Film Corner: Atomic Blonde

image of Charlize Theron in Atomic Blonde, accompanied by the film's logo

So, this weekend, I finally saw Atomic Blonde, aka Furiosa Goes to Berlin. And I liked it a whole lot! Charlize Theron was amazing, obvs. Although I will immediately register one complaint: I'm pretty sure there were people of color in Berlin in the '80s, ahem.


Have you seen it? Here is a place for discussion if you want to talk about it! Also, as always, happy to answer any questions about potentially triggering/problematic content, for anyone who's trying to assess whether to see it.

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"Dastardly, Cowardly" Bombing of Mosque in Minnesota


[Content Note: Terrorism; Islamophobia.]

An unknown person (or persons) placed an improvised explosive device (IED) at Dar Al-Farooq Islamic Center in Bloomington, Minnesota, which exploded during Saturday morning prayers. Fortunately, no one was physically injured.
Mohamed Omar, the center's executive director, told The Washington Post he was inside the mosque preparing for morning prayers when he felt a "huge explosion" that quickly caused smoke and flames. Omar said another person present later told him he had heard the sound of a window breaking and then a pickup truck fleeing outside.

"The sprinkler system went off and immediately water came down," Omar said. "We didn't know what was happening but it was scary."

..."Hate is not okay," Asad Zaman, executive director of the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, told reporters, according to the Star-Tribune. "We need an America where people are safe with their neighbors."

If the attack was motivated by anti-Muslim bias, it would represent "another in a long list of hate incidents targeting Islamic institutions nationwide in recent months," CAIR-MN civil rights director Amir Malik said. CAIR said in a report last month that anti-Muslim hate crimes in the United States nearly doubled in the first half of this year over the same period in 2016. At least 35 anti-mosque acts — including vandalism and arson — were reported during the first three months of this year, the organization has said.

Last week, vandals spray-painted swastikas and hateful graffiti at the Al Magfirah cemetery in Castle Rock Township, just outside the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, the Associated Press reported. Other messages at the Muslim cemetery read "666" and "leave you R Dead," according to photos published by the KSTP News.
This intimidation, harassment, and violence isn't happening in a vacuum. It's happening in the context of a presidency that has been defined by the promise to "Make America Great Again," a central strategy of which has been fearmongering against nonwhite and non-Christian populations, including very prominently Muslims.

Donald Trump did not invent Islamophobia, but he has empowered it. And these are the consequences of his reckless bigotry.

As of 9:30 Eastern this morning, Trump has tweeted nine times, but has not even mentioned the bombing of Dar Al-Farooq Islamic Center.

Touring the center, Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton denounced the explosion "as a 'wretched' hate crime and act of terrorism," saying: "What a terrible, dastardly, cowardly act was committed. Anything I can do to put a stop to it, I would gladly do."

And many local residents share his anger and grief:
Since the morning attack at the mosque, the area has been shut down as an active crime scene, but it has also attracted well-wishers, from neighbors to other members of the faith community.

"The churches around and synagogues … almost all of them came down and showed their support," Omar said. "We are strong and we don't want to lose hope because of things that happen."

...Ilham Omar, a Somali American state representative who is Muslim, called on Minnesotans to "stand together in opposition to hate."

"This building is more than a religious symbol," she said in a statement. "It's a place where Minnesotans are gathering to create community, to talk to their neighbors, to learn about our world and each other, and to help care for children."
I take up space in solidarity with the members of the Dar Al-Farooq community. I fervently hope the perpetrator of this heinous act is swiftly identified.

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Keep Your Eyes on Pence

On Saturday, Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns at the New York Times reported that a number of Republicans are already slavering at the possibility that Trump will not run again in 2020 — among them, naturally, Vice President Mike Pence.

In most cases, the shadow candidates and their operatives have signaled that they are preparing only in case Mr. Trump is not available in 2020. Most significant, multiple advisers to Mr. Pence have already intimated to party donors that he would plan to run if Mr. Trump did not.

...Though it is customary for vice presidents to keep a full political calendar, he has gone a step further, creating an independent power base, cementing his status as Mr. Trump's heir apparent and promoting himself as the main conduit between the Republican donor class and the administration.

The vice president created his own political fund-raising committee, Great America Committee, shrugging off warnings from some high-profile Republicans that it would create speculation about his intentions. The group, set up with help from Jack Oliver, a former fund-raiser for George W. Bush, has overshadowed Mr. Trump's own primary outside political group, America First Action, even raising more in disclosed donations.

Mr. Pence also installed Nick Ayers, a sharp-elbowed political operative, as his new chief of staff last month — a striking departure from vice presidents' long history of elevating a government veteran to be their top staff member. Mr. Ayers had worked on many campaigns but never in the federal government.

...Mr. Pence has made no overt efforts to separate himself from the beleaguered president. He has kept up his relentless public praise and even in private is careful to bow to the president.

Mr. Pence's aides, however, have been less restrained in private, according to two people briefed on the conversations. ...Mr. Ayers has signaled to multiple major Republican donors that Mr. Pence wants to be ready.

For his part, Mr. Pence is methodically establishing his own identity and bestowing personal touches on people who could pay dividends in the future. He not only spoke in June at one of the most important yearly events for Iowa Republicans, Senator Joni Ernst's pig roast, but he also held a separate, more intimate gathering for donors afterward.
Pence has also "turned his residence at the Naval Observatory into a hub for relationship building," hosting the Koch Brothers, arch-conservative Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, and Kentucky coal barons Kelly and Joe Craft, among others.

At the "large gatherings" he convenes, he "keeps a chair free at each table so he can work his way around the room. At smaller events for some of the party's biggest donors, he lays on the charm." Gross.

It's remarkable how confident Pence is that none of the Trump administration corruption will stick to him. Not surprising, given that the media inexplicably believes his innocent act, but remarkable all the same.

His aides deny that this obvious maneuvering is to position himself to run in 2020, calling the suggestion "beyond ridiculous." And who are you going to believe — your own functioning brain that can draw obvious conclusions from easily observable data, or the lying aides to a lying scoundrel?

On Joy Reid's show this weekend, Rep. Maxine Waters made it clear that she's going to trust her own skills of observation.

Also, I wanna just say that, you know, the rumor is that, you know, [Pence] is getting ready — because maybe he believes that something might happen, and he should be ready to step in. Or that he can run in 2020 and win. So, I don't think we should be concerned about him; Trump should be concerned about him!
Now, you know I don't like to disagree with Rep. Waters, but the fact that it's plain as day Pence is angling to make sure he's the 2020 Republican frontrunner now is exactly why we should be concerned about him.

He's leveraging his position as vice-president to make sure he starts the 2020 race with an insurmountable head start on all the other candidates. If he doesn't get the position by default because Trump is ousted, then he wants to make sure he's got every possible advantage in a contest.

Which, of course, he vehemently denies:
Vice President Mike Pence declared his loyalty to [Donald] Trump on Sunday and denounced a New York Times article suggesting that he was positioning himself to run for president in 2020 if Mr. Trump does not seek a second term.

"Today's article in The New York Times is disgraceful and offensive to me, my family and our entire team," the vice president said in a statement. "The allegations in this article are categorically false and represent just the latest attempt by the media to divide this administration."

He added: "Whatever fake news may come our way, my entire team will continue to focus all our efforts to advance the president's agenda and see him re-elected in 2020. Any suggestion otherwise is both laughable and absurd."

Danielle Rhoades Ha, a Times spokeswoman, said in response: "We are confident in the accuracy of our reporting and will let the story speak for itself."
Keep your eyes on Pence. He's coming for the presidency.

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Open Thread

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

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of a pub Photoshopped to be named 'The Beloved Community Pub'
[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

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

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by the smell of freshly cut grass.

Recommended Reading:

Rebecca Schoenkopf: [Content Note: Misogynoir] Sure Guys, It Is Awesome That We Are Shitting on Kamala Harris

Zerlina Maxwell: Kamala Harris Is One of the Most Progressive (and Attacked) Leaders in America

Ben Yakas: Guilty: 'Pharma Bro' Martin Shkreli Convicted of Securities Fraud

IWHC Staff: [CN: Misogyny] The US Cannot Renege on its Commitment to Democracy Worldwide

Aaron D. Cobb: [CN: Loss of a child; discussion of euthanasia; disablism] A Tale of Two Sams

Ragen Chastain: [CN: Disordered eating; diet talk] Celebrity Diet Culture: Just Stop Already

Charline Jao: Rock Out and Support Trans Rights: Music Recommendations for Bandcamp's Transgender Law Center Fundraiser

George Dvorsky: [CN: Moving GIF at link] Robotic Deep Sea Explorer Uncovers Treasure Trove of Freaky Marine Life

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

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On Liking Hillary Clinton, with Enthusiasm

Back in April, I wrote a piece about how the "Hillary is uniquely unlikeable" narrative served to discredit all the people who like her.

Given that the same strategy is currently being used against Senator Kamala Harris, I thought it would be good to freshen up and revisit that piece.

So, in case you missed it the first time around or want to have another look, here it is: "On Liking the Unlikeable Hillary Clinton."

Whom, by the way, I like not only with enthusiasm but out of spite for everyone who irrationally hates her. That's a big and formidable combo, friends!

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Hey


And that's all I have to say about that.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat lying on the couch, looking dreamily into the distance
Matilda, thinking about Tony what it was like when we used to have a president who was a deeply ethical, intelligent, competent, hardworking, compassionate, flawed but fabulous human being, instead of a having president who is a monumental wreck.

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 197

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 Is Horrendous in West Virginia and Keep Your Eyes on Pence.

Greg Miller, Julie Vitkovskaya, and Reuben Fischer-Baum at the Washington Post: 'This Deal Will Make Me Look Terrible': Full Transcripts of Trump's Calls with Mexico and Australia. "The Washington Post has obtained transcripts of two conversations [Donald] Trump had with foreign leaders: one with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto and another with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. The transcripts were prepared by the White House but have not been released. The Post is publishing reproductions rather than original documents in order to protect sources."

Spoiler Alert: They are humiliating. (I'm sure you're shocked.) The world literally laughs at us.

Franco Ordoñez at McClatchy: Diplomats Laughing at Trump over Leaked Mexico Transcript. "Seven months into the Trump administration, the world's diplomatic community has gone from throwing its hands in the air to now leaning back in their chairs and laughing, albeit morosely, at Trump's cringe-worthy display of diplomacy during the infancy of his presidency. ...[Jorge Guajardo, one of Mexico’s most senior and seasoned foreign policy hands, said] the reality is that people expect more from the United States and any leader with a 'shred of dignity' is not going to allow themselves to be spoken to in that way. ...The exchange will only make it harder for Mexico's government to work with anyone in the United States who encouraged or tried to defend Trump's behavior."

Just to be clear: The U.S. President has made it "harder for Mexico's government" to work with the United States, even though "Mexico is the third largest U.S. trading partner and a crucial ally in a wide range of security, migration, and trade issues."

Attorney General Jeff Sessions isn't happy about the transcripts being leaked:


That's just the head of the Justice Department threatening the free press with an unconstitutional act. Everything is fine. (Everything is not fine.)

* * *

This seems concerning: Russian bots are promulgating hostile rhetoric toward National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster after he, empowered by newly-minted Chief of Staff John Kelly, started cleaning house of his predecessor Michael Flynn's people lingering on the National Security Council.


Further, and relatedly, the suspicion and attendant targeting of McMaster is creating, and reflective of, deep divisions in the White House. At Business Insider, Natasha Bertrand explains:
The dismissals of Ezra Cohen-Watnick, Rich Higgins, and Derek Harvey have exacerbated friction between McMaster and the White House's more nationalist wing, which is led by Bannon and has [Donald] Trump's ear.

"There is a split in the White House between the Bannon camp of ideologues and the McMaster-Mattis-Tillerson camp of more centrist intellectuals," Pete Mansoor, a retired Army colonel who worked closely with McMaster, told Politico. "And this conflict is playing out in real time as the Trump administration tries to flesh out its foreign policy and national security policy."

...Since the firings, administration officials speaking anonymously to conservative-leaning news outlets have accused McMaster of being "anti-Israel" and opposing "everything the president wants to do."

..."H.R. McMaster is a Deep State Plant who Opposes the Trump Agenda," tweeted Mike Cernovich, a prominent far-right provocateur who describes himself as an "American nationalist."

Cernovich set up a website this week called McMaster Leaks, on which he alleged the general had "been leaking information to David Petraeus and has had direct contact with George Soros," a billionaire, left-leaning philanthropist and frequent bogeyman of the far-right.

...Twitter accounts that have been linked to Russian influence operations have jumped on the anti-McMaster bandwagon, too, using hashtags like #FireMcMaster and #deepstate, according to a newly launched website that aims to track Russian propaganda efforts in real time.
By way of reminder, this is the same strategy that Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner claim they used to win the election, which is coincidentally (ahem) one of the strategies Russia was using to interfere with and influence the election.

Russia is still meddling. The only question is whether the Bannon Camp of the White House is still using this strategy, too — and whether they are coordinating (now, or still) with the Russians.

* * *

Judd Legum at ThinkProgress: Senate Protects Mueller, Blocks Trump from Making Recess Appointment. "The Senate unanimously approved a procedure that will block Trump from making recess appointments during August. The move is the one of the first significant actions Republican Senators have taken to restrain Trump's power. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) moved to hold a series of 'pro-forma' sessions while senators are away for the month of August. Every few days a Republican senator will preside over an empty chamber for about a minute. The move will prevent Trump from filling posts that would ordinarily require Senate confirmation."


This is good. Too little and too late already, but good.

* * *

image of Newsweek's latest cover, featuring Donald Trump in a recliner eating junkfood, accompanied by the text: 'LAZY BOY: Donald Trump is bored and tired. Imagine how bad he'd feel if he did any work.'

Newsweek's latest cover is something. I mean, I'm not thrilled about the implication that anyone who eats junkfood is lazy (yawn), but I do commend them on a cover that will surely elicit maximum rage from its subject.

And the cover story itself, by Alexander Nazaryan, is scathing: Trump, America's Boy King: Golf and Television Won't Make America Great Again. The entire thing is worth your time to read, but here are a few of my favorite passages:
Pence wrote that "Trump's accomplishments are nothing short of historic." Even by the dismayingly loose standards of political discourse, that is untrue. ... One act renamed a courthouse for Fred Thompson, the actor and Republican senator.
"Make America great again" was policy shock and awe, not small-bore executive memoranda celebrated as if each were the Louisiana Purchase.
For all his dealmaking skills, Trump hasn't shown much ability to negotiate with Congress, probably because it would require a knowledge of what members of Congress want, need and, above all, fear. And that would require doing homework. It's much easier to just threaten Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski on Twitter. It's also a lot less effective.
DAMN.


* * *

This is also concerning: The following two tweets showed up back-to-back in my Twitter feed this morning.

image of a tweet authored by Jared Yates Sexton, quoting a Fox News segment in which Judge Jeanine has threatened 'unrest' if there is an indictment against Trump or anyone in his family, about which Jared has commented: 'She said 'an uproar' and an 'uprising.' We're going to see the narrative change to Right Wing mentioning violent outcomes from investigation'
image of a tweet authored by Laurence Tribe, quoting a tweet from Julian Assange showing video of protests in Venezuela and reading 'This is happening in Venezuela right now. If the #DeepState succeeds in ousting @realDonaldTrump, expect the same.', about which Laurence has commented: 'Assange pretends he's forecasting violence but he's actually fomenting it.'

This is what's bubbling up from the extreme right and the extreme left: Threats of violence, being proffered as concerned warnings.

* * *

And finally...

David Herzig and Bridget Crawford at the Washington Post: This Trump Real Estate Deal Looks Awfully Like Criminal Tax Fraud. "According to a recent story by ProPublica and the Real Deal, in April 2016 a limited liability company managed by Trump sold two condominium apartments to a limited liability company managed by Eric Trump. They were on the 13th and 14th floors of a 14-story, full-service, doorman building at 100 Central Park South in Manhattan. This is a prime Midtown neighborhood, yet the sale price for each condo was just $350,000. ...Maybe the two units in question were in terrible shape, but two months before the sale to Eric Trump's LLC, they were advertised for $790,000 (on the 13th floor) and $800,000 (on the 14th floor), according to ProPublica." Fucking hell.

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

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Happy Birthday, President Obama!

image of President Obama in the White House press room, smiling, during his final press conference
President Barack Obama at his final press conference in office.

Today is President Barack Obama's birthday. Happy Birthday, Mr. President! I didn't know what to get you, since being out of office seems like the best gift ever!

If you'd like to wish Obama a happy birthday, or reminisce about what it was like when we used to have a president who was a deeply ethical, intelligent, competent, hardworking, compassionate, flawed but fabulous human being, instead of a having president who is a monumental wreck, have at it in comments!

I miss you, President Obama. I really do.

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Keep Your Eyes on Pence

graphic of Mike Pence with his shifty eyes highlighted

A couple of pieces of Mike Pence news, to which I want to direct your attention.

1. Tony Cook at the Indy Star: [Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] After Six Months, Pence Has Now Turned over All State-Related AOL Emails, His Attorney Says.
It took nearly six months after he left the governor's office, but Vice President Mike Pence and his legal team say they have now provided Indiana officials with all emails from his personal AOL account involving state business.

Pence attorney Karoline Jackson said in a recent email to the state's legal counsel that "a complete electronic production of state records" from Pence's time as governor had been delivered to the state as of June 23.

The office of Pence's successor, Gov. Eric Holcomb, said the records consist of state-related emails from two AOL accounts Pence used as governor.
So, let me just stop right there to note the carefully and repeatedly inserted caveat about the emails being "state-related." That means they've excised anything they've deemed to be unrelated to state business.

One might reasonably note Hillary Clinton didn't turn over personal emails, and that is correct. But note that there is a meaningful difference between "personal emails" and "emails unrelated to state business." It sounds like semantics, but it actually creates a whole lot of wiggle room for Pence to argue that he didn't believe a discussion about, hypothetically, quid pro quo was official state business.

NB: "Pence's attorneys are only providing emails they consider to be related to state business, but [Pence spokesman Marc Lotter] did not answer questions about how those determinations are being made."

Also worth noting: Despite Pence's repeated contention that he broke no laws, "Indiana's public access counselor recommends that public officials who use private accounts forward or copy state-related emails to their state accounts, so that they can be preserved and searched in response to public records requests. There is no indication Pence took such steps."

Finally:


Currently pending are "roughly 50 public record requests for Pence's emails. Some of those requests are more than a year old and about half were made while Pence was governor, but went unfulfilled. The pending requests seek Pence's emails on a variety of topics, including Donald Trump, Indiana's controversial Religious Freedom Restoration Act, voter fraud, Syrian refugee resettlement, lead contamination in East Chicago, and the HIV outbreak in Scott County."

Pence has had six months to comb through his emails, knowing what those requests entail. And we have no idea how his legal team assessed whether emails on those subjects were considered (by them) to be "state-related."

That's how Mike Pence does business. A complete lack of transparency, contempt for the law, and zero accountability.

2. Kenneth P. Vogel at the New York Times: Pence to Speak at Conservatives' Meeting Organized by Koch Brothers.
In a sign of an expanding alliance between the Trump administration and one of the most well-financed forces in conservative politics, Vice President Mike Pence has agreed to speak to a gathering of the billionaire Koch brothers' advocacy network this month.

Mr. Pence will deliver the keynote address on Aug. 19 in Richmond, Va., to the annual meeting of activists and donors organized by Americans for Prosperity, the group announced on Friday. The nonprofit advocacy group is financed by the industrialist brothers Charles G. and David H. Koch, and their allies.

The Koch brothers steer a network of groups that spent between $720 million and $750 million to bolster conservative policy positions and politicians in the run-up to the 2016 election, according to people familiar with the spending. Yet the groups withheld support from [Donald] Trump's campaign out of distaste for his populist and protectionist rhetoric, which clashed sharply with the Kochs' support for free-market policies.

But in recent weeks, the Kochs' groups — as well as other deep-pocketed conservative outfits — have expressed increasing support for Mr. Trump's plans to overhaul the tax code.
I'm sure that, on some level, the Kochs' support for Trump's "tax reform" proposal is genuine, because the Kochs are dedicated fans of wealth redistribution upward schemes. But I also believe that support for the tax plan is a cover to explain their working with Pence, instead of openly admitting they're increasingly confident he'll soon be president.

A promotion for which Pence has been quietly laying the groundwork just in case: His former longtime aide Marc Short is now the White House legislative affairs director; Short also "once worked for the Koch network." And Pence "met with Charles Koch for an hour in June," just to keep the hearth warm.

He's making his moves. Keep your eyes on Pence.

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Trump Is Horrendous in West Virginia

Yesterday, Special Counsel Robert Muller impaneled a grand jury as part of his Russia investigation, which has naturally made Donald Trump very unhappy. So, at another Make America Clap for Me Again rally in West Virginia last night, Trump went off on an egregiously disingenuous rant in his own defense:

In what might be seen as a bid to weaponise his populist base, Trump told the crowd in Huntington, a coal country stronghold where he beat Hillary Clinton by 42 percentage points: "Most people know there were no Russians in our campaign; there never were. We didn't win because of Russia. We won because of you."

The crowd, many with "Make America great again" hats or signs, erupted in vociferous cheers. Trump continued: "We won because we totally outworked the other side. We won because of millions of patriotic Americans voted to take back their country."

The president asked mockingly: "Have you seen any Russians in West Virginia or Ohio or Pennsylvania? Are there any Russians here tonight, any Russians? They can't beat us at the voting booths so they're trying to cheat you out of the future and the future that you want. They're trying to cheat you out of the leadership that you want with a fake story that is demeaning to all of us and most importantly demeaning to our country and demeaning to our constitution."

"I just hope the final determination is a truly honest one, which is what the millions of people who gave us our big win in November deserve and what all Americans who want a better future want and deserve," the president added ominously.

"Democrat lawmakers will have to decide. They can continue their obsession with the Russian hoax or they can serve the interests of the American people. Try winning at the voter booth. Not going to be easy, but that's the way you're supposed to do it."

Trump spared the media his usual broadsides and instead focused on the Democrats, whom he claimed were trying to find an excuse for "the greatest loss in the history of American politics." Prosecutors should be looking for former secretary of state Hillary Clinton's 33,000 emails, he added, prompting thunderous cheers and chants of "Lock her up!" – some nine months after the election.
To be clear: This is what I mean when I say that the collusion happened — and continues to happen — right out in the open. There is agreement among U.S. intelligence agencies that Russia interfered in the election to Trump's benefit, which should concern any patriotic American who values our national sovereignty. But Trump casts aspersions on the investigation, implies its findings will be fraudulent, demonizes the Democrats, and makes fucking jokes about how there are no Russians running about the countryside.

(Actually, there are: "In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the State Department, were going missing. The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. ...It's a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States' telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to disrupt it.")

Trump's ridiculous rhetoric serves to enable continued Russian attacks on the U.S. by pretending — and inviting his base to pretend — that such attacks don't even exist.

Meanwhile, he makes sure that the ire of his fawning, unquestioning base remains firmly directed at Hillary Clinton, who is neither a figure in government nor a candidate for office.

Trump is dangerous, and he's appallingly disloyal to the country he's meant to lead. I know that's like observing that the sky is blue, but I'm going to keep saying it anyway, since so many other people refuse to say it. Or believe it.

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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

It's that time again: What would you like to see asked as a future Question of the Day? Either something that's never been asked, or something that I haven't asked for awhile and you really enjoyed the first time around.

BRING ALL YOUR QUESTIONS! ALL OF THEM! :)

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Your Best Photograph

If you're a photographer, even if a very amateur one (like myself), and you've got a photo or photos you'd like to share, here's your thread for that!

It doesn't really have to be your best photograph—just one you like!

Please be sure if your photo contains people other than yourself, that you have the explicit consent of the people in the photos before posting them.

* * *

This is a photo I took in November 2011, which was a spectacularly beautiful fall in northwest Indiana. Even the barren trees were stunning against the silver skies.

image of a barren tree in silhouette against a silvery blue sky

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Mueller Impanels Grand Jury in Russia Probe; Digs into Trump's Finances

Let me start with my usual annoying caution to maintain measured expectations about what all of this means: It means that Special Counsel Bob Mueller's investigation is proceeding. That's it. But that's good news, especially considering that Donald Trump has repeatedly tried to intimidate Mueller with belligerent public statements and suggested he will interfere with the investigation.

News that the investigation is proceeding is good!

So, be optimistic, but don't misunderstand that this news means that a particular outcome is any more likely than another at this point.

Okay, that said: Here's the latest...

1. Del Quentin Wilber and Byron Tau at the Wall Street Journal: Special Counsel Robert Mueller Impanels Washington Grand Jury in Russia Probe.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller has impaneled a grand jury in Washington to investigate Russia's interference in the 2016 elections, a sign that his inquiry is growing in intensity and entering a new phase, according to people familiar with the matter.

The grand jury, which began its work in recent weeks, signals that Mr. Mueller's inquiry will likely continue for months.
2. Evan Perez, Pamela Brown, and Shimon Prokupecz at CNN: [Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] One Year into the FBI's Russia Investigation, Mueller Is on the Trump Money Trail.
Federal investigators exploring whether Donald Trump's campaign colluded with Russian spies have seized on Trump and his associates' financial ties to Russia as one of the most fertile avenues for moving their probe forward, according to people familiar with the investigation.

...In recent weeks, investigators have also started looking into the June 2016 meeting in Trump Tower and how the White House responded to news of that meeting. The session included Trump Jr., Manafort, Trump's senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner, and a Russian attorney.

Trump has denied any collusion and maintains that his business empire has "no involvement with Russia" and that he has "no loans, no nothing" from Russia. His lawyers have detailed a few exceptions, including the Miss Universe pageant he held in Moscow and the Florida mansion he sold to a Russian oligarch in 2008. Trump earned more than $100 million from those deals, according to his lawyers.

...Investigators are looking both at whether financial laws were broken and whether there are any dealings that could put the President or his associates in a compromising position.

"There's always been a concern about his exposure to blackmail in his financial dealings," says the person briefed on the investigation.
This, of course, is why Trump has stubbornly refused to disclose his taxes. There's something, or many things, in there them that would look suspicious, at best.

Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort is another primary target of the investigation — and may be the key to proving the collusion that we've all seen happening right out in the open was also happening behind the scenes.
CNN has learned that investigators became more suspicious when they turned up intercepted communications that US intelligence agencies collected among suspected Russian operatives discussing their efforts to work with Manafort, who served as campaign chairman for three months, to coordinate information that could damage Hillary Clinton's election prospects, the US officials say. The suspected operatives relayed what they claimed were conversations with Manafort, encouraging help from the Russians.

Manafort faces potential real troubles in the probe, according to current and former officials. Decades of doing business with foreign regimes with reputations for corruption, from the Philippines to Ukraine, had led to messy finances.
Emphasis mine.

If Manafort's finances are "messy" enough that he stands to face charges, he's going to roll on Trump. No one knows better than one of Trump's multiple fired campaign managers that Trump's veneration of loyalty only goes one way.

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What Is This?

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

In the year of our lord Jesus Jones two thousand and seventeen, Wired published an(other) entire issue of its magazine in which every single feature was written by men.

Instead of not doing that in the first place, or acknowledging it with a serious editor's note reflecting on the regrettable lack of opportunities extended to women, the men-only issue was published instead with a cringe-inducing "humorous" note recognizing the women who made the issue possible, even though there are zero bylines for women.


The note reads: "WONDER WOMEN WHO HELPED GET THIS ISSUE OUT: My eight-months-pregnant CrossFit coach; Michelle Obama; my acupuncturist; the one and only RBG; senior editor Lauren Murrow; the moms working at Saigon Sandwich; Lexi "Poppy Seed" Pandell; new fellowship applicants; Amisha Patel and her amazing functional tags for Copilot; Lynda Carter; Coconut the dog; departing photo editor Sarah Silberg; electronic music masters Suzanne Ciani and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith; executive editor Maria Streshinsky; Thelma and Louise; Elisabeth Moss in The Handmaid's Tale; Ilana Glazer; Kim from Better Call Saul; articles editor Sarah Fallon; managing editor Erica Jewell; Constance Wu; Melissa Clark; the superheroic all-female WIRED photo department."


In addition to equating actual living women who worked on the magazine with fictional characters and a fucking dog, the "superheroic all-female WIRED photo department" isn't even individually named. What's the excuse there — it would have made the list too long? Maybe that should have been the first clue that including "Thelma and Louise" wasn't a great idea.

Treating the exclusion of women from opportunities as so unserious that it can be addressed with a "joke," the punchline of which is that the editorial staff of Wired believes its female staffers contribute as much as a goddamned dog, is actually worse than not acknowledging their misogyny at all.

"Yeah, we know we did this shitty thing, but OH WELL LADIES!" is gross and shameful. On many occasions, I've been obliged to grit my teeth and bite my tongue in response to men who made a hee-hee silly joke in response to their misogyny in professional environments, and I take up space in solidarity with any woman who works at Wired and feels understandably slighted by this failful, accountability-dodging horseshit.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat lying on the floor, stretching
Little cat; big stretch.

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 196

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: A Glimpse into One of Our Possible Dystopian Futures and "Sanders Democrats" Don't Own the Left. Also: Eastsidekate and I talked about purity politics.

As part of his morning tweetshitz today, Donald Trump tweeted this mess:


There's a lot to unpack in that one little tweet (isn't there always?), but the most critical thing is that Trump is now openly warring with Congress despite its Republican majority. Remember when Reince Priebus was shitcanned, and I warned that it signaled a potential break with the Republican Party? "Priebus was, besides Pence, the last one with strong ties to the Republican Party. That could signal a significant break, too."

If the administration is going rogue from the GOP, that is another clear indication of its authoritarian strategy — especially with Trump making noise about Congress encroaching "on presidential authority." Not good. Not good at all.

Speaking of Russia...

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Jeff Stein at Newsweek: How Russia Is Using LinkedIn as a Tool of War Against Its U.S. Enemies. "LinkedIn provides a rich hunting ground for Russian agents. Unlike Twitter and Facebook, most of its estimated 500 million, predominantly white-collar subscribers use it to advertise their expertise, seek employment, or engage with peers in expert-based discussion groups. To bolster their credentials, most — even current and former U.S. national security officials — post detailed résumés and recommendations from their colleagues. That provides fodder for Russian intelligence to gather detailed information on its most formidable critics and cast doubt on the truth of those accomplishments."

John Sipher and Steve Hall at the New York Times: Oh, Wait — Maybe It Was Collusion.
Did the Trump campaign collude with Russian agents trying to manipulate the course of the 2016 election? Some analysts have argued that the media has made too much of the collusion narrative; that Jared Kushner and Donald Trump Jr.'s meeting with Kremlin-linked Russians last year was probably innocent (if ill-advised); or that Russian operatives probably meant for the meeting to be discovered because they were not trying to recruit Mr. Kushner and Mr. Trump as agents, but mainly trying to undermine the American political system.

We disagree with these arguments. We like to think of ourselves as fair-minded and knowledgeable, having between us many years of experience with the C.I.A. dealing with Russian intelligence services. It is our view not only that the Russian government was running some sort of intelligence operation involving the Trump campaign, but also that it is impossible to rule out the possibility of collusion between the two.
Welp. Take note, Mr. Mueller! And speaking of Mueller...

Matt Shuham at TPM: Senators to Introduce Bill to Protect Robert Mueller. "Sens. Thom Tillis (R-NC) and Chris Coons (D-DE) plan to introduce legislation meant to shield Department of Justice special counsels from political influence — with an eye toward protecting Robert Mueller, the special counsel at the head of the department's Russian election meddling investigation and a target of the Trump administration. The Associated Press reported Wednesday that Tillis and Coons' legislation would allow any Justice Department special counsel to challenge his or her firing in court, and to have it reviewed by a three-judge panel. The bill would apply retroactively to May 17, 2017, AP reported — the day Mueller was assigned as a special counsel by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein."

Pam Vogel at MediaMatters: Pro-Trump Outlet Sinclair Broadcast Group Is Turning Local News into Trump TV.
Local television news giant Sinclair Broadcast Group has been making headlines in recent weeks as it seeks to both double down on its requirement that its stations run mandated conservative commentary segments and vastly expand its reach into new major cities across the United States.

Plenty of recent major profiles of Sinclair have discussed its unusual tactic of designating certain conservative commentary segments it produces in its national studios as "must-runs," meaning that every Sinclair-owned local television news station — all 73, across 33 states and the District of Columbia — is required to air them.

...The latest Sinclair profiles often focus on the "Bottom Line with Boris" segments starring former Trump aide Boris Epshteyn, who is now employed as Sinclair's chief political analyst. Epshteyn has been producing 60- to 90-second commentary segments several times a week since Sinclair hired him in April. Last month, Sinclair announced it would be upping Epshteyn's segments from airing three times per week to nine.

Employees at Sinclair stations across the country, from Seattle, WA, to Washington, D.C., are expressing concerns about the clearly conservative must-run segments pushed by Sinclair executives.

...Sinclair is empowering Epshteyn to broadcast regular segments effusively praising his former employer to local TV news viewers across the country who aren't signing up to watch garbled propaganda every evening.
There is much more at the link. This is an important issue to understand, because Sinclair essentially provides Trump all the benefits of a state-run propaganda outlet with the illusion of independence from the government. Scary shit.

Josh Rogin at the Washington Post: Tillerson Leaves the Community of Democracies in the Dark. "The State Department is supposed to host a major international conference next month, bringing leaders from more than 100 democracies together in Washington. But as of now, nobody involved knows how or if the conference will take place because for several months Secretary of State Rex Tillerson hasn't signed off on the plans. For some lawmakers and the pro-democracy community, the State Department's handling of the issue is only the latest in a long series of signs that the Trump administration is turning away from the United States' role as champion of democracy and human rights around the world." OH FOR THE LOVE OF MAUDE!!!

Caitlin MacNeal at TPM: Kushner Cos. Subpoenaed over Use of Visas to Secure Foreign Investment. "Kushner Companies, the real estate company run by Jared Kushner's family, has been subpoenaed by federal prosecutors in New York over the company's use of the EB-5 visa program, which grants green cards to foreigners who invest in U.S. businesses, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday night. ...The Kushner Companies' use of EB-5 visas came under scrutiny recently when Jared Kushner's sister, Nicole Meyer, mentioned her brother's new role in the White House during a presentation to potential Chinese investors."


Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast: Trump's DHS Ordered Agents to Block Congressmen During Travel Ban. "On the chaotic day the Trump administration's travel ban went into effect, high-level Homeland Security officials directed their staff at airports around the country to stiff-arm members of Congress and treat lawyers with deep suspicion. Members of Congress say they're shocked by the orders, uncovered in documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request from The Daily Beast and The James Madison Project, both of which were represented by the law office of Mark S. Zaid. 'I'm extremely troubled that CBP [Customs and Border Protection] employees would be instructed by superiors to ignore Congressional representatives trying to do their job, especially under such circumstances,' said Sen. Cory Booker."

To be clear: The Trump administration explicitly instructed Customs and Border Protection to interfere with members of Congress working for their constituents. That is absolutely chilling.

[CN: Nativism] Rachel Chason at the Washington Post: He Went to ICE to Tell Agents He Had Gotten into College; Now He and His Brother Have Been Deported. "The brothers have no criminal records and would not have been a priority for deportation by the Obama administration, said Matthew Bourke, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. [Donald] Trump's administration, in contrast, has made clear that any undocumented immigrant is subject to being expelled from this country. And so, on the same day that the White House endorsed a proposal to curtail legal immigration to the United States, the brothers were put on a plane to San Salvador." Disgusting. This administration is vile.

[CN: Nativism] Kate McKenna at the CBC: Montreal's Olympic Stadium Used to House Surge in Asylum Seekers Crossing from U.S. "A temporary welcome centre has been opened at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal to house a new wave of asylum seekers coming from the United States to Quebec, many of them Haitians. 'We've never seen this before,' said Francine Dupuis, spokesperson for PRAIDA, the provincial government organization that helps claimants in their first months. 'It's really quite a bit more intense than what we're used to.' On Wednesday, asylum seekers were taken to the Olympic Stadium by bus. Among them were children and pregnant women." Goddammit. I am so angry and so sad about what is happening in this country. Fucking hell.

Greg Miller at the Washington Post: Trump Urged Mexican President to End His Public Defiance on Border Wall, Transcript Reveals. "[I]n his first White House call with Mexico's president, Trump described his vow to charge Mexico as a growing political problem, pressuring the Mexican leader to stop saying publicly that his government would never pay. 'You cannot say that to the press,' Trump said repeatedly, according to a transcript of the Jan. 27 call obtained by The Washington Post. Trump made clear that he realized the funding would have to come from other sources but threatened to cut off contact if Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto continued to make defiant statements." Unreal. Absolutely unreal.

[CN: Racism; violence] E.A. Crunden at ThinkProgress: NAACP Issues Travel Warning for Missouri. "People of color and other minorities have been warned not to visit the state of Missouri after Republican Gov. Eric Greitens signed a draconian bill into law that directly threatens minorities, advocates claim. In a sweeping advisory from June that began gaining traction on a national level last week, members of the NAACP voted to approve the travel warning, which was extended to people of color, women, and the queer community. The NAACP advised those groups that their civil rights may be violated while visiting the state. The organization also advised 'extreme caution' to both travelers and minorities currently living in Missouri." Blub. Like I've said before, Trump didn't invent bigotry, but my god has he empowered it.


No kidding.

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

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