We Resist: Day 169

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: Putin and the Puppet and This Is Our Reality Now.

REMINDER: KEEP CALLING YOUR SENATORS TO TELL THEM TO VOTE NO ON TRUMPCARE.

So, obviously the biggest item today is Donald Trump's meeting with Vladimir Putin ahead of the G20 summit. The meeting lasted much longer than planned — two hours and 16 minutes, to be exact — and, well, from early reports, it seems to have gone about exactly as one would have expected.


I'm guessing the Kremlin — not exactly known for openness, inclusion, and transparency — also wanted the meeting small, but, as soon as Trump gave the slightest indication he wanted a small meeting, they knew how to play him, and convinced him to argue for a smaller meeting to which they'd then appear to acquiesce. Trump would then feel like he had a "win" going in, and thus would be overconfident.

He's that easy. Frightening.

We don't yet know a whole lot about what went on in that meeting, but the AP reports that sources tell them: US, Russia Reach Deal on Syria Cease-Fire. "The United States and Russia have reached agreement on a cease-fire in southwest Syria, three U.S. officials said Friday as [Donald] Trump held his first meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The deal marks a new level of involvement for the U.S. in trying to resolve Syria's civil war. Although details about the agreement and how it will be implemented weren't immediately available, the cease-fire is set to take effect Sunday at noon Damascus time, said the officials, who weren’t authorized to discuss the cease-fire publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity."

Okay. I'll just note, again, that the U.S. and Russia do not have the same objectives in Syria. At least, we didn't used to.

In related news:


"Resolve" is doing a lot of work there, ahem. Also, I'm not sure I understand why Kurt Volker, who's well-regarded and highly qualified, is choosing to go along with what seems pretty likely to ultimately be a charade. But he's a friend and former legislative fellow on the staff of Senator John McCain, who may have convinced him to do it — and, as we all know, McCain has a looooooong history of pretending he's going to do the right thing, only to cave and abet the worst fascistic abuses of Republican governance at the one-yard line. Would be a shame if he's set up Volker that way. Then again, maybe Volker has the same instincts as McCain.

Or maybe he's in it for the right reasons and hopes he is going to be able to make a positive mark. It seems fairly certain that he will not be given that opportunity by this administration, however.

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[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Michael Riley, Jennifer A Dlouhy, and Bryan Gruley at Bloomberg: Russians Are Suspects in Nuclear Site Hackings, Sources Say.
Hackers working for a foreign government recently breached at least a dozen U.S. power plants, including the Wolf Creek nuclear facility in Kansas, according to current and former U.S. officials, sparking concerns the attackers were searching for vulnerabilities in the electrical grid.

The intruders could be positioning themselves to eventually disrupt the nation's power supply, warned the officials, who noted that a general alert was distributed to utilities a week ago. Adding to those concerns, hackers recently infiltrated an unidentified company that makes control systems for equipment used in the power industry, an attack that officials believe may be related.

The chief suspect is Russia, according to three people familiar with the continuing effort to eject the hackers from the computer networks.

...U.S. intelligence officials have long been concerned about the security of the country's electrical grid. The recent attack, striking almost simultaneously at multiple locations, is testing the government's ability to coordinate an effective response among several private utilities, state and local officials, and industry regulators.
This is exactly what I said last month: "Cyberattackers are probing. They're searching for vulnerabilities, and they're also testing what our response is to these relatively small-scale attacks."

Meanwhile, this is what our State Department is up to: David Kravets at Ars Technica: State Department Concocting "Fake" Intellectual Property "Twitter Feud". For fuck's sake.

[CN: Nativism] Jake Lahut at Politico: Trump Says Mexico Should 'Absolutely' Pay for Border Wall. JFC we're back to this shit again?! "Mexico should 'absolutely' pay for the border wall between the United States and its southern neighbor, [Donald] Trump said Friday during his meeting with his Mexican counterpart, Enrique Peña Nieto. On the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, an Associated Press reporter asked Trump, 'Do you still want Mexico to pay for the wall?' The president responded, 'absolutely,' according to a pool report."

[CN: Nativism; racism] Marcelo Rochabrun at ProPublica: ICE Officers Told to Take Action Against All Undocumented Immigrants Encountered While on Duty. "The head of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement unit in charge of deportations has directed his officers to take action against all undocumented immigrants they may cross paths with, regardless of criminal histories. The guidance appears to go beyond the Trump administration's publicly stated aims, and some advocates say may explain a marked increase in immigration arrests. ...David Bier, an immigration policy analyst at the libertarian Cato Institute, said the fallout from the memo has been evident for months. 'The memo explains what we have actually been seeing on the ground,' Bier said, asserting that immigrants without criminal backgrounds were routinely being arrested and ordered deported." Fuck fuck fuck.

[CN: Racism; violent imagery; threats] AP at the Guardian: U.S. Mint Employee Placed on Leave After Putting Noose on Black Co-Worker's Chair. "An employee at the U.S. mint in Philadelphia has been placed on administrative leave after a noose was found on the chair of an African American colleague. ...Around 3pm on 28 June the white male coin maker walked across the factory floor with the noose in hand. Surveillance video captured the entire activity, including the employee's actions. Many African American workers called and texted the union president the next day, and the U.S. treasury department inspector general launched an internal investigation. A treasury spokesman said the department has 'absolutely zero tolerance for the kind of misconduct reported at the mint.'" Zero tolerance, but the guy who made and left the noose is just on leave? Oh.

Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: Trump's Proposed Budget Cuts Could Mean More Deaths from Extreme Heat. "[E]limination of the program would be particularly dire for people in Southern and Western states, said Mark Wolfe, head of the National Energy Assistance Director's Association. 'In warm-weather states, you have federal funding but there's no state funding, no utility funding, so you have a different culture, where in those states you're on your own,' Wolfe told ThinkProgress. 'You have more families who are in need for help, but there's no discount program to make cooling more affordable.' According to the National Weather Service, the heat in Southern California could break records on Friday, when temperatures could rise to 120 degrees."

I guess I'll just point out that the federal government's indifference to probing hacks on our power grid are a problem, too, since cooling is dependent on functional electricity.

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

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An Observation

Today is the first day that Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin met face-to-face after Trump won the election in which Putin orchestrated meddling to help get Trump elected.

That's a pretty big deal, especially given that Trump, members of his family, members of his administration, and various associates are currently under investigation by multiple individuals and agencies for possible collusion with Russia during said election.

But it would be understandable if you weren't really considering the enormous implications of all of that today, since very few of our major news outlets are leading with these critical facts.


Why they aren't is a question I strongly urge you to consider.

By the way:


Oh.

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This Is Our Reality Now

Last night, Rachel Maddow used the A-block of her show to tell the tale of receiving a document, ostensibly a top secret document, which she now believes is an elaborate fraud designed to trick her into reporting on something false, in order to discredit her, MSNBC, the mainstream media generally, and the investigation into Donald Trump and his associates' potential collusion with Russia.

She starts the segment noting that she is telling the tale of receiving and assessing the document as a warning to other news outlets: Someone is peddling counterfeit documents apparently in the hope of tricking reporters and undermining their credibility.

This is a warning to news consumers, too. Scrutinize everything carefully.

And it is a warning to us as citizens. This is our reality now. And we have to understand the new threats we are facing as a nation.


[The complete transcript will be available here, once it has been posted.]

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Putin and the Puppet

Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin met face-to-face today — a quick meet ahead of their formal meeting later today, during which Trump will reportedly be accompanied only by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (who has zero diplomatic experience) and a translator, so I'm sure everything will go fine.


It looks like they're getting on swell. Of course, as my friend Sarah Kendzior pointed out, one of the rare exceptions to Trump looking like he hates being president with every fiber of his being is when he gets to hang out with Russians.


If nothing else, at least the meeting gives Trump the opportunity to thank Putin in person for meddling in the U.S. election and giving Trump a huge assist.

Anyway.

Here are some headlines about today's meeting between the two leaders (see if you notice a theme):

Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: How Ex-Spies Think Putin Will Sucker 'Sociopathic Narcissist' Trump.

The Guardian Editors: The Guardian View on Trump and Putin: Mind Games and the Risk of a Misstep.

David Filipov and Abby Phillip at the Washington Post: Here's What's at Stake When Trump Finally Meets Putin.

Neil MacFarquhar at the New York Times: For Russia, Trump-Putin Meeting Is a Sure Winner.

Basically, the entire world is all: DON'T FUCK IT UP, TRUMP. And Trump is all:


What the U.S. President needs to do is go into that meeting and face off with Putin over Russia's meddling in our election and increasing hacking attempts, including and especially [video may autoplay] nuclear site hackings.

What Donald Trump will do is, well, not that. Which is unfortunate for all of us who aren't Russian oligarchs, to put it mildly.

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Open Thread

image of a pink couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker DesertRose: "Has anyone you know ever phrased anything so perfectly that you just loved the comment instantly?"

DesertRose continues: "I'm thinking of a friend of mine in the UK who described her lovely, goofy Springer spaniel mix dog as having 'so much heart, there's no room for brains,' which describes a dog my family had before I was born and when I was a very small child and also a cat we had from my adolescence until her passing at age 18 in 2009."

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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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Almost every time Deeky comes to visit, either Iain picks up a prepared cheese and meat tray from the grocery store, or I put together a fancy cheeses, meats, fruits, spreads, and breads plate, and then we all have fun eating the fuck out of it!

Next time, I think I'm just going to go wild and make a bologna cake, lol.

image of a slice being taken out of a bologna cake

Since I hate bologna, I'd probably make it with salami, though. It would be like those old school salami and cream cheese rolls, except A MILLION TIMES BETTER!

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This F#@king Guy


I don't even know what to say anymore that I haven't said eleventy-seven times already. This is a white nationalist, Christian supremacist, authoritarian coup being led (ostensibly) by a billionaire manbaby with the attention span of a goldfish and the ethics of a Ray Liotta character.

He is doing profound damage to this nation's standing in the world, and that doesn't even begin to get to the fuckery that is his domestic agenda.

Honestly, I sometimes have a difficult time just going on with my daily routine because THIS IS NOT NORMAL AND EVERYTHING IS NOT FINE. Fuck.

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Discussion Thread: Good Things

One of the ways we resist the demoralization and despair in which exploiters of fear like Trump thrive is to keep talking about the good things in our lives.

Because, even though it feels very much (and rightly so) like we are losing so many things we value, there are still daily moments of joy or achievement or love or empowering ferocity or other kinds of fulfillment.

Maybe you've experienced something big worth celebrating; maybe you've just had a precious moment of contentment; maybe getting out of bed this morning was a success worthy of mention.

News items worth celebrating are also welcome.

So, whatever you have to share that's good, here's a place to do it.

* * *

Here's a good thing I enjoyed very much! A doggeh decides to make herself at home during a performance of the Vienna Chamber Orchestra at the 31st International Izmir Festival in Çesme, Turkey.



Video Description: The chamber orchestra can be seen onstage, beginning to play. From stage right, a dog that looks like a yellow lab strolls onto the stage. The audience chuckles, and, as the conductor notices the dog with an appreciative gesture, they begin to applaud. The orchestra plays on, as the dog stands next to a violinist. As the violinist gets a break and looks down at the dog with a smile, she turns around and lies on the ground beside him, to further applause. And there she chills comfortably, with a contented yawn.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt and Sophie the Torbie Cat lying on the floor in the dining room, with a large cat toy between them

Zelda waits for Sophie to start playing with the toy, then Zelda gets all excited and starts nudging Sophie with her nose. At which point, Sophie rolls on her back and makes a baby-whining sound, and then Zelda play-bows, with her butt in the air and tail wagging furiously. Then she sits her butt down and watches Sophie with anticipation, and the whole thing starts over again. ♥

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 168

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 Abroad: Hubris and Humiliation and Trump's "Election Commission" Is Garbage, and Always Remember It's Being Run by Mike Pence and Republicans Are Lying to Sell a Bill That Will Kill People.

REMINDER: KEEP CALLING YOUR SENATORS TO TELL THEM TO VOTE NO ON TRUMPCARE.

Allegra Kirkland at TPM: Trump Ex-Business Associate to Assist Kazakh Money Laundering Probe.
A former business associate of [Donald] Trump who has extensive ties to organized crime is cooperating with a money laundering probe that stretches across three continents, the Financial Times reported Thursday.

The Russian-born Felix Sater is working with a team of lawyers and private investigators who are pursuing civil cases against the Khrapunovs, a Kazakh family that Sater allegedly helped use shell companies to launder millions of dollars into U.S. real estate, five people with knowledge of the probe told FT.

One of the venues for that dirty money, according to the report, was a failed Manhattan real estate venture of the president's, Trump SoHo:
It is unclear how much money has flowed from the alleged Kazakh laundering scheme to Mr Trump. Title deeds and banking records show that in April 2013 shell companies controlled by the Khrapunovs spent $3.1m buying three luxury apartments in Trump Soho from a holding company in which Mr Trump held a stake.
The FBI also was interested in whether the probe involved potential money-laundering in the United States, one anonymous source involved in the investigation told the FT.

...Trump's business ties to Sater, who once served 15 months in prison for stabbing a stockbroker in the face with a broken martini glass and went on to became a government informant after pleading guilty in a $40 million fraud scheme, have long raised eyebrows.
I've always thought if anyone was ever going to turn on Trump, it would be a race between Carter Page and Felix Sater.

Sater, as I've previously mentioned, was also in charge of a 2005 hotel project in Moscow that was part of a Trump licensing deal. Additionally, Sater was involved in crafting the back-channel plan to lift sanctions on Russia, which Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen personally delivered to Michael Flynn a week before he resigned as national security adviser.

For additional background on Sater, I recommend these two pieces by TPM's Josh Marshall: A Big Shoe Just Dropped and Learning Eye-Popping Details About Mr. Sater.

* * *

Jessica Taylor at NPR: Majority of Americans Believe Trump Acted Either Illegally or Unethically with Russia. "A majority of Americans believe [Donald] Trump has done something either illegal or unethical when it comes to Russia, according to a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll. The 54 percent of people who believe something untoward has gone on include a quarter who believe the president has done something illegal in regards to his dealings with Russia, and 29 percent of Americans who think he has done something unethical, but not illegal." Huh.

Remi Adekoya at the Guardian: Poland's Courting of Trump Is a Few Supporters Short of a Picnic.
Poland's rightwing government is pulling out all the stops for what it sees as its greatest foreign policy achievement to date: a visit to Warsaw today by US president Donald Trump. In what has to be acknowledged as wily diplomacy, the Law and Justice (PiS) government is appealing to the US president's achilles heel: His vanity, reportedly luring him with promises of adoring crowds, in contrast to the chillier receptions he can expect in western Europe.

The ruling party is bussing in its supporters from all over Poland, encouraging them to take part in a "great patriotic picnic" on the occasion of Trump's visit. The idea is to make the big man feel as good about himself as possible, which will hopefully benefit Poland in some way, such as a more categorical assertion that Nato would — under US leadership — protect Poland from any aggression from Moscow.
Good lord. [Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] And, as Dan Merica and Antonia Mortensen report at CNN, it wasn't just the Polish government orchestrating this ridiculous fraud: "Paul Jones, the US ambassador to Poland, also appeared on Polish media to invite people to attend the speech." Fucking hell.

And if that weren't humiliation enough... Marcus Engert at BuzzFeed: Trump Apparently Couldn't Find a Hotel to Book for the G20 Summit. "White House officials apparently waited too long to book accommodations for [Donald] Trump, leaving him without a hotel in Hamburg, Germany, as world leaders converge for the G20 summit. Organizers announced the scheduled summit in February 2016, which requires 9,000 hotel rooms to accommodate world leaders, their sizable staffs, and security details. ...[E]very luxury hotel in Hamburg was reportedly booked by the time the Americans called, leaving Trump, who is associated with an empire of hotel properties, scrambling for a place to stay. ...With the summit approaching, the city of Hamburg is now apparently stepping in to help. Police officers guard the official Senate guest house of Hamburg, where [Donald] Trump will reportedly stay during the upcoming G20 summit."

So, it sounds like Hamburg will have to provide security to protect him there — same shit as Melania in NYC or Trump at Mar-a-Lago, basically. COOL.

Max Ehrenfreund at the Washington Post: Trump's Job Growth Nightmare: His First Year Could Be Slower Than Obama's Last. "Trump is touting data on the economy, telling his supporters that things are getting better for American workers. Not all professional forecasters share that enthusiasm, though, and many of them believe that this is about as good as it is going to get. According to the average forecast among analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News, U.S. employers combined will add 165,000 workers to their payrolls a month this year, on net. That would be the slowest pace for hiring since 2010. Under President Barack Obama last year, the economy produced an average of 187,000 jobs a month." That's not really "Trump's Job Growth Nightmare" as much as it is "U.S. Workers' Job Growth Nightmare," though. Trump will just call the facts "fake news" and get on with his golf game.


Lolsob foreverrrrrrrr.

Molly Hensley-Clancy at BuzzFeed: 18 States Are Suing Betsy DeVos over For-Profit College Rules. "Eighteen states and Washington, DC, are suing Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and the Education Department over DeVos's decision to roll back rules designed to help students who have been defrauded by their colleges. The group of Democratic state attorneys general alleges that the Education Department is breaking the law by withdrawing an Obama-era regulation, known as the 'borrower defense' rule, which lays out a process for students to have their federal loans forgiven if they were defrauded by their schools."


Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: The Trump Administration Hands a Big Gift to Abusive Nursing Homes. "The Trump administration is poised to undo rules issued by the Obama administration last year to protect seniors from a common tactic used by businesses to shield themselves from consequences for illegal conduct. Under these rules, issued last September, Medicare and Medicaid would cut off payments to nursing homes that require new residents to sign forced arbitration agreements, a contract which strips individuals of their ability to sue in a real court and diverts the case to a privatized arbitration system. But last month, the Trump administration published a proposed rule which will reinstate nursing homes' ability to receive federal money even if they force seniors into arbitration agreements." Seethe.

Tara Palmeri at Politico: Trump's Aides Build Their Own Empires in the West Wing. "Donald Trump won office on promises to shake up how Washington works, and so far that's been most apparent in his own West Wing, where his top advisers have built up personal staffs to support their own agendas instead of using a traditional White House policy and messaging operation. ...The expansion of staff assigned to individual senior advisers has helped the people closest to Trump build up their own brands and policy portfolios — such as Kushner's focus on technology and Middle East peace — but also reinforces factionalism within the West Wing. The aides help bolster competing camps when they're squaring off to influence the president on everything from climate change to trade and health care. Current and past White House aides say such an arrangement also risks distracting from a unified Trump agenda."

Also bear this competitive chaos in mind each time you hear the refrain that Trump's principles only last as long as the last person to whom he spoke. He moves through his presidency like a goldfish, taking ideas from competing factions in his own administration, which results in ideological incoherence. The only thing they all share in common is a profound lack of ethics and a penchant for abuse.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington: CREW Files Ethics Complaint Against Jared Kushner. "White House Senior Advisor and Assistant to the President Jared Kushner appears to have failed to make the required disclosure of his ownership interest in an online real estate investment company called Cadre, and likely must divest from Cadre to prevent having a conflict of interest, according to a complaint filed today by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) with the Office of Government Ethics (OGE). Kushner co-founded Cadre and continues to own a significant part of it. ...'Kushner's failure to disclose his ownership in Cadre is very troubling,' CREW Executive Director Noah Bookbinder said. 'It appears to be one of his larger investments, not something he could easily overlook, and it is impossible to ensure that senior government officials are behaving ethically if they fail to disclose key assets.'" This entire fucking family.

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

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Republicans Are Lying to Sell a Bill That Will Kill People

Yesterday, I noted Greg Sargent's keen observation that Republicans are going to "extraordinary lengths" to conceal that the Affordable Care Act has helped countless people: "If you think about it, pretty much every major lie that [Donald] Trump and Republicans are telling right now to get their repeal-and-replace bill passed is designed to cover it up." Yep.

And oh the lies they are telling as part of that grand obfuscation! Like, for example, this trash:


Republican Senator John Cornyn responded to that tweet thus:


People will buy what they value. Okay. Except surely Cornyn has heard that there are millions of people in this country who struggle occasionally or often or always to meet all of their basic needs.

When someone has to choose between paying rent, paying an insurance premium, or buying a metro card to get to work, because they can't afford all three, something has to give, and it isn't because they don't value all three of those things.

It's not that Cornyn doesn't know this, of course. He knows. But he would simply tell another lie to obfuscate this truth: The lie that any person in the United States can bootstrap their way out of need.

To listen to Cornyn and his reprehensible cronies tell it, anyone who is lacking essentials just isn't working hard enough.

Never mind that Cornyn and his reprehensible cronies are responsible for undercutting labor laws, empowering corporate greed, busting unions, and ignoring the cost to workers of automation for decades, which has made jobs with livable wages ever more scarce.

Lie upon lie upon lie — all to sell a bill that will kill people, and cause an awful lot of unnecessary suffering. Including among countless children, many of whose parents voted for Donald Trump. Whoops.

In related news: Margot Sanger-Katz reports at the New York Times that "Ted Cruz Has an Idea for How to Cover High-Risk Patients." And guess what? It's garbage.

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Trump's "Election Commission" Is Garbage, and Always Remember It's Being Run by Mike Pence

Late last month, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the vice-chair of Donald Trump's Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, sent a letter to the Secretaries of State of all 50 states, requesting that voter data for every registered voter in the entire country — including name, address, birthdate, partial SSN, voting history, and party affiliation — be sent to the White House.

To anyone who does not afford unearned good faith to the Republican Party, nor to Mike Pence, the head of the commission, this was a transparent ploy to lay the groundwork for a nationwide voter suppression effort under the auspices of "voter fraud prevention."

There was also no reason to trust, at all, that the commission, nor the White House, nor the Republican Party, would properly secure that information, if provided.

Indeed, former Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff penned a piece for the Washington Post warning that the request potentially poses a major national security risk: "If this sensitive data is to be collected and aggregated by the federal government, then the administration should honor its own recent cybersecurity executive order and ensure that the data is not stolen by hackers or insiders."

Suffice it to say, there is evidently no plan for securing the data, during transfer or subsequent storage.

Secretaries of State from around the country quickly starting releasing statements raising concerns about the request and/or announcing a flat-out refusal to comply. At this point, 44 states have now said that they don't intend to submit the information as requested.

Mark Berman and John Wagner at the Washington Post: Why Almost Every State Is Partially or Fully Rebuffing Trump's Election Commission.

Pushback has swept across red and blue states alike, drawing in Democratic critics of the president and Republicans uneasy about a broad federal request they suggest intrudes on states' rights. That sentiment has been notable for including Republicans such as Arizona Secretary of State Michele Reagan, who called the commission's request a "hastily organized experiment," and Louisiana Secretary of State Tom Schedler, who described it as "federal intrusion and overreach."

The Trump administration has bristled at some of the recent criticism and media coverage. In a statement Wednesday, Kobach assailed media reports describing states as refusing to hand over data, calling them "more 'fake news.'"

"Despite media distortions and obstruction by a handful of state politicians, this bipartisan commission on election integrity will continue its work to gather the facts through public records requests to ensure the integrity of each American's vote because the public has a right to know," Kobach said in the statement, released by the White House. He also emphasized that the commission's letters had asked only for publicly available data and that many states are complying. "At present, only 14 states and the District of Columbia have refused the Commission's request for publicly available voter information."

More than two dozen states said they will provide some of the requested information, according to interviews, public statements and media accounts. Others have not announced decisions or elaborated on what they plan to provide.

Marc Lotter, a spokesman for Pence, said the commission will work with remaining states to obtain data through public-records requests or other means. He would not rule out the commission purchasing data from states, if such policies are consistent with how other parties seeking such information are treated.
Two important takeaways there:

One: There are plenty of states, especially Republican-led states, who are making lots of grunty noises and outraged gestures about this request, but are, as Kobach says, complying with him as much as their laws allow.

In fact, per Greg Palast: Twenty-one of the states on the list of 44 "have already turned over voter files to Kobach's office," including, for example, Louisiana, which "turned over nearly three million voter files to Kobach earlier this year, including voter birthdates and Social Security information" — even though its Secretary of State Tom Schedler said, "The President's Commission has quickly politicized its work by asking states for an incredible amount of voter data that I have, time and time again, refused to release."

Basically, there are a number of Republican-led states who were giving up voter info even before this request, and now they're making public statements suggesting otherwise.

Which is par for the course: Republican state legislatures have been enacting voter suppression efforts for decades under the auspices of preventing voter fraud, despite the fact that widespread voter fraud does not exist, according to multiple and exhaustive studies. The GOP continually lies about this issue, and the national commission is, unsurprisingly, no different.

Two: If states legitimately refuse to comply, the commission will seek to procure the information in some other way. That means if you live in a Democratically-led state whose elected officials are protecting your privacy as you elected them to do, the federal government will try to do an end-run around them.

This in particular has Pence written all over it. The complete abandonment of "small-government conservatism" when it suits him; the hostility to privacy and consent; the intense disregard for anything resembling respect for voting rights, because voter suppression is a key to a winning electoral strategy for Republicans.

This entire debacle is a gross abuse of power — and, although Kris Kobach's name is at the top of every story, always remember that the person hand-selected by Donald Trump to lead and oversee the commission is Mike Pence.

Who clearly wants a national voter suppression strategy in place ahead of his presidential run. Whenever that will be.

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Trump Abroad: Hubris and Humiliation

Donald Trump is in Europe for the G20 summit, a trip during which he will again embarrass this nation and make us less safe by further alienating our allies.

He will also meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin tomorrow, ahead of which Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has announced that the administration "is prepared to consider joint stability operations with Russia in Syria, including no-fly zones, cease-fire observers, and coordinated deliveries of humanitarian aid." This, as I have previously noted, is foolish for a number of reasons, not least of which is that Russia does not have the same objectives in Syria that the U.S. does. Or used to.

Today, though, Trump is in Poland, where he met with Polish President Andrzej Duda, and delivered a major speech during which he declared

that "the West will never be broken" and vowed to win the battle against Islamist extremism.

Speaking in Warsaw on Thursday, Trump said "our people will thrive and our civilization will triumph."

"The fundamental question of our time is whether the West has the will to survive. Do we have the confidence in our values to defend them at any cost? Do we have enough respect for our citizens to protect our borders? Do we have the desire and the courage to preserve our civilization in the face of those who would subvert and destroy it?"
It was a disturbing speech, juxtaposing a history lesson about the Nazis and Soviets invading Poland with thinly-veiled white supremacist and Christian supremacist rhetoric.

Trump threw in an odd ad-lib accompanied by a weird grin about the WWII invasions of Poland: "That's trouble. That's tough."

The crowd certainly knew what to expect, and Trump delivered.


In addition to his big speech, Trump appeared at a joint press conference with Duda, where he was asked (again) if he will say definitively that Russia interfered in the U.S. election, and he responded by launching an extended attack against President Obama.


Which was coupled with his usual dissembling:
"I think it was Russia and I think it could have been other people and other countries who interfered. It could well have been other people. It could have been a lot of people who interfered," Trump said.

"I won't be specific, but I I think a lot of people interfere, it's been happening for a very long time. It's been happening for many years."

..."I think it was Russia, but I think it was people and or countries, and I see nothing wrong with that statement. Nobody really knows. Nobody really knows for sure."
Trump also took some time out of the Polish press conference to continue his war on the press.


And he spoke about North Korea, with his usual vague belligerence:
"I have some pretty severe things that we're thinking about," Trump told reporters about the possible U.S. response to North Korea...

North Korea test-fired its first intercontinental ballistic missile Tuesday, marking a significant step forward in its weapons program and an escalation of the nuclear standoff with the U.S.

"I think we'll just take a look at what happens over the coming weeks and months," Trump said ahead of his trip Friday to the G-20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany. "It's a shame that they're behaving this way. Something will have to be done."
Trump also pretended for a fleeting moment like he isn't Putin's puppet, saying: "We urge Russia to cease its destabilizing activity in Ukraine and elsewhere," and calling on Moscow to "join the community of responsible nations." He also said Russia must stop its "support for hostile regimes, including Syria and Iran." Which might have meant more if his Secretary of State hadn't just said that the Trump administration is considering working with Russia in Syria.

Finally, there was this:


Sure.

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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

What is an experience you've had, good or bad, so unusual that you are reasonably certain no one else in this community has had?

I was once let into a locked building to escape a downpour by Gary Sinise.

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by broccoli.

Recommended Reading:

April Walloga: [Content Note: Fat hatred; moving gif at link] Plus-Size Model Owns Flight Passenger Who Made Her 'Uncomfortable to Exist'

Heather Bryant: [CN: Classism] So This One Time at a Journalism Conference...

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Racism] Asian American Actors Exit Hawaii Five-0 over Pay Equality

Cat Pausé: [CN: Fat hatred] On Super Fat Packing

Elayne Clift: Tales, Tips, and Love from Women Caregivers

Monica Roberts: RIP Aleshia Brevard

Ryan F. Mandelbaum: Scientists Think They've Figured Out Where Bizarre Runaway Stars Are Coming From

Thomas Ricker: Volvo to End Gas-Only Cars by 2019

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

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Today in Racism: Canada Day in Halifax Edition (Updated)

[CN: organized white supremacy, racist violence, colonialist violence.]

On July 1, as celebrations of Canada’s 150th anniversary were underway across the nation, a number of Indigenous groups conducted ceremonies and protests calling attention to their historical and contemporary oppressions. One of these, a Mi’kmaq ceremony in Halifax, Nova Scotia, attracted the attention of white supremacists, who decided to crash the ceremony wielding the Red Ensign, a flag associated with pre-1965 Canada as well as with the earlier colonial period of British North America.

Before I get into the actions of these racist dipshits, it’s important to note the significance of the ceremony and its location. The ceremony, led by Chief Grizzly Mamma, was held in Cornwallis Square, in front of a statue of Edward Cornwallis. Cornwallis was briefly governor of colonial Nova Scotia, from 1749-1752, and is associated with the founding of Halifax. He’s also associated with waging attempted genocide against the Mi’kmaw people, offering a bounty for the scalps of men, women, and children alike. Thus, holding the ceremony before his statue holds special significance in a commemoration both of past genocide and present issues including the violence against murdered and missing Indigenous women.

The ceremony, as described by CBC reporter Anjuli Patil, included the following:

Chief Grizzly Mamma, who is originally from British Columbia but now lives in Halifax, shaved her head and then placed her hair — which had been braided in two sections — at the foot of the statue. "Cornwallis, you took my last brothers and sisters. I cut off genocide, genocide no more," she said, standing in front of the statue while holding the braids in her hand. "You took their scalps, you can have mine too.

As the ceremony progressed, a group of people in yellow-trimmed black polo shirts, carrying the aforementioned Red Ensign, approached the ceremony while singing "God Save the Queen." They identified themselves as members of "the Proud Boys," a hate group self-described as "Western chauvinists." The Fred Perry polo shirts (also favored by skinheads) serve as their default uniform. You can read a good deal more at this link, but one thing important to note: part of their initiation into the higher degrees of their pseudo-fraternity involves street brawling.

Very fortunately, the Halifax confrontation involved no physical violence against human beings, although one of the assholes apparently tried to trash one of the flowers left in memorial of missing and murdered indigenous women. From an eyewitness:

 photo flower_zps4qgicmjg.jpg

[Screenshot from The Anti-Racist Canada blog, where it was submitted.]

A short video captures three of the men giving their names: John Eldridge, David Eldridge, and Grant, who is very insistent that his name be captured. A longer video captures more of their confrontation with protest-goers who ask them to leave and block them from interrupting Chief Grizzly Mamma.

I regret that I don’t have a transcript of the video, but it includes these guys pulling the usual racist and colonialist disphittery, with an added dose of not actually knowing the history they attempt to spout. They insist that the ceremony should stop because this is Canada, not Mi’kmaq territory. Yet they also are obnoxiously insistent on carrying their Red Ensign, because “this is a British colony.” Well, no, nimrods. Nova Scotia ceased to be a British colony in 1867. And yes, it’s been Mi'kma'ki for 13-15000 years. There’s also garbled talk that the protestors should "give back" their "Medicare" cards (that’s MSI or Nova Scotia Health card, but thanks for playing) because that’s been "given" to them by the government of Canada. That this logic eventually leads to the government of Canada folding and giving the entirety of its geography back to its original inhabitant doesn't seem to occur to him.

Now, I could make fun of these ill-informed assholes all day, but the point really isn't how nonsensical their ideology is. It’s that they spout it like the true believers they are, having been thoroughly indoctrinated. And they spout it aggressively, confrontationally, as they co-opt the language of social justice. At one point in the video, Grant tells the women standing in front of him that she is too close and that it’s a "microaggression." That didn't come from nowhere. That’s a conscious mockery, and it’s one he relishes. It doesn't really matter that their doctrine is founded on bullshit. What matters is that they believe it and want to fight for it. They want to hurt people, to dominate by verbal and physical aggression. Like many hate groups, they embrace the pseudo-intellectual nonsense because it tells them that they are superior and promises to restore an imaginary version of history. What’s not imaginary, though, is the pushback against bilingualism, the rights of Indigenous people, the entry of non-white and non-Christian immigrants into Canada, and all of their other aggressive hostility towards most of the better parts of modern Canadian history.

Two of the five "Boys" were quickly identified as members of the Royal Canadian Navy. Later it was confirmed at all are serving in the armed forces, including at least one soldier from the Canadian Army. I seriously doubt that it’s a coincidence that this incident occurred just days after the Department of National Defence announced a major effort to promote more diversity in its armed forces. There are ongoing, deadly issues with systemic racism in Canada's armed forces. Indoctrination by organized hate groups isn't new, either. Which gets us to the issue of what consequences are in store for this particular band of (literally) blackshirts.

The Minister of Defence has apologized for the disrespect, and both the commander of the RCN and the chief of Defence staff have assured that the persons involved have been suspended and that there is an investigation ongoing and that there will be consequences. The service members have almost certainly violated the Code of Values and Ethics for service members. What is not clear is whether the Department of National Defence will work from an Indigenous-centred perspective, as suggested by Rebecca Thomas, who is Mi'kmaw (specifically, a member of the Pictou Landing First Nation) and Halifax’s poet laureate. In an interview with David Squires, she expressed appreciation for what the DND has done thus far, and reiterated the need for a restorative approach:

Rebecca Thomas, a Mi'kmaq activist who attended the ceremony to mourn the atrocities committed against Indigenous peoples says the military’s apology was respectful.

"I was pleasantly surprised at the apology and without conditions. Just we're sorry. This shouldn't have happened. End of story. There were no conditions and that meant something," said Thomas.

Thomas is now calling on the military to address the root cause of the problem that led five of its members to interrupt the Indigenous protest.

"I think having a restorative justice peace is really important. I want them to understand why what they did was wrong … if you just punch them without adding that context it might further entrench them into this belief that Indigenous people are deviant or disruptive," said Thomas.

That's a pretty crucial distinction, frankly. Because the problem isn't just that their behavior violated DND standards. It's that the armed forces have a known problem with racism, and whatever has been done thus far, it isn't working. Further, simply severing these men from their jobs just frees them to continue their hate group activities openly. Practicing catch-and-release with racist recruits only ups the ante in terms of what they will do next.

My point, here it is: the DND has a responsibility to be concerned with more than its own reputation and internal discipline. It has a responsibility to the people being hurt by racist servicemembers, whether those people are civilian or military. It has a responsibility to all Canadians to ensure that the RCN, RCAF, and CA not continue to be be incubators for hate. And it has a special responsibility, considering the military's institutional history of anti-Indigenous violence, to work in earnest towards reconciliation. That means listening to voices like Rebecca Thomas, rather than assuming non-Indigenous perspectives will be enough. She's opened a door; will anyone walk through? I certainly hope so.

Update: The CBC has decided to give Gavin McInness, founder of the Proud Boys, a platform tonight on which he's lying his ass off, unchallenged by host Hannah Thibodeau. He actually defended the bounty on Mi'kmaq scalps, a quote which CBC posted to Twitter. CBC, this is not a time for "both sides" lies. One of these things is NOT like the other. Where is your Mi'kmaq guest? Where is their perspective? Oh that's right. You didn't bother.

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TV Corner: GLOW

image of the cast of GLOW, a show about the 1980s wrestling show Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling

Anyone else watching GLOW on Netflix? IF NOT, YOU SHOULD BE, BECAUSE IT IS AMAZING. It's a series about the 1980's phenomenon "Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling," and it is: 1. A show with so many women omg!!! and 2. Absolute 80's perfection.

I'm only a few episodes into its first (and so far only) season, but I am loving it.

I also really love the promotional posters for the series:

series of promotional posters for GLOW, which feature a diversity of women, in race and body size

Fuck yeah!

So, are you watching? If so, what do you think?

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WTF Is This?

[Content Note: Misogyny; white supremacy.]

Actual Headline: "In defense of the white male."

Actual Paragraph from This Actual Article Actually Published by the Boston Globe in the Year of Our Lord Jesus Jones Two Thousand and Seventeen:

It's not hard to argue that white men have done more harm in history — from the keeping of slaves to the genocide of Native Americans, and a thousand other examples — than any other single group. But it can also be argued that they have done more good — in combatting evil regimes, in developing medicines, in inventing everything from the automobile to the cellphone to various methods of birth control. White men discovered penicillin, Novocain, the drug regimen used to treat people afflicted with AIDS. In many places the chances are good that if your home is on fire, it will be a white man who comes to put it out. And, if it were not for the millions of white men who gave their lives in World War II, we might all be starting the work day with the Nazi salute.
Someone remind me: Were any of the Nazis white men?


"In defense of the white male." One hundred and sixty-seven days into the presidency of a white man, the successor of a Black president and defeater of a female rival, who endeavors in every way to roll back equality for people who are not straight, white, cisgender, able-bodied, Christian, wealthy white men.

Fuck off.

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