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The Virtual Pub Is Open

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[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

Belly up to the bar,
and be in this space together.

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We Resist: Day 113

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So Liss posts 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. My list is not as comprehensive as hers usually is, but here are some things worth resisting.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist

***

So Trump merrily continues committing obstruction of justice crimes in public. During today's early morning Trump Dump, he tweeted:

I've long thought that Trump sounds like a a wannabe mob boss from a 1930s gangster film. "Comey had better hope...or he sleeps with fishes!" (If only Trump were a fictional character played by James Cagney. If only.)

It didn't take long for Keith Boykin to cite the specific statues Trump is potentially violating:

This afternoon, Sean Spicer refused to comment on an obvious question related to the tweet, when a reporters asked if Trump was recording White House conversations.

As I noted in today's earlier thread, Republicans keep steadfastly gazing at their shoes in response to Trump's sneers at the law. Per usual, privately many Republicans are willing to admit Trump's firing of Comey is a disaster, as this story from John Ward at Yahoo News suggests. But on the record? Well.

You can read what happened when The Texas Tribune asked members of the Texas legislative delegation their opinion about the state of the investigations; most Republicans either insisted that the current investigations are enough or declined to comment. Which means, they're not defending Trump, either.They know it's indefensible and still. Even those few who are critical? I think this headline from Tara Golshan's story at Vox sums it up: "Jeff Flake isn’t comfortable with the Comey firing, but he’s not doing anything about it."

Over at Mother Jones, Pema Levy writes about the Democrats who are trying to hold Team Trump accountable, calling out Sessions for breaking his recusal promise:

On Friday, two senior House Democrats pushed harder. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, asserted that Sessions violated two recusal promises and, in so doing, may have broken the law.

In a letter to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, Conyers and Cummings lay out their case against Sessions. In his confirmation hearing, Sessions promised to recuse himself from any investigation involving Hillary Clinton due to derogatory statements he had made about her when he was campaigning for Trump. And on March 2, following the revelation that Sessions had lied to the Senate Judiciary Committee about his past contacts with the Russian ambassador, Sessions recused himself from "any existing or future investigations of any matters related in any way to the campaigns for President of the United States."

And Ken Delanian and Pete Williams at NBC have a devastating takedown of Trump's claims about his dinner with Comey:

In his interview with Holt Thursday, Trump said twice that he believed Comey requested the dinner. Trump said Comey asked that Trump keep him on as FBI director, and told the president on three occasions that he was not under investigation as part of the FBI's inquiry into Russian election interference.

"The president is not correct," the former official said. "The White House called [Comey] out of the blue. Comey didn't want to do it. He didn't even want the rank and file at the FBI to know about it."

But in the end, "He's still the commander-in-chief. He's your boss. How do you say no?"

As for Trump spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders' story that she spoke with "countless" FBI agents who supported the Comey firing:"White House Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders claimed Thursday that she had heard from "countless members of the FBI who are grateful for the president's decision." Current and former FBI agents scoffed at what they termed a ridiculous assertion."I doubt five people at the FBI even have the [phone] number of the deputy White House press secretary," the former senior official said."

Just to remind ourselves: this is not normal. And this is not smaller than Watergate. The Atlantic has an excellent story from James Fallows that explicitly compares this crisis to Watergate, which he witnessed as a young journalist. It's far more serious. Among his reasons is the seriousness of the crime:

But the worst version of what Nixon and his allies were attempting to do—namely, to find incriminating or embarrassing information about political adversaries ranging from the Democratic party chairman Lawrence O’Brien to Pentagon Papers-whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg—was not as bad as what came afterwards. Those later efforts included efforts to derail investigations by the FBI, the police, various grand juries and congressional committees, which collectively amounted to obstruction of justice.

And what is alleged this time? Nothing less than attacks by an authoritarian foreign government on the fundamentals of American democracy, by interfering with an election—and doing so as part of a sustained effort that included parallel interference in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and elsewhere. At worst, such efforts might actually have changed the election results. At least, they were meant to destroy trust in democracy. Not much of this is fully understood or proven, but the potential stakes are incomparably greater than what happened during Watergate, crime and cover-up alike

I also think his comparison of Trump and Nixon is on point:

Richard Nixon was a dark but complex figure. ...He was paranoid, resentful, bigoted, and a crook. He was also deeply knowledgeable, strategically prescient, publicly disciplined—and in some aspects of his domestic policy strikingly “progressive” by today’s standards (for instance, his creation of the Environmental Protection Agency).

Donald Trump, by contrast—well, read the transcripts of his two most recent interviews, and weep. He is impulsive, and ignorant, and apparently beyond the reach of any control, even his own.

Speaking of Trump's odious character and incredible ignorance, Ava Du Vernay tweeted out this clip yesterday, from the March interview of former FBI agent Clint Watts by the Senate Intelligence Committee. Senator James Lankford (R-OK) asked him why the Russians were using "active measures" in the 2016 election, and why they were successful. It's worth pondering again.

Rough transcript of Watt's response: "I think the answer is very simple and is what no one is really saying in this room, which is: part of the reason active measures have worked in this U.S. election is because the Commander-in-Chief has used Russian active measures at times against his opponents at times. On 14 August, 2016, after a debunked incident, his campaign chairman (crosstalk)--Paul Manafort, cited the fake terrorist story on CNN [note: story concerned an alleged attack on NATO base) and he used it as a talking point. On 11 October, President Trump stood on a stage and cited what appears to be a fake news story from Sputnik news that disappeared form the internet. He denies the intel from the United States about Russia. He claimed the election could be rigged. That was the number one theme pushed by RT Sputnik-wide outlets all the way up until the election. Ah, he's made claims of voter fraud, that president Obama is not a citizen, that, ah, you know Congressman [sic--Senator] Cruz is not a citizen, so, part of the reason active measures worked, and it does today in terms of Trump Tower being wiretapped is because they parrot the same lines. So, Putin is correct. He can say that he's not influencing anything because he is just putting out his stance. But until we get a firm basis for fact and fiction in our own, our own country? Do I support the intelligence community or a story I read on my Twitter feed? we're gonna have a big problem. I can tell you, right now, today, gray outlets, that are Soviet [sic--Russian] pushing accounts, Tweet at President Trump, during high volumes when they know he's online, and they push conspiracy theories. So if he is going to click on one of those or cite one of those, it just proves Putin correct."

The Russians know they can tweet bullshit at President Trump and there's a damn good chance that he will believe it, and repeat it, and perhaps even use it to justify policy. This is not normal.

Elsewhere in the world, Le Monde had a good investigation into the American hate sites that were linked to the anti-Macron propaganda spread in France. There's an English summary here. Of note is that key to the connection is white supremacist Andrew Auernheimer, who bragged in late 2016 to Ben Schreckinger at Politico about his success in converting Bernie Sanders supporters to Trump supporters, and about opening operations in France and Germany. Feminists may also remember him as "weev," the key figure in the vicious harassment of tech guru Kathy Sierra back in 2007.[Content note: descriptions of harassment, including rape threats and revenge porn, at link.]I note with bitterness that the in the linked article, we see the FBI declining to investigate cases of women being harassed online because it wasn't a matter of national security. Welp.

Let's all ponder the fact that if law enforcement hadn't essentially shrugged at the online harassment of women for the past decade, we might not be here.

*****

In non-Russia news. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions has announced he is stepping up his efforts to impose longer prison sentences:

Attorney general Jeff Sessions is directing federal prosecutors to pursue the most serious charges possible against the vast majority of suspects, a reversal of Obama-era policies that is sure to send more people to prison and for much longer terms.

“This policy affirms our responsibility to enforce the law, is moral and just, and produces consistency,” Sessions wrote in a memo sent Thursday night to US attorneys and made public early on Friday.

The move amounts to an unmistakable undoing of Obama administration criminal justice policies that aimed to ease overcrowding in federal prisons and contributed to a national rethinking of how drug criminals were prosecuted and sentenced. Critics said the change will subject more lower-level offenders to unfairly harsh mandatory minimum sentences.

Not surprisingly, Trump's tax plan is terrible. More surprisingly, both conservative and liberal economists tend to agree it's ineffective. As Binyamin Applebaum writes at the New York Times:

Economists do not see a similar upside in reducing personal income taxation because there is little evidence that current rates are high enough to discourage people from earning as much money as they can. When Mr. Reagan took office, the top tax rate was 70 percent; now, it is 39.6 percent. “The top tax rates appear to have little or no relation to the size of the economic pie,” the Congressional Research Service concluded in a 2012 report examining the impact of tax cuts on economic growth.

Even the rosiest estimates of the potential benefits of such changes fall well short of creating the economic growth necessary to offset the cost of Mr. Trump’s plan. Mr. Furman said he thought he could write a tax code that would increase annual economic growth by about 0.3 percent. Over a decade, that’s enough to add about $1,500 to the average family’s income.

Lindsey Bever at the Washington Post reports that new immigration policies are having a terrible effect on reporting of crime by Hispanic Americans.

“It looks like they’re going further into the shadows, and there appears to be a chilling effect in the reporting of violent crime by members of the Hispanic community,” Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said. Acevedo recently announced that new data shows a 13 percent decrease in violent crime reporting by Hispanics in Houston during the first three months of 2017 compared to the first three months of 2016; it also shows a 12 percent increase in violent crime reporting by non-Hispanics. Houston saw a 43 percent drop in the number of Hispanics reporting rape and sexual assault, while there was an 8 percent rise in the number of non-Hispanics reporting such crimes.

And in news from the people leading the resistance:

Trans teen Gavin Grimm is back in court, and his lawyers are arguing that Title IX still protects his right to gender-appropriate facilities, despite the federal government rescinding Obama-era guidelines for schools to interpret Title IX in that fashhion. John Riley at Metro Weekly describes their arguments:

“The ‘dispositive realit[y]’ is that Gavin is recognized by his family, his medical providers, the Virginia Department of Health, and the world at large as a boy. Allowing him to use the same restrooms as other boys is the only way to provide him access to sex-separated restrooms pursuant to [the Education Amendments Act of 1972] without discrimination. It is, therefore, the only option consistent with the underlying requirements of Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause. “Excluding transgender people from using the same restrooms as everyone else prevents them ‘from participating fully in our society, which is precisely the type of segregation that the Fourteenth Amendment’ and Title IX ‘cannot countenance,’ the brief continues, quoting the Bostic v. Schaefer case that overturned Virginia’s ban on same-sex marriage.

The key takeaway here is that Grimm's lawyers are arguing the protection exists independently of the whims of the Department of Education. Although Grimm will be graduating soon, he expresses hope that the case will help others:

"While it’s disappointing that I’m going to graduate high school without this case being resolved, I’ve long since realized that this fight is about more than just me,” Grimm said in a statement. “It’s for all of the trans youth who are in school or one day will be who shouldn’t have to go to school and be treated differently than anyone else, and I’m eager to continue my fight in order to do as much good for them as I can.”

Thank you for fighting, Gavin.

And thanks to the students of two HBCUs for standing up to the racists who now lead our country. Last week, students at Bethune-Coookman college booed and turned their backs on Black History ignoramus Betsy DeVos, who the administration had invited as their commencement speaker. As Kevin Diaz and Lindsey Ellis report, the administration at Texas Southern decided to avoid such a scene and canceled a speech due to be given by Republican senator John Cornyn. Students had signed a Change.org petition protesting his invitation:

The Change.org petition was sponsored by 26-year-old Rebecca Trevino, 2017 graduate in social work from San Antonio. In an interview Friday, she said she had no desire to censor Cornyn, but rather to represent the values of the school. "What I want people to realize is that this is our commencement," Trevino said. "This is something we've worked hard for and we want someone who represents us and our values."

She posted the petition online a week ago, after hearing about Cornyn's invitation. "This is an issue that's important to me and my classmates," she added. "We have a lot of pride in our school, and we're very protective of who comes by."

In an online appeal for signatures, she said that "Cornyn and his political party create and support policies that cause harm to marginalized communities." She also cited Cornyn's votes to approve DeVos, Jeff Sessions as Attorney General, and his support for voter ID law. The student petition also cites is opposition to federal funding for "sanctuary cities" and his past support for a constitutional ban of same-sex marriage.

Right on, Rebecca.

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

{Note: my thanks to SKM, eastsidekate, Fannie and Scott for their help in compiling this.]

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DDOC: 1 Dalmation

I admit it: I follow cute dog accounts on Twitter for the stress relief.

Video description: a Dalmation puppy walks v-e-r-y carefully across a hardwood floor with a tennis ball in its mouth. It makes it to the human recording this and drops the ball very politely. Then it LEAPS for its human, who can be heard giggling as the video ends.

Please use this as a daily dose of cute thread, and feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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Trump Openly Admits to Obstruction of Justice

Welp. It's official. Trump has brazenly admitted to obstructing justice. Will anyone do anything about it?

From CNN (auto-play at link), the story from the White House press conference:

Earlier Thursday, White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the Comey firing may hasten the agency's investigation into Russian meddling.

"We want this to come to its conclusion, we want it to come to its conclusion with integrity," she said, referring to the FBI's probe into Moscow's interference in last year's election. "And we think that we've actually, by removing Director Comey, taken steps to make that happen."

Okay, so we want to see the probe "come to its conclusion" and removing Comey will help that. Uh-huh.

If that weren't enough, there was Trump's interview with NBC's Lester Holt, which I mentioned in yesterday's We Resist thread. When a fuller version of the interview came out, it seems Trump made several damaging, and even incriminating, statements.

In that interview, Trump said that he had called Comey to ask if he were under investigation.

He also said he made up his mind to fire Comey because the Russia-Trump connection is a "made-up story."

No, you didn't misread that. The President of the United States said he fired the man investigating him because, according to him, the subject of a federal investigation, he's innocent.

This is not how the Constitution works.

For bonus points in the ignorance/arrogance category, Trump openly admitted that he knowingly kept Flynn on despite warnings that Flynn was compromised, because Flynn was a general and all and deserved a chance, amirite?

NBC has clips and the extended interview available.

Conservative columnist Jennifer Rubin, a consistent Trump critic, writes bluntly: No good lawyer would have let Trump give Lester Holt this interview.

Trump implausibly claimed James B. Comey told him he was not under investigation while simultaneously acknowledging that the campaign for which he was the candidate is. Not only would it have been highly improper for Comey to talk about the investigation (and smack of obstruction since the question was asked during a dinner discussing Comey staying on), it would have also been untrue. Comey has testified under oath that Trump’s campaign is under investigation so it would be impossible to rule out Trump’s complicity. Trump’s repeatedly quizzing Comey on the investigation can also be seen as an ongoing attempt to interfere with the investigation. Trump’s remarks not only strain credulity, they also effectively waive the executive privilege on conversations with Comey. Conversely, if they are true he effectively has confessed to obstruction.

Trump is in deep trouble, primarily because his own staff, enablers and media cohorts cannot keep up with his lies. They might consider not saying anything until they are sure what the permanent cover story is.

Now let's all engage in a thought experiment, shall we? Let's imagine President Hillary Clinton firing the head of an agency investigating the Benghazi stuff that we know the GOP was planning to keep alive. Let's imagine she openly said she'd contacted the head of the investigation to ask about it. And let's imagine she admitted she'd kept on someone she was warned was a security risk.

The GOP would have had the articles of impeachment drawn up within the hour.

Remember: they screamed when Bill Clinton (with poor judgement, in my opinion) spoke with Loretta Lynch on the tarmac about grandkids while the Justice Department was investigating bullshit charges about Hillary Clinton's private server. They did so loudly enough that Lynch recused herself from the investigation, put Comey in charge, and well, we know how that ended.

But now? Well, according to Seun Min Kim and Burgess Everett at Politico, GOP Senators are still unwilling to support calls for the Justice Department to appoint a special prosecutor. And only two Senators support even the appointment of a select committee focused solely on investigating Trump-Russia ties:the very same Senators who have done so for months, McCain and Graham. Nothing has changed. As Kim and Burgess write:

It’s a familiar dance between Donald Trump and the congressional GOP: Trump does something widely seen as a brazen violation of political norms. Even as some Republicans call him out, most defend Trump’s actions or decline to take action directly challenging his administration.

I think this sums it up:

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) said he’d need to see “some evidence that people investigating it are not doing a good job before we want to have something different.”

“I haven’t heard anybody accused of a crime yet,” Paul said. “Accuse someone of a crime, show they did something wrong, show us some evidence. Just to have an investigation to have an investigation, I don’t think is a good idea. We’ve got plenty of investigations.”

Show they did something wrong before you investigate? That's the whole point of investigations, genius. And your "plenty" of investigations don't have the resources a single focused one would have. These guys can't even get their excuses straight. Also? YOU HAVE ALL THE EVIDENCE YOU NEED, HE SAID IT ON FUCKING TV.

Ahem.

To sum: Trump admits crime and malfeasance on tv. GOP collectively shrugs.

It remains to be seen if Trump will face any real consequences for his statements.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a pink sofa. Have a seat and chat.

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Question of the Day

I'm recycling a question Liss asked back in 2012:

If you were a crayon, what color would you be?

I'm still going with Shiny Shamrock.

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Stop Helping, Bernie

Gentle readers, I give you Senator Bernie Sanders:

The relevant portion of the video clip starts just after the 4 minute mark. Sanders says that people have lost faith in the Republicans And the Democrats before stating, "Democrats should stop politicizing this is issue. It may turn out president...was not colluding with the Russians."

Um.

WHAT ARE YOU EVEN DOING, BERNIE?

(That's rhetorical).

(h/t Eastside Kate.)

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We Resist: Day 112

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So Liss posts 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. My list is not as comprehensive as hers usually is, but here are some things worth resisting.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist

***

Carol Moello and Greg Miller at the Washington Post report that members of the intelligence community are alarmed that Trump permitted a Russian photographer in the Oval Office, probably without the kind of screening needed to detect sophisticated spying equipment. The article notes:

Russia has in the past gone to significant lengths to hide bugs in key U.S. facilities. In the late 1990s, the State Department’s security came under fire after the discovery of a sophisticated listening device in a conference room on the seventh floor, where then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and others often held meetings.

The same article reports on the reactions of Russian officials to questions about Russian electoral interference and the the Comey firing:

Speaking to reporters at the Russian Embassy after his White House talks with Trump and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Lavrov did not hide his irritation with repeated questions about Moscow’s alleged meddling in the U.S. presidential election to boost Trump’s chances and damage Hillary Clinton’s.

“I never thought I’d have to answer such questions, particularly in the United States, given your highly developed democratic system,” he said, according to a simultaneous translation of his remarks into English.

He's laughing at us. And so are the Moscow headlines:

“A Comical Firing” was the headline on the Comey story on Russia’s pro-Kremlin NTV news channel. In the report, Konstantin Kosyachev, a senior Russian legislator, said that the FBI director was let go “because he’s not supposed to act like he’s the president.

One of the hallmarks of American constitutional democracy is that no-one is above the law, not even the president. It's an indication of how endangered that democracy is that Russians (who know a thing or two about political leaders acting outside the law with total impunity) would say Comey was overreaching, and also find it all very funny.

Although the Justice department has denied this, news reports citing Congressional sources say that Comey had requested additional "resources" the help with the Russia investigation before he was fired.

And speaking of being humiliated by Russia:

Another ludicrous lie. What on God's green earth does one do with publicity photos but release them? And why lie about this, when it only makes the administration look even more incompetent and humiliated?

And speaking of ludicrous lies. In the immediate aftermath of the firing, the White House was big on insisting that it had nothing to do with the Russia probe and that Trump acted on the recommendations of Sessions and Rosenstein. They even trotted out Mike Pence. (Auto-play at link.)

Then this, today:

Yes, asshole, we all knew that, but why the pretense?

In non-Russia-related resistance news:

Trump has announced the formation of a voter fraud commission, to be headed up by Mike Pence and Kris Kobach, Secretary of State for Kansas. As Bryan Lowry, Lindsay Wise, Jonathan Shorman and Anita Kumar report, Kobach has a long history with voter "fraud," aka voter suppression:

Kobach, who is weighing a run for Kansas governor in 2018, is the only secretary of state in the nation with prosecutorial power and has championed the state’s controversial proof of citizenship law, which requires voters to provide a birth certificate or passport to register. The news comes one day after Kobach was ordered by a federal judge to hand over documents from a November meeting with Trump to the American Civil Liberties Union as part of an ongoing voting rights lawsuit.

Former Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander, a Kansas City Democrat, said that the entire purpose of commission “is to use taxpayer dollars to create the impression among the average voter that there is widespread fraud in our elections” to make it easier to pass restrictive voting laws at the state level. “This commission is a fraud. And President Trump has chosen a fraud to be in charge of it,” Khttps://www.thenation.com/article/trumps-commission-on-election-integrity-will-lead-to-massive-voter-suppression/ander said of Kobach.

Chris Carson, president of the League of Women Voters, called the commission in a statement “part of a wider effort to suppress the vote, keep certain politicians in power, and undermine our elections by spreading falsehoods.”

Ari Berman observes:

If you want to know what such voter intimidation looks like, take a look at Pence’s home state of Indiana, where state police in October 2016 raided the offices of a group working to register African-American and low-income voters. They seized thousands of voter registration applications, even though only ten were suspected to be fraudulent and no one has been charged.

Just yesterday, as part of a lawsuit by the ACLU challenging Kansas’s proof of citizenship law, a federal judge ordered Kobach to produce documents by Friday that he shared with Trump after the election that called for purging the voting rolls and amending the National Voter Registration Act to require proof of citizenship for registration. When he met with Trump on November 21, Kobach was photographed holding a white paper that advocated for a wish-list of radical right-wing policies, including “extreme vetting” and tracking of “all aliens from high-risk areas,” reducing the “intake of Syrian refugees to zero,” deporting a “record number of criminal aliens in the first year,” and the “rapid build” of a wall along the US-Mexico border.

The Trump administration has shown us what they'll do for disaster relief (in states with Democratic governors at least), and it isn't pretty. From Angela Fritz at the Washington Post: "N.C. said it still needs $929 million in aid for Hurricane Matthew. It got $6.1 million."

North Carolina officials estimate the storm did $2.8 billion in damage, which doesn’t include $2 billion in economic losses. In the days after the storm, Congress gave North Carolina around $332 million for immediate disaster relief in addition to the assistance FEMA provided. In December, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) provided the state with $199 million for long-term relief and rebuilding.

Cooper says it wasn’t enough to cover the full extent of the damage. In early April, he requested an additional $929 million. But in the omnibus spending bill passed earlier this month, Congress only gave HUD $400 million.

In other words, the department that allocates long-term disaster relief has a budget that’s less than half of what Cooper says North Carolina needs to recover from Hurricane Matthew alone.

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

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DDOC: Best Damn Kitten Goalie in the NHL

This kitten is an excellent goalie.

Video description: A tawny kitten crouches low on a wood floor, looking in the direction of the camera. A puck-shaped piece of plastic (a bottle cap?) slides towards it. Kitten blocks! Another block! BLOCK! Now comes one that's airborne--kitten leaps--BLOCKED! And a low BLOCK! High BLOCK! Good kitten!

Please use this as a daily dose of cute thread, and feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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Subpoena Issued for Flynn Documents

Yesterday evening, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence issued a subpoena to Mike Flynn for documents relating to the Russia investigation. The announcement was made jointly by committee chair Republican Richard Burr of North Carolina, and vice-chair Mark Warner, Democrat from Virginia. The announcement notes:

The Committee first requested these documents in an April 28, 2017 letter to Lieutenant General Flynn, but he declined, through counsel, to cooperate with the Committee’s request.

NBC's Frank Thorpe reports that this is the first subpoena issued by the Senate Intel Committee since the 9/11investigation.

This is in addition to the subpoena issued by a grand jury for Flynn's Russia-related documents (as reported by CNN, auto-play at link). As Alex Whiting explained at Newsweek (another auto-play at link), this is not a sign that charges are imminent, and such subpoena orders are a normal part of the grand jury's investigative function. Nevertheless, it signals the investigation is not closing anytime soon.

By contrast, Senate and Congressional committees more often ask for voluntary cooperation first. The fact that Burr and Warner have publicly called out Flynn for his non-cooperation is not a good sign for him. (That's probably why Roger Stone is babbling about how he will voluntarily cooperate, while also whining about how he has been disparaged and also Comey was bad, blah blah blah. My advice would be to stop talking, dude, except that actually I hope you will incriminate yourself, so DO PROCEED, Mr. Stone.)

That doesn't mean that Burr or any other Republicans are abandoning Trump; possibly they hope they can scold Flynn as a scapegoat and be done with it. But I doubt any good of this comes for Flynn--and that's good for the rest of the country.

Of course, that may be complicated by Trump's alleged continued loyalty to Flynn. As reported by Kimberly Dozier, Asawin Suebsaeng, and Lachlan Markay at the Daily Beast, staffers are having to practically sit on Trump to keep him from contacting Flynn. That would be witness tampering, of course, which helped bring Nixon down. So again, if I'm giving advice--go for it, Don! Call him, text, send a note on ruled paper covered in hearts and elaborately folded into a small rectangle! By all means, incriminate yourself!

Just another day of these fucking guys.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a yellow sofa. Have a seat and chat.

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Blog Note

Since tomorrow is my birthday, I am giving myself the gift of the rest of the week off. (Happy Birthday to me!) Even though I will be away, we will still have Open Threads, and some of the other contributors may pop in over the next two days.

See you on Monday!

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Kathy_A: "What cool story do you tell about yourself that really surprises people when you tell it?"

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by soup.

Recommended Reading:

Mariame Kaba: [Content Note: Carcerality; abuse; violence; misogynoir] Free Us All: Participatory Defense Campaigns as Abolitionist Organizing

Tauriq Moosa: [CN: White supremacy] White People, It's Time to Prioritize Justice over Civility

Monica Roberts: [CN: Transmisogynoir; violence; death] My Thoughts About Brenda Bostick's Murder

Yessenia Funes: Senate Rejects Resolution to Remove Methane Emissions Regulations

Keisha Hatchett: Betsy DeVos Came to Bethune-Cookman for an Honorary Degree and They Came for Her Hairline

Ally Boguhn: Nebraska Democrat with Anti-Choice Record Loses Mayoral Bid

Leave your links and recommendations in comments. Self-promotion welcome and encouraged!

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Shaker Gourmet

Whatcha been cooking up in your kitchen lately, Shakers?

Share your favorite recipes, solicit good recipes, share recipes you've recently tried, want to try, are trying to perfect, whatever! Whether they're your own creation, or something you found elsewhere, share away.

Also welcome: Recipes you've seen recently that you'd love to try, but haven't yet!

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The White House Says Comey Committed "Atrocities"

This is a real thing that happened at the White House press briefing, where Deputy White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was filling in for Sean Spicer (who was presumably lost in a hedge):

REPORTER: You said that [Comey] made a lot of missteps and mistakes; back at the end of October, this president was applauding the FBI Director when he reopened the investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails. So he seemed quite happy with him at that point. What changed?

SANDERS: Well, I think the president's position. One, he was a candidate for president, not the president. Those are two very different things. Once you take over leading the Department of Justice, that's very different than being a candidate in a campaign. As you guys all know, there's a very clear distinction between those two things.

I think also having a letter like the one that he received [from Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein] and having that conversation that outlined the basic, uh, just, atrocities in circumventing the chain of command in the Department of Justice.

Any person of legal mind and authority knows what a big deal that is, particularly in the Department of Justice, particularly for somebody like the Deputy Attorney General, who has been part of the Justice Department for thirty years and is such a respected person. When he saw that, he had to speak up on that action, and I think that was the final catalyst.
Whew, okay. So, first of all, there's this:


Trump also insisted that Michael Flynn was treated unfairly by the media. He went out of his way to defend a man he was obliged to begrudgingly fire because of that man's lies and possible treason, but now the White House spokesperson accuses Comey of having committed "atrocities," referring to the same actions that Trump praised.

If Comey committed any atrocity, it was helping elect Trump. And that is certainly not what the White House means.

Secondly, Sanders doubled-down on the White House party line that Rosenstein's report was the final straw for Trump, but elides the inconvenient fact that Rosenstein did not explicitly recommend firing Comey in his report.

That was Attorney General Jeff Sessions' recommendation, based on Rosenstein's report, which itself was requested by Trump during a meeting at the White House.

We are meant to believe that Sessions and Rosenstein only now brought their concerns to Trump about Comey's handling of the Clinton investigation last year, Trump told them to put it in writing, then Trump reviewed their findings, and made the tough decision to fire Comey. We are simultaneously meant to ignore that Comey was investigating Trump's ties to Russia and reports that Trump "had grown enraged by the Russia investigation."

That is manifest horseshit.

This president and his attorney general conspired to obstruct justice, creating a constitutional crisis for the nation.

That is what happened. There is no doubt.

And, as my friend Sarah Kendzior observes in her latest piece, "The purge of Mr. Comey is a standard power play, the kind one typically sees in states like Turkey or Russia as dictators consolidate power. To not be surprised is to acknowledge the horrifying fact that the United States is becoming an autocracy."

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Daily Dose of Cute

This is how Dudley lets me know he needs to go out. It makes me laugh every single time.


Video Description: Dudley the Greyhound shoves his long schnoz in my face to make sure he has my attention. Then he walks over to the couch and sliiiiiiiiiides all the way along its back. At the end, he waggles his butt, then rubs his face on the arm.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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We Resist: Day 111

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 is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

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

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Obviously the political press is consumed today by Trump's firing of FBI Director James Comey. Following is a quick list of some recommended reading on the subject.

Josh Dawsey at Politico: Behind Comey's Firing: An Enraged Trump, Fuming about Russia. "He had grown enraged by the Russia investigation, two advisers said, frustrated by his inability to control the mushrooming narrative around Russia. He repeatedly asked aides why the Russia investigation wouldn't disappear and demanded they speak out for him. He would sometimes scream at television clips about the probe, one adviser said."

The L.A. Times Editorial Board: Absolutely Nothing About James Comey's Firing Passes the Smell Test. "Comey is the official who has been supervising an investigation into possible links between Russia and the campaign of the very president who just fired him. That president, by the way, tweeted this on Monday: 'The Russia-Trump collusion story is a total hoax, when will this taxpayer funded charade end?' Americans can be excused for wondering if Trump hopes that Comey's departure from the scene is the answer to his question."

Matt Shuham at TPM: McConnell Defends Trump's Firing Of Comey, Opposes New Investigations. "Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) on Wednesday defended [Donald] Trump's decision to fire James Comey as director of the FBI. McConnell also argued against appointing a special prosecutor to investigate Russian meddling in the 2016 election."

Greg Sargent at the Washington Post: In the Wake of Trump's Brazen Firing of Comey, It's Time to Go Nuclear. Here's How. "If those Republicans are truly as alarmed as their rhetoric suggests, there are concrete things they can do in the Senate right now that could help compel either a full accounting of the Comey firing, or an independent Russia probe, or both. And Democrats, too, can ratchet up the tactics in a big way to try to force GOP leaders to relent on both of these fronts."

Josh Meyer and Darren Samuelsohn at Politico: FBI Agents in Tears as News of Comey's Firing Spread. "The news of FBI director James Comey's firing struck like a thunderclap at field offices around the country, where agents heard first from TV or the internet that their boss had been dismissed by [Donald] Trump. 'I'm literally in tears right now. That's all I have to say,' said a longtime special agent who's known and worked with Comey for years, who first heard the news on the car radio."

Also:


To sum: Multiple news outlets are reporting, based on information from well-placed sources, that Comey recently requested additional resources from the Justice Department to expand his Russia investigation. The Justice Department spokesperson, who has lied to cover the Attorney General's ass previously, contradicts those reports. Very concerning. Are all of those sources lying, or is the Justice Department?

Julian Sanchez at Just Security: Some Obvious Thoughts About the Comey Firing. "The question of Comey's replacement is hugely significant, and the confirmation hearings for the next FBI director are bound to be explosive. One consistent theme of Trump's business career is that he has always viewed the law as a cudgel with which to bludgeon adversaries.. The prospect of a Federal Bureau Investigation run in the same way ought to be genuinely frightening, and with Comey out of the way, it seems all too possible."

Also genuinely frightening is that "Sessions, who is supposed to recuse himself from Trump campaign investigations, is going to be interviewing for an acting FBI director."

* * *

Relatedly, and very importantly, Trump and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met at the White House today with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who joked about Comey's firing before heading into his meeting with Tillerson.

Later, this happened:


Note the credit on that photo: "Russian Foreign Ministry."


So, to recap: The Russian Foreign Minister makes a joke about the U.S. FBI Director, who's overseeing investigations into Russian interference and collusion, being fired. Then he goes to meet with the President of the United States, who disallows press access, and then the Russian Foreign Ministry releases a photo of the Foreign Minister shaking hands with the President.

They are laughing at us. Trump is Putin's puppet, whether he intends to be or not. He is so easily manipulated because of his brittle ego that he has played right into Russian hands. And, thus far, Republicans seem disinclined to rescue the nation from this humiliation and peril.

Speaking of which: Mike Pence went on record in defense of this horseshit today.


This also happened:


Russia laughs at the Trump administration, and the Trump administration laughs at us. They're just trolling us. What the fuck are you gonna do about it?

RESIST.

* * *

In other news:

Samantha Schmidt at the Washington Post: West Virginia Journalist Arrested After Asking HHS Secretary Tom Price a Question.
As Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price walked through a hallway Tuesday in the West Virginia state capitol, veteran reporter Dan Heyman followed alongside him, holding up his phone to Price while attempting to ask him a question.

Heyman, a journalist with Public News Service, repeatedly asked the secretary whether domestic violence would be considered a preexisting condition under the Republican bill to overhaul the nation's health care system, he said.

"He didn't say anything," Heyman said later in a news conference. "So I persisted."

Then, an officer in the capitol pulled him aside, handcuffed him and arrested him. Heyman was jailed on the charge of willful disruption of state government processes and was released later on $5,000 bail.

Authorities said while Secret Service agents were providing security in the capitol for Price and Kellyanne Conway, special counsel to the president, Heyman was "aggressively breaching" the agents to the point where they were "forced to remove him a couple of times from the area," according to a criminal complaint.

Heyman "was causing a disturbance by yelling questions at Ms. Conway and Secretary Price," the complaint stated.

But Heyman said he was simply fulfilling his role as a journalist and feels that his arrest sets a "terrible example" for members of the press seeking answers to questions.

"This is my job, this is what I'm supposed to do," Heyman said. "I think it's a question that deserves to be answered. I think it's my job to ask questions and I think it's my job to try to get answers."
Absolutely chilling. That is of course his job. And it is plain as day that accusations of being disruptive were used against him because he was asking a very inconvenient question on a subject that the Republican Party doesn't want to answer.

Speaking of Tom Price:


Tara Bahrampour at the Washington Post: U.S. Census Director Resigns Amid Turmoil over Funding of 2020 Count. "The director of the U.S. Census Bureau is resigning, leaving the agency leaderless at a time when it faces a crisis over funding for the 2020 decennial count of the U.S. population and beyond. John H. Thompson, who has served as director since 2013 and worked for the bureau for 27 years before that, will leave June 30, the Commerce Department announced Tuesday. The news, which surprised census experts, follows an April congressional budget allocation for the census that critics say is woefully inadequate. ...A Commerce Department spokesperson said an acting director would be designated 'in the coming days' and the position would be filled permanently 'in due course.'"

Marianne Levine at Politico: Is ICE Targeting Activists? "Immigration activists say the Trump administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants is targeting those who speak out against it. ...A young woman was detained after she denounced deportations at a press conference in Jackson, Miss. A pair of activists in Burlington, Vt., were arrested leaving their offices. An outspoken college student in New Brunswick, N.J., was summoned to an unexpected meeting with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. 'That's not something that we saw under the Obama administration,' said Cecillia Wang, a deputy legal director at the American Civil Liberties Union. 'As draconian as the enforcement was under Obama, there did not appear to be a deliberate effort to instill fear in immigrant communities.'"

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

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Ahem

Who the fuck wants to come tell me that there is "no difference" between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump now?

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