not dividers, and her words show that she lacks the understanding and judgment to represent the people of our state.' In her own statement Sunday, Hyde-Smith [said]: 'In a comment on Nov. 2, I referred to accepting an invitation to a speaking engagement. In referencing the one who invited me, I used an exaggerated expression of regard, and any attempt to turn this into a negative connotation is ridiculous.'" WOW.

Kira Lerner at ThinkProgress: Trump Properties Made Millions off the Midterm Election. "Trump-owned and branded properties cashed in during the midterm elections, according to a CNN analysis which found that campaigns and outside groups spent at least $3.2 million at the hotels and resorts. The CNN analysis of Federal Election Commission data found that the Republican National Committee was the biggest customer, spending at least $1.2 million at Trump-branded properties since the beginning of 2017." How nice for him.

* * *

[CN: Nativism] Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: ICE Is Imprisoning a Record 44,000 People. "The steep rise in detentions is 'indicative of the fact that the Trump administration has weaponized ICE into an entity that far exceeds the agency's original mandate and fits with the anti-immigrant actions of this administration,' Rep. Raul Grijalva, an Arizona Democrat, told The Daily Beast. 'With little accountability and oversight — and a long track record of abuse — I'm concerned that the vast majority of those in ICE custody include many innocent people who've done nothing wrong.' ...'From a moral perspective, 44,000 is an astonishing number of people to be separated from their families and communities and held within a system that DHS's own Inspector General has criticized for abusive conditions,' added the Detention Watch Network's Mary Small."

[CN: Misogyny] Jessica Glenza at the Guardian: Planned Parenthood's New President Warns of 'State of Emergency' for Women's Health.
Dr. Leana Wen takes over as president of Planned Parenthood — America's biggest, best-funded, and most vilified reproductive healthcare institution — at a time of unprecedented attacks on the organization's values and work.

Last week, Alabama voters passed a fetal rights law; the Trump administration finalized rules to allow employers to opt out of health insurance requirements to provide birth control; and liberal women collectively held their breath as one of their champions — 85-year-old supreme court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, leader of the court's liberal wing — was hospitalized with three cracked ribs.

To all this, Wen's answer is to play offense.

"There is huge unmet need across our country, and it is our moral imperative to provide care for all those who need us," Wen said, with the torch-carrying conviction of an emergency room physician who has seen too much in too little time. "I plan to expand our services, and expand our reach."

..."There is no question we are in a state of emergency for women's health," said Wen. When a society "treats one type of healthcare differently than everyone else, that's when we get to where we are, which is the biggest healthcare crisis of our time."
[CN: Authoritarianism] Matt Shuham at TPM: Conway on Doctored Video White House Released: 'That's Not Altered; That's Sped Up'. "White House counselor Kellyanne Conway asserted Sunday that a 'sped-up' video is not the same as an 'altered' video, while defending the White House's use of an altered video of a hand motion made by CNN reporter Jim Acosta in order to justify suspending his press pass. 'That's not altered; that's sped up,' Conway told Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace. 'They do it all the time in sports to see if there's actually a first down or a touchdown. So I have to disagree with the, I think, overwrought description of this video being doctored as if we put somebody else's arm in there,' she added."

Staff at the Daily Beast: North Korea 'Continuing Missile Program at 16 Secret Sites,' Satellite Images Show. "North Korea is carrying on with its ballistic missile program at 16 secret facilities, new satellite images have revealed, undermining [Donald] Trump's boasts that he persuaded the hermit kingdom to abandon its weapons production and work toward denuclearization. The images, reported by The New York Times, show North Korea is continuing to make improvements at more than a dozen launching sites. The development suggests North Korea's promise to shut down one major test site was an attempted deception. The secret missile bases were identified in a study to be published Monday by the Beyond Parallel program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank."

[CN: Homophobia] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Boston Gay Bars Receive Threatening Phone Calls. "At least two Boston gay bars received threatening phone calls around the same time on consecutive nights over the weekend, according to police. What the threats were was not disclosed. dbar in Dorchester received a threatening call on Friday night, and Alley Bar in downtown Boston received a similar call on Saturday. ...The Boston Globe reported on the threat to Alley Bar: 'Rocco LaMonica, the bar's manager on duty, said a doorman answered the bar's phone and heard the threats. LaMonica would not comment on what happened during the call but said it 'was threatening enough that we needed to call the police.' 'We're not going to stand back for anybody,' LaMonica said. 'You can't take a chance now.''"

Martin Rosenbaum at BBC News: Pseudonyms to Protect Authors of Controversial Articles. "Academics who are frightened to explore controversial topics, in case it provokes a backlash, will soon have a safer route to publish such work. An international group of university researchers is planning a new journal which will allow articles on sensitive debates to be written under pseudonyms. They feel free intellectual discussion on tough issues is being hampered by a culture of fear and self-censorship. The Journal of Controversial Ideas will be launched early next year." Yeah, this is going to be bad.

[CN: Rape culture; clergy sex abuse] David McFadden and David Crary at the AP: Bishops Will Delay Votes on Steps to Combat Sex Abuse Crisis. "In an abrupt change of plans, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops opened the group's national meeting Monday by announcing it will delay for at least several months any votes on proposed new steps to address the clergy sex abuse crisis that is rocking the church. Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, of Galveston-Houston, said the delay was requested by the Vatican, which asked that the U.S. bishops wait until after a Vatican-convened global meeting on sex abuse in February." The literal opposite of urgency. Fucking disgusting.

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 585

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

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

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

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

* * *

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

Shocking. Cough.

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


That is such bad news. Fucking hell.

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

[CN: Genocide]


* * *

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

* * *

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


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

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

Open Wide...

Pope Francis Says Words; Takes No Action

[Content Note: Sex abuse by clergy.]

Last week, the Pennsylvania Attorney General's office issued an extensive, gruesome grand jury report, detailing decades of abuse by Catholic clergy and subsequent cover-ups by the Catholic Church in the state.

Today, Pope Francis issued a letter in which he condemns the abuse and cover-up and wrote: "Looking ahead to the future, no effort must be spared to create a culture able to prevent such [abuses] from happening, but also to prevent the possibility of their being covered up and perpetuated."

Strong words from someone who was publicly accusing victims of being liars just earlier this year.

But, as we all know, Pope Francis is always there with the strong words to get the headlines and attendant commentary about how progressive he is.

Which he is indeed getting today. In abundance.

The problem is, there's no follow-through on those words; no action to back them up.

Francis did not lay out any concrete steps the Vatican would take, but he acknowledged that systemic change is needed.
Oh.

I guess it'll just happen my magic if we all pray hard enough for it to happen.

As I have been saying for many years, the difference in this pontiff is not that he's actually more progressive, but that he's more media-savvy.

I take up space in solidarity with the survivors of abuse, and I hope that they will get more than cynical words from the leader of the institution that enabled their abusers and concealed their abuse.

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