I Am So Done with This Covfefe


He knew exactly what he was doing. And I am fed up to the teeth with the idea that a 70-year-old billionaire who ascended to the presidency while shouting that he knew more about everything than any politician in the entirety of Washington, D.C., didn't know it was wrong to tell the Director of the FBI to shitcan his investigation of someone in that president's administration.

HE KNEW.

I'm tired of Donald Trump being held to lower standards than I was as a tiny child.

I was born a girl, and I quickly became a big sister, and so my entire childhood was filled with "you should know better," even when there's no way I possibly could have.

I was constantly scrambling to figure out how to respect rules and meet expectations that had never been clearly articulated to me. I was just expected to know.

And when I finally figured out one set of rules, I was met with another, often conflicting set of rules, because, like every other woman on the planet, my life has been shaped with rules designed to ensure my failure—the Can't Fucking Win List.

Trump has faced no such arbitrary and impossible rules in his life. All he has to know is the very fucking basics. Things like, "If you're president, don't obstruct an FBI investigation."

I don't believe for a second that he doesn't know that rule. Instead, what is clear is that Trump is so used to even the most basic rules not applying to him, because of his immense privilege, that he figured none of the rules do.

He thought he could get away with breaking this obvious rule. And that is fundamentally not the same thing as being unaware that it exists.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat sound asleep beside me on the couch, with her feet resting on my leg
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz...

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 140

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:

Earlier today by me: Comey Hearing Wrap-Up.

Obviously, the political news is overwhelmingly consumed with the Comey hearing today, but there are a few other things of importance in need our attention, too.

The UK election is today. Exit polls are showing a Tory lead (ughhh), but the final tally isn't in yet. The Guardian has live updates.

Also: The Senate continues to pursue the Republicans' assault on healthcare access, while no one is paying attention. CALL YOUR SENATORS and tell them to VOTE NO on repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act.


MAKE. THOSE. CALLS. This is not a drill. This is our last chance.

Meanwhile... Hannah Levintova at Mother Jones: House Republicans Are Trying to Pass the Most Dangerous Wall Street Deregulation Bill Ever.
The Republican Congress shares Trump's dislike of Dodd-Frank and this week, the House plans to vote on the Financial CHOICE Act, a Dodd-Frank overhaul bill that will, as promised, make banks and Wall Street "very happy" if it becomes law, while undoing numerous financial safeguards for regular Americans. (CHOICE is an acronym for "Creating Hope and Opportunity for Investors, Consumers, and Entrepreneurs.")

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas), takes aim at some of Dodd-Frank's main achievements: It guts rules intended to protect mortgage borrowers and military veterans, and restrict predatory lenders. It also weakens the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's ability to oversee and enforce consumer protection laws against banks around the country—upending a mix of powers that have helped the CFPB recover nearly $12 billion for 29 million individuals since opening its doors in July 2011. The bill also weakens or outright cuts a number of bank regulations enacted through Dodd-Frank to keep risky investing behavior in check in order to avoid the economic devastation of another financial crisis or taxpayer-funded bailout.

During an April hearing before the House Financial Services Committee, Sen. Elizabeth Warren gave a fiery speech criticizing the measure. "This is a 589-page insult to working families," she said. "It would unleash the same behavior on Wall Street that led to the 2008 financial crisis." Other Democrats have joined Warren in opposing the bill, as have some institutional investors and financial experts.

"With this bill, fraud becomes easier, consumer abuse becomes easier, reckless lending becomes easier, speculation becomes easier," says Carter Dougherty, communications director of the left-leaning Americans for Financial Reform. "The chances of another financial crisis rise immeasurably with the passage of this legislation."
There is much, much more at the link. Read the whole thing, and then call your reps to tell them to vote no on the Financial CHOICE Act.

In foreign policy news...

Ju-min Park and Soyoung Kim at Reuters: North Korea Fires Suspected Land-to-Ship Missiles as South Korea Delays THAAD. "North Korea fired what appeared to be several land-to-ship missiles off its east coast on Thursday, South Korea's military said, a day after the South postponed full deployment of a controversial U.S. anti-missile system designed to deter a North Korean attack. The launches, the latest in a fast-paced series of missile tests defying world pressure to rein in its weapons program, come less than a week after the United Nations Security Council passed fresh sanctions on the reclusive state."

BBC News: Qatar Vows 'No Surrender' in Row with Arab States. "Qatar has vowed it will 'not surrender' its foreign policy in a row with other Arab states over its alleged connections to extremism. Foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said he favoured diplomacy to resolve the escalating crisis and that there was no military solution, Reuters reported. Qatar rejects claims it is a leading supporter of Islamist extremism. ...Saudi Arabia and other states cut travel and diplomatic links on Monday. The emir of Kuwait is trying to mediate the row, carrying out shuttle diplomacy between Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). ...Qatar is heavily dependent on food imports and the crisis has led to stockpiling and shortages. Sheikh Mohammed said Qatar had never before experienced such hostility. In another development, Russia said Sheikh Mohammed would fly to Moscow for talks with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, on Saturday."

Hoo boy:


In other U.S. domestic news...

Yessenia Funes at Colorlines: This Is Trump's Latest Proposal to Fund His 'Great Wall'. "A new idea has emerged for how the United States can foot the bill on [Donald] Trump's proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall: cover it in solar panels so the wall will pay for itself. The president proposed this idea in a meeting yesterday (June 6) with Republican congressional leaders, reports news site Axios. According to the publication, three people 'with direct knowledge of the meeting' said that Trump mentioned this idea, elaborating that the solar panel-covered wall would be 40 to 50 feet high and look like 'beautiful structures.' His comments are a bit ironic given that he pulled out of the iconic Paris Agreement last week, on June 1."

[Content Note: Misogynoir] Auditi Guha at Rewire: Report: Black Women Face Inequality in Every Part of Society. "As Alicia Garza, the panel's moderator, said in a statement, 'While Black women are working hard, democracy isn't working for us, and hard work isn't paying off. Black families depend on Black women, yet Black women face the highest poverty rates in the nation, second only to indigenous women. We do our part to make this country better—we vote at higher rates than any other racial or ethnic group. It's time for an agenda that puts Black women at the center, for the sake of all of us.' Garza is the co-founder of Black Lives Matter and [National Domestic Workers Alliance] special projects director. The 96-page report, produced by NDWA and the Institute for Women's Policy Research, analyzes national data and highlight the disparities Black women face in political participation, employment, poverty, health, and safety."

And finally! In good news...

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Scottish Episcopal Church Is First Christian Church in UK to Allow Same-Sex Marriages. Woot!

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

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Comey Hearing Wrap-Up

Well, that was something. James Comey answered questions for nearly three hours, and essentially confirmed a lot that we already knew, and gave us a few bits of new information—the most important of which, in my estimation, being that the reason he started taking copious contemporaneous notes following his meetings with Donald Trump is because he did not trust Trump not to lie about what transpired during those meetings.

On the one hand, stating that Trump is a reflexive and abundant liar hardly seems like new information. But look a little more closely: This is the former FBI Director saying that he felt obliged to carefully document his interactions with the President of the United States because he could not trust him to faithfully and honestly represent their interactions.

Not only is that assessment significant, but so is the fact that he testified to it in an open senate session.

If you were unable to watch or follow that session in real time, I live-tweeted the hearing and have Storified those tweets.

A couple of other key takeaways:

* Comey definitely took Trump's suggestion to drop the Flynn investigation as a "directive," not a casual request.

* Comey reiterated that there is no doubt Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election. He also repeatedly made the point that the resulting investigation should not be seen as partisan, but about a necessary investigation into an attack on our country.

* Special Counsel Bob Mueller's investigation remains exponentially more likely to result in accountability than the Senate (or House) investigations.

* The Republicans continue to be unpatriotic nightmare water-carriers for Trump.

To that last point, it was incredibly distressing watching the Republican Senators question Comey about the way in which he responded to Trump. I had a number of things to say about that in my live-tweeted commentary, but the long and the short of it is this: Republicans desperately wanted to make this hearing about Comey's "failure" to hold Trump accountable for possible obstruction in the moment that he did it. But it wasn't Comey's job to hold him accountable in that moment. It's theirs to hold him accountable now.

And they are, quite clearly, manifestly unwilling to do it.

On a final note: Fuck John McCain.

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Blog Note

FYI I'm following (and live-tweeting) the Comey hearing, so content will be light this morning, as I can't do that and simultaneously write new content, lol. New content in this space will return once we get through the hearing!

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Comey to Testify Today

image of James Comey standing in a Congressional hearing room, buttoning his jacket, with his chin lifted rather haughtily, to which I've added text reading: 'Here we go.'

Today, starting at 10:00 AM EDT, former FBI Director James Comey will testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and Donald Trump's attempts to disrupt investigation thereof.

If you are in search of online streaming, here is the C-SPAN link where his testimony will be broadcast.

And here is my piece about his prepared openning remarks, which were made public yesterday, apparently at his request.

Because I am the brokenest of broken records, I will just caution once more—especially for people who didn't go through Fitzmas, whether because of youth or inattention—to maintain reasonable expectations about what will come out of today's hearing. It probably won't be explosive, and, even if it is, there is no guarantee of consequences, given that Republicans are the ruling majority on the committee.

I'm not trying to be a downer. Be cautiously optimistic that our democratic institutions are still capable of functioning as they should! I'm just seeing a lot of what I would classify as overexcitement and unrealistic expectations about what will happen today, even and especially from journalists who should know better, so, for people who trust my experience and rely on my assessments, I just want to encourage a more measured approach to today.

(And if there are any bombshells, remember that the legal fallout will not happen today; it will take time, if it comes at all.)

Anyway! This thread will serve as the central discussion point before and during Comey's testimony, which begins shortly.

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Open Thread

image of a yellow couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker ivyceltress: "If you were in charge of creating National Holidays, which ones would you designate?"

My first order of business would be making Election Day a national holiday!

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by curtains.

Recommended Reading:

Ali Thompson: [Content Note: Fat hatred; medical harm; death] The Recent History of Fat Stigma

Kayla Renee Parker: [CN: Racism; harassment] Beware of Wolves in Sheep's Clothing: The Tale of a Progressive Professor Who Forgot to Hide Her Racism and Got Her Ass Fired

Anne Helen Petersen: [CN: Violence; sexual assault; misogyny; ageism] Women Who Believe Women

Monica Roberts: [CN: Racism; misogyny; gender policing] Race and Gender Discrimination Sidelines Nebraska Soccer Player and Her Team

Perri Konecky: Orly's New Collection Finally Makes It Possible for Muslims to Wear Nail Polish

Vivian Kane: [CN: Moving GIF at link] Supergirl Stuntwoman Jessie Graff Made History (Again) and We're Not Sure Our Hearts Can Take It

Bryan Menegus: Watching Apple's New Shark Tank-Inspired TV Series Is Like Slowly Dying

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

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This Is So Cool

The amazing discovery of 300,000-year-old remains in a Moroccan cave has upended the notion that modern humans evolved in East Africa only 200,000 years ago. Alan Burdick reports at the New Yorker:

In a paper in the journal Nature, an international team of researchers announced that they have pushed back the date of the earliest human remains to three hundred thousand years ago. And the specimens in question were found not in East Africa, which has become synonymous with a sort of paleoanthropological Garden of Eden, but clear on the other side of the continent—and the Sahara—in Morocco. "We're not claiming that Morocco is the cradle of modern humankind," the lead author, Jean-Jacques Hublin, of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, said at a press conference yesterday. Rather, he added, our emergence as a species was pan-African. "There is no Garden of Eden in Africa—or if there is, it's Africa," Hublin said. "The Garden of Eden is the size of Africa."

The site in question, Jebel Irhoud, is part of a network of caves that lies about sixty miles west of Marrakesh. In 1960, a mining operation unearthed an array of animal and human bones there, including a nearly complete hominin skull. But the remains were a puzzle—they were initially dated at forty thousand years old and thought to be Neanderthal, not human. Maybe this was a far-flung outpost of the European populations, the occupant a Neanderthal Robinson Crusoe. In 1968, a child's jawbone was found; the teeth suggested that it belonged to Homo sapiens, and improved dating techniques put it at a hundred and sixty thousand years old. Maybe this was a human site after all, a backwater branch of those early Homo sapiens in East Africa. In 2004, Hublin and his colleagues began to excavate in earnest, and brought the total number of hominin bones to twenty-two. All came from the same stratigraphic layer. Once the researchers had analyzed them, Hublin said, "the dates were a big wow."
Emphases mine. Wow indeed! Head on over to read the whole thing.

[H/T to Shaker Scott Madin.]

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SUMMER ANTHEM


Miss Eaves: "Thunder Thighs"

[Video Description: A bunch of women of all shapes, sizes, and colors prancing through Bed-Stuy wearing whatever the fuck they want and feeling awesome about it.]

This is giving me liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiife!!!

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Comey: "We simply looked at each other in silence."

The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has made available [pdf] James Comey's prepared opening statement ahead of his testimony tomorrow. It's quite an extraordinary document, not because there is shocking new information in it (to the contrary, most of it is already known to one degree or another), but because of what it lays out so clearly: A United States president's utter contempt for the rule of law.

I encourage you to take the time to read the whole thing (it's not an enormous document), but here are some highlights [Content Note: Derogatory term for sex workers]:

A few moments later, the President said, "I need loyalty, I expect loyalty." I didn't move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed. We simply looked at each other in silence.
Near the end of our dinner, the President returned to the subject of my job, saying he was very glad I wanted to stay, adding that he had heard great things about me from Jim Mattis, Jeff Sessions, and many others. He then said, "I need loyalty." I replied, "You will always get honesty from me." He paused and then
said, "That's what I want, honest loyalty." I paused, and then said, "You will get that from me." As I wrote in the memo I created immediately after the dinner, it is possible we understood the phrase "honest loyalty" differently, but I decided it wouldn't be productive to push it further. The term – honest loyalty – had helped end a very awkward conversation and my explanations had made clear what he should expect.
On the morning of March 30, the President called me at the FBI. He described the Russia investigation as "a cloud" that was impairing his ability to act on behalf of the country. He said he had nothing to do with Russia, had not been involved with hookers in Russia, and had always assumed he was being recorded when in Russia. He asked what we could do to "lift the cloud."
I said the White House Counsel should contact the leadership of DOJ to make the request, which was the traditional channel. He said he would do that and added, "Because I have been very loyal to you, very loyal; we had that thing you know." I did not reply or ask him what he meant by "that thing." I said only that the way to handle it was to have the White House Counsel call the Acting Deputy Attorney General. He said that was what he would do and the call ended. That was the last time I spoke with President Trump.
Laura Rozen speculates that "that thing" refers to Comey's announcement 11 days before the election regarding the investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails, which almost certainly contributed to Trump's win. Sounds plausible.

The entire statement is essentially Comey recounting how Trump behaved in an inappropriate, unethical, and coercive manner (my words, not Comey's), and how Comey tried to navigate that as professionally as possible. His strategy, according to his account, was to say as little as possible and to discourage Trump from behaving in fundamentally undemocratic ways.

And naturally Trump did not take the hint, seemingly plowing onward with increasing intensity to try to cajole Comey to sign on as a loyalist and to discourage his independence.

[CN: Fictional image of injury] I summed it up thus on Twitter:


So, now we know what Comey will say. Tomorrow, we'll find out what the members of the Senate Intelligence Committee have to say. I expect there will be a lot of questions from Democrats on which Comey will demur, citing Bob Mueller's investigation, and I expect there will be a lot of questions from Republicans about leaks that have fuck-all to do with Trump's pressuring Comey.

Comey's also clearly prepared for questions from the GOP about why he didn't immediately tell Attorney General Jeff Sessions that Trump had asked him to drop the Flynn investigation, noting right in his opening statement that he expected Sessions would have to recuse himself from the investigation, which he ultimately did. Ouch.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat sitting on the back of a chair, looking at me with wide eyes
"Why are you taking a picture when you should be petting my head?"

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 139

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:

Earlier today by me: Trump Nominates Christopher Wray as FBI Director; Eric Trump Says Democrats Are "Not Even People"; and The Latest on Trump and the Russia Investigation.

Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Michael Flynn Had a Plan to Work With Russia's Military. It Wasn't Exactly Legal.
Donald Trump's first national security adviser pushed so hard for the Pentagon to cooperate with the Russian military that his initiative would likely have broken the law if it had ever been enacted.

Four current and former Pentagon officials told The Daily Beast that during Michael Flynn's brief White House tenure, the retired general advocated for the expansion of a relatively narrow military communications channel—one meant to keep U.S. and Russian pilots safe from one another—to see if the two nations could jointly fight the so-called Islamic State.

The initiative never went anywhere, in part because of opposition from the Pentagon and from U.S. Central Command; a legal prohibition set by Congress; and, ultimately, Flynn's firing.

Inside the Pentagon, "there was a lot of fear that we'd move to outright cooperation [with Russia] through this channel," according to a former senior defense official.
Emphasis mine. So, what's particularly interesting to me about this is Flynn's justification for suggesting a shared military communications channel with Russia: A joint fight against the Islamic State.

The reason that caught my attention is because, before the 2016 election, joining forces with Russia to defeat ISIS was not a mainstream position, on either side of the aisle. [Content Note: Video may autoplay at following link.] That's because, as Hillary Clinton noted during the second presidential debate, Vladimir Putin doesn't give a fuck about ISIS: "Clinton said that Russia 'isn't interested in ISIS' and its assault on Aleppo was aimed at destroying Syrian rebels opposed the regime led by Bashar al-Assad."

But during the 2016 election, the one in which Russian interfered, every single one of Hillary Clinton's leading opponents suggested working with Russia in some manner, using the justification of joining forces to defeat ISIS.

Donald Trump repeatedly insisted throughout the campaign (and still asserts) that we should work with Russia to defeat ISIS, and criticized President Obama for not having done the same, despite the fact that such a plan is "futile and dangerous."

November 2015: Sanders Calls for New NATO That Includes Russia. "Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) called for a new accord between America, its closest allies, and Russia as well as Arab nations as a major plank on how to destroy the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS)."

September 2016: Gary Johnson: 'What Is Aleppo?' "With regard to Syria I do think it's a mess. I think that the only way that we deal with Syria is to join hands with Russia to diplomatically bring that at an end."

October 2015: Jill Stein Calls for Ceasefire in Syria, Joint Peace Agenda with Russia. "Stein People's Agenda for Global Peace and Agenda lays out a multi-prong approach to pursue peace based on focusing on promote [sic] justice and prosperity for all countries. Stein last week in NYC briefly outlined the proposal to Russia Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who asked her to follow-up with more details."

So, no serious foreign policy suggestions to join with Russia to fight ISIS before 2016. Then, during the election in which Russia intervened with the express purpose of defeating (or critically weakening) Clinton, every one of her opponents from across the political spectrum—her Democratic primary opponent, and her general election Republican, Libertarian, and Green Party opponents—each offered a policy of aligning with Russia, with the rationale of defeating ISIS.

Clinton was also the only candidate who did not have someone with ties to Putin working on her campaign, or a previous campaign. Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort and Sanders' chief strategist Tad Devine had previously worked in collaboration for pro-Putin former Ukrainian leader Viktor Yanukovych. Roger Stone was an advisor on Johnson's 2012 campaign, and continued to speak enthuiastically about Johnson in 2016. And Stein rather famously had dinner with Putin herself.

Also at that dinner? Michael Flynn—who then used that curiously shared rationale of defeating ISIS to argue for allying with Russia when his candidate won the White House.

A rationale that has never made, and continues to make, no sense based on the most basic understanding of Russia's objectives and alliances in Syria.


Maybe this is all just one monumental coincidence. Or maybe it's a case for a broadened investigation into Russian interference in the election.

* * *

Dan Alexander at Forbes: How Donald Trump Shifted Kids-Cancer Charity Money into His Business.
Eric Trump, the president's second son and now the co-head of the Trump Organization, [has hosted the Eric Trump Foundation golf invitational] for ten years on behalf of the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. He's done a ton of good: To date, he's directed more than $11 million there, the vast majority of it via this annual golf event. He has also helped raise another $5 million through events with other organizations.

The best part about all this, according to Eric Trump, is the charity's efficiency: Because he can get his family's golf course for free and have most of the other costs donated, virtually all the money contributed will go toward helping kids with cancer. "We get to use our assets 100% free of charge," Trump tells Forbes.

That's not the case. In reviewing filings from the Eric Trump Foundation and other charities, it's clear that the course wasn't free—that the Trump Organization received payments for its use, part of more than $1.2 million that has no documented recipients past the Trump Organization. Golf charity experts say the listed expenses defy any reasonable cost justification for a one-day golf tournament.

Additionally, the Donald J. Trump Foundation, which has come under previous scrutiny for self-dealing and advancing the interests of its namesake rather than those of charity, apparently used the Eric Trump Foundation to funnel $100,000 in donations into revenue for the Trump Organization.

And while donors to the Eric Trump Foundation were told their money was going to help sick kids, more than $500,000 was re-donated to other charities, many of which were connected to Trump family members or interests, including at least four groups that subsequently paid to hold golf tournaments at Trump courses.
Note that this story came out yesterday, hours before Eric Trump appeared on Sean Hannity's show to angrily sputter that Trump opponents are "not even people."

Meanwhile, reporter David Fahrenthold, who has done a ton of excellent investigative work on the Trump Foundation, notes that the details revealed in the Forbes piece mean that Eric Trump "repeatedly" lied to him.

* * *

Dana Milbank at the Washington Post: 'President Pence' is Sounding Better and Better. "Many liberals correctly call Pence a doctrinaire conservative, particularly on gay rights and other social issues. ...But Pence is, at core, a small-d democrat, not a demagogue. The world would be safer with him in charge. We would still have fierce divisions about the nation's direction. But Pence, in the nearly two decades I've known him, has been an honorable man. Opponents can disagree with him yet sleep well knowing he's unlikely to be irrational." This is straight-up garbage.


Seethe.

Caitlin MacNeal at TPM: Karen Handel: 'I Do Not Support a Livable Wage'. "During Tuesday night's debate for an open U.S. House seat in Georgia, Republican candidate Karen Handel said that she does not support a 'livable wage.' 'This is an example of the fundamental difference between a liberal and a conservative: I do not support a livable wage,' she said on Atlanta's WSB-TV in response to a viewer question about raising the minimum wage. 'What I support is making sure that we have an economy that is robust with low taxes and less regulation.'" Let me note once again: Republicans think people aren't entitled to food.

Or anything else that is necessary to live. To wit: If you thought that Republicans had given up on destroying healthcare access, I'm sorry to inform you that they have not.


Yeah.

[CN: Racism] Breanna Edwards at the Root: In Every Service Branch, Black Troops Are More Likely to Be Punished by Commanders, Courts: Report. "Black service members are up to two times more likely to face court martial or other forms of military punishment than their white counterparts in an average year, an analysis by advocacy organization Protect Our Defenders has revealed. According to USA Today, which received an advance copy of the study, the advocacy group for victims of sexual assault in the military and military justice went through Pentagon data from 2006 to 2015 to compile its report, and came up with the perhaps not-so-surprising results. 'Over the past decade, racial disparities have persisted in the military justice system without indications of improvement,' the report states."

[CN: Racism] Kenrya Rankin at Colorlines: Study: Cops Routinely Use Disrespectful Language with Black People. "A new report from researchers at Stanford University found what many Black people already know: Police are more likely to speak disrespectfully to Black people than they are to their White counterparts. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences posted 'Language From Police Body Camera Footage Shows Racial Disparities in Officer Respect' online yesterday (June 5). ...Overall, the study found that White people are shown more respect, with Whites being 57 percent more likely to be addressed with the most respectful statements, and Blacks 61 percent more likely to be disrespected."

Jessica Mason Pieklo at Rewire: Supreme Court Ruling Could Let Catholic Hospitals 'Pocket' Millions in Retirement Funds. "The impact of the decision [in Advocate Health Care Network v. Stapleton] means Catholic hospitals, which employ tens of thousands of low- to middle-income workers, can now generally avoid the pension and health insurance protections required by federal law."

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

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The Latest on Trump and the Russia Investigation

A few items of note from last night and this morning, centered around Donald Trump's apparent attempts to obstruct justice:

1. Trump tried to enlist multiple administration officials to pressure James Comey to stop investigating Michael Flynn.

Adam Entous at the Washington Post: Top Intelligence Official Told Associates Trump Asked Him If He Could Intervene with Comey on FBI Russia Probe.

The nation's top intelligence official told associates in March that [Donald] Trump asked him if he could intervene with then-FBI Director James B. Comey to get the bureau to back off its focus on former national security adviser Michael Flynn in its Russia probe, according to officials.

On March 22, less than a week after being confirmed by the Senate, Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats attended a briefing at the White House together with officials from several government agencies. As the briefing was wrapping up, Trump asked everyone to leave the room except for Coats and CIA Director Mike Pompeo.

The president then started complaining about the FBI investigation and Comey's handling of it, said officials familiar with the account Coats gave to associates. Two days earlier, Comey had confirmed in a congressional hearing that the bureau was probing whether Trump's campaign coordinated with Russia during the 2016 race.

After the encounter, Coats discussed the conversation with other officials and decided that intervening with Comey as Trump had suggested would be inappropriate, according to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive internal matters.

...The interaction with Coats indicates that Trump aimed to enlist top officials to have Comey curtail the bureau's probe.
2. Trump was putting so much pressure on Comey, that Comey told Jeff Sessions he didn't want to be alone with Trump anymore.

Matt Shuham at TPM: NYT: Comey Told Sessions He Didn't Want to Be Alone with Trump. "The day after [Donald] Trump allegedly asked then-FBI Director James Comey to drop the bureau's investigation into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, Comey told Attorney General Jeff Sessions that he did not want to be alone with the president again, the New York Times reported late Tuesday. Citing unnamed current and former law enforcement officials, the Times reported that Comey believed Sessions should protect the FBI from White House pressure. Sessions reportedly told Comey that he could not guarantee Trump wouldn't continue to attempt to speak to him one-on-one."

3. Trump's meddling was causing so much friction with Sessions that he offered to resign.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Jonathan Karl at ABC News: Attorney General Jeff Sessions Suggested He Could Resign Amid Rising Tension with Trump.
The friction between the two men stems from the attorney general's abrupt decision in March to recuse himself from anything related to the Russia investigation — a decision the president only learned about minutes before Sessions announced it publicly. Multiple sources say the recusal is one of the top disappointments of his presidency so far and one the president has remained fixated on.

Trump's anger over the recusal has not diminished with time. Two sources close to the president say he has lashed out repeatedly at the attorney general in private meetings, blaming the recusal for the expansion of the Russia investigation, now overseen by Special Counsel and former FBI Director Robert Mueller.

...Asked by ABC News if the attorney general had threatened or offered to resign, Justice Department spokesperson Sarah Isgur Flores declined to comment.

Meanwhile, White House press secretary Sean Spicer was asked [yesterday] if the president still has confidence in his attorney general. He could not say.
And by the end of the day yesterday, that question still had not been answered.


4. Three FBI officials can confirm Comey reported directly after his meeting with Trump that Trump tried to pressure him to drop the investigation of Flynn.

Ed Kilgore at New York Magazine: Comey Has 3 Top FBI Officials Who Can Corroborate His Account of Meeting Where Trump Pressured Him to Drop Flynn Investigation. "[W]ithin two days of Comey's fateful meeting with Trump in the Oval Office, he relayed his account of what Trump asked him to do (or undo) to three top FBI associates: Deputy Director (and now Acting Director) Andrew McCabe; Chief of Staff Jim Rybicki; and General Counsel James Baker. ...[Their] recollections and notes about the Comey-Trump meeting will be of great interest to special counsel Robert Mueller, who knows them all well. What makes the corroborating accounts so likely to come up when Comey testifies is the fact that Republicans on the committee apparently plan to make his failure to notify the Justice Department of Trump's alleged indiscretions grounds for doubting his story."

* * *

In related news, former CIA Director James Clapper says that Trump's relationship to Russia and subsequent attempts to squash investigations thereof is significantly worse than Watergate: "Clapper questioned Trump's continued pro-Russian stance, saying his sharing of intelligence with Russia 'reflect either ignorance or disrespect, and either is very problematic.' 'I think if you compare the two that Watergate pales, really, in my view, compared to what we're confronting now,' Clapper told reporters in Canberra, Australia's capital."

And finally: The new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds that 56 percent "of U.S. adults say Trump is interfering with such investigations rather than cooperating" and 61 percent "say Trump fired Comey to protect himself rather than for the good of the country." Welp.

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Eric Trump Says Democrats Are "Not Even People"

[Content Note: Dehumanization; violent rhetoric; disablist language.]

Appearing on Fox News with Sean Hannity last night, Eric Trump, the son of Donald Trump, went off on an angry rant against Democrats, calling Tom Perez a "whack job" and engaging in rank dehumanization, saying that people who oppose his father's administration are "not even people."

ERIC TRUMP: Hey, Sean, how are you?

SEAN HANNITY: Don't you wish you went to Washington, so you could be dealing with this every second of every day?

TRUMP: You know, I've never seen hatred like this. I mean, to me, they're not even people. It's—it's so, so sad. I mean, morality's just gone. Morals have flown out the window. We deserve so much better than this as a country, and, you know, it's so sad. You see the Democratic Party—they're imploding. They're imploding. They have no message; you see the head of the DNC, who is a total whack job; there's no leadership there. And so what do they do? They become obstructionists, because they have no message of their own; they have no solid candidates of their own; they lost the election that they should've won because they spent seven times the amount of money that my father spent. They have no message! So what do they try and do? They try and obstruct a great man; they try and obstruct his family; they come after us viciously—

HANNITY: Eric, I gotta tell ya something—

TRUMP: —and it's truly, truly horrible.
Wow.

So, there's a lot to unpack there, starting with the fact that 90 percent of it is projection, accusing opponents of Trump with precisely the lack of morality and coherent messaging that is plaguing his father's administration.

Then there's the issue that Eric Trump, who has repeatedly insisted there's a firewall between his father's administration and his father's business, over which he and his brother Don Jr. have ostensibly taken full control, is making a political defense in which he includes a resentful complaint about Democrats obstructing "a great man" and "his family."

Finally, and most importantly, there's Trump saying that opponents of his father's administration are "not even people." This is not just some innocuous hyperbole. This is the son of the president, in the middle of an appearance in which he has positioned himself as a spokesperson for the administration, saying that people who oppose the president aren't even human.

That is the rhetoric of despots.

And it has consequences. Here are just two things I pulled out of my mentions from the last 12 hours:

screencap of a tweeted response to me reading: 'You're idiots. You can't stand the man elected so you'll overthrow the legitimate government. I hope you try it and get put down like dogs.'
screencap of a tweeted response to me reading: 'You mean the legally binding, democratic election? I wake up everyday and wonder why collectively,we don't euthanize morons like you!!'

Eliminationist language is the inevitable result of casual dehumanization. When the president's son goes on television to say that people like me aren't human, eliminationism directed at me increases. And I am hardly alone.

This is deeply irresponsible and dangerous. Which, I regret to say, is precisely the fucking point.

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Trump Nominates Christopher Wray as FBI Director

So, in an announcement clearly timed to distract from James Comey's Senate testimony tomorrow, Donald Trump has nominated Christopher Wray as FBI Director.

Here are a few things to know about Wray:

1. He was New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's personal lawyer during the Bridgegate scandal. To be clear, it's not like Wray was a public defender or legal aid lawyer being assigned cases. He is a high-powered private attorney who chose to take a case defending a state executive in a matter concerning an egregious abuse of power.

2. His law firm advises the Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust, which holds his business assets. Another partner at the firm is the ethics adviser to the trust. This presents a potential conflict of interest, which would need to be closely examined during his nomination hearing.

3. He worked for the Bush administration, and Marcy Wheeler notes a few things about Wray's time there: The ACLU's torture database has a number of entirely redacted documents involving Wray, and Wray was inappropriately briefing then-Attorney General John Ashcroft during the investigation into outing Valerie Plame, which is what ultimately "led to Ashcroft's recusal and the appointment, by Deputy Attorney General Jim Comey, of Patrick Fitzgerald as special counsel."

A lot of folks are saying this is a good, solid pick. Suffice it to say, I have concerns.

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Open Thread

image of a red couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker IrishUp: "If you could be transformed into any critter to live like it lives for a week (like young Wart in 'The Sword and the Stone'), what would it be?"

An eagle. I would love to experience what it feels like to soar.

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An Observation


I will never, ever, stop being incandescently angry at journalists who covered themselves in wicked disgrace during the election having the unmitigated temerity to pretend that one of the reasons that the Democrats lost is because they can't articulate what they stand for.

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