Three Significant Russia Stories Today

These are all important stories, which are easily missed given the overwhelming news out of Las Vegas today, so I wanted to give them their own dedicated post.

1. Tom Hamburger, Rosalind S. Helderman, and Adam Entous at the Washington Post: Trump's Company Had More Contact with Russia During Campaign, According to Documents Turned over to Investigators.

Associates of [Donald] Trump and his company have turned over documents to federal investigators that reveal two previously unreported contacts from Russia during the 2016 campaign, according to people familiar with the matter.

In one case, Trump's personal attorney and a business associate exchanged emails weeks before the Republican National Convention about the lawyer possibly traveling to an economic conference in Russia that would be attended by top Russian financial and government leaders, including President Vladi­mir Putin, according to people familiar with the correspondence.

In the other case, the same Trump attorney, Michael Cohen, received a proposal in late 2015 for a Moscow residential project from a company founded by a billionaire who once served in the Russian senate, these people said. The previously unreported inquiry marks the second proposal for a Trump-branded Moscow project that was delivered to the company during the presidential campaign and has since come to light.
So, to sum: More heretofore undisclosed contacts between the Trump campaign and Russian contacts during the campaign which suggest that Trump was actively planning to use the presidency to personally enrich himself via his private business.

2. Julia Ioffe and Franklin Foer at the Atlantic: Did Manafort Use Trump to Curry Favor with a Putin Ally?
On the evening of April 11, 2016, two weeks after Donald Trump hired the political consultant Paul Manafort to lead his campaign's efforts to wrangle Republican delegates, Manafort emailed his old lieutenant Konstantin Kilimnik, who had worked for him for a decade in the Ukrainian capital, Kiev.

"I assume you have shown our friends my media coverage, right?" Manafort wrote.

"Absolutely," Kilimnik responded a few hours later from Kiev. "Every article."

"How do we use to get whole," Manafort asks. "Has OVD operation seen?"

According to a source close to Manafort, the initials "OVD" refer to Oleg Vladimirovich Deripaska, a Russian oligarch and one of Russia's richest men.

...Excerpts from these emails were first reported by The Washington Post, but the full text of these exchanges, provided to The Atlantic, shows that Manafort attempted to leverage his leadership role in the Trump campaign to curry favor with a Russian oligarch close to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. Manafort was deeply in debt, and did not earn a salary from the Trump campaign.
There is much more at the link.

If the name Oleg Deripaska sounds familiar, that's because Deripaska is the same Russian oligarch for whom Manafort worked secretly for at least half a decade, during which time Manafort assisted Deripaska, a close Putin ally, to advance Putin's interests and "proposed an ambitious political strategy to undermine anti-Russian opposition across former Soviet republics."

Deripaska is the same guy to whom Manafort promised "private briefings" during the 2016 campaign and to whom Manafort reportedly owed somewhere between $7.8 and $19 million.

3. Joel Schectman, Dustin Volz, and Jack Stubbs at Reuters: HP Enterprise Let Russia Scrutinize Cyberdefense System Used by Pentagon.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise allowed a Russian defense agency to review the inner workings of cyber defense software used by the Pentagon to guard its computer networks, according to Russian regulatory records and interviews with people with direct knowledge of the issue.

The HPE system, called ArcSight, serves as a cybersecurity nerve center for much of the U.S. military, alerting analysts when it detects that computer systems may have come under attack. ArcSight is also widely used in the private sector.

The Russian review of ArcSight's source code, the closely guarded internal instructions of the software, was part of HPE's effort to win the certification required to sell the product to Russia's public sector, according to the regulatory records seen by Reuters and confirmed by a company spokeswoman.

Six former U.S. intelligence officials, as well as former ArcSight employees and independent security experts, said the source code review could help Moscow discover weaknesses in the software, potentially helping attackers to blind the U.S. military to a cyber attack.

"It's a huge security vulnerability," said Greg Martin, a former security architect for ArcSight. "You are definitely giving inner access and potential exploits to an adversary."

Despite the potential risks to the Pentagon, no one Reuters spoke with was aware of any hacks or cyber espionage that were made possible by the review process.

The ArcSight review took place last year, at a time when Washington was accusing Moscow of an increasing number of cyber attacks against American companies, U.S. politicians, and government agencies, including the Pentagon.
Welp. If it isn't the president's personal greed, or his associates' greed, that does us in, corporate greed might finish the job.

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"Trump is dividing this country with the delicacy of a meat cleaver."

[Content Note: Bigotry.]

This is a very good piece by Charles M. Blow for the New York Times: "Divert, Divide, Destroy."

[W]hen Carmen Yulín Cruz, the female mayor of San Juan, dared to advocate for the lives of the people in her city by pushing back on the Trump administration's "good news story" narrative, Trump released a bullet spray of injurious tweets — some from the bucolic grounds of his Bedminster golf club — not only about the mayor but also about the people of Puerto Rico.

He said that the mayor was being "nasty," a coded appellation he seems to favor when his target is female.

...The subtext here — or perhaps the actual text — was to blame the victim and berate them as a group: These brown people want/need help, but won't/can't help themselves because their community/culture is inferior/ineffective.

It was a revolting, racialized attack, but one delivered in much the same way that his racialized attack on the N.F.L. players was delivered: by using hijacked glory.

He used the nobility of veterans and active service member to shield his ignoble attack on the N.F.L. players, and he used the nobility of first responders to shield his ignoble attack on Puerto Ricans.

The mayor was right, of course. No one wants their plaintive wails drowned out by a cacophony of premature, self-congratulatory pats on the back. Also, what kind of man demands praise from the mourning?
A rhetorical question, naturally. We all know, because it is painfully evident, what kind of man demands praise from the mourning: A man with a voracious ego and an insatiable need for approbation and applause. A man who is intransigently preoccupied with his own sense of grandeur. A man who cares about nothing and no one but himself. A man like Donald Trump.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat, Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat, and Sophie the Torbie Cat lying in the sunshine on the dining room floor
Cat convention in the afternoon sunshine.

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 256

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: 50+ Killed and Hundreds Injured in Mass Shooting and Trump Dedicates Golf Trophy to Hurricane Victims and State Violence Meets Catalan Referendum in Spain, Following Russian Meddling.

Most of the news today is about the terrorist mass shooting in Las Vegas, as well it should be, so first some related news and then just a couple of other items today...

[Content Note: Guns; violence; death; terrorism.]


Kira Lerner at ThinkProgress: House GOP Set to Approve Bill That Could Make Mass Shootings Deadlier. "As details emerge about the carnage at a Las Vegas country music concert, the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, the House is set to move forward with a vote on a gun lobby-backed bill that would deregulate the sale of gun silencers, which make it harder to detect the origin of gunshots. ...In the early chaos of these attacks, it's often difficult for law enforcement and the general public to discern the original of gunshots and whether there could be more than one gunman. The use of silencers would make that even more difficult."


* * *

Richard Primus at Politico: The Supreme Court's Blockbuster Term.
The Supreme Court term that begins this week is set to be a blockbuster. There's a reason: When Justice Antonin Scalia died in February of 2016, the court hit the pause button on some of the most important issues it was facing. Either because the justices knew they would be deadlocked, or because they preferred not to tackle important questions without a full bench, the court started ducking big cases, and we've now been through two cycles with relatively few landmark decisions.

That's about to end. Once Justice Neil Gorsuch took his seat, the court put one big case after another on the calendar, and the term that starts this week is set up to pack the punch of two to three normal Supreme Court terms. When you factor in the Trump administration's tendency to provoke constitutional litigation, there's no telling how explosive the new term could be.

Some of this term's docket presents familiar culture-war issues: Prominent in that category is Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, in which a Christian baker seeks legal vindication for his refusal to sell a wedding cake to a same-sex couple.

...Another case, Carpenter v. United States, asks whether and how the Fourth Amendment limits the government's ability to track individuals' locations by searching their historical cellphone records.

...There's also Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, in which the court is being asked, on First Amendment grounds, to overrule prior cases holding that public-sector unions can require employees at unionized workplaces to contribute financially to the unions.

...The biggest constitutional controversy of the Trump administration so far—the entry ban—could also find its way to the court.

...But the most important developments of all this year could come in election law. In Husted v. A. Philip Randolph Institute, the court confronts Ohio's effort to purge its voter rolls of voters who have not voted in recent elections. ...Most momentously of all, Gill v. Whitford presents a challenge to Wisconsin's system of districts for state legislative elections.

...As significant as the court's new term seems, though, the whole year could also feel like just a prelude to what might be coming next. Court-watchers speculate perpetually about retirements, and usually the speculation is overly eager. But it isn't [strange] to think that Kennedy might be on his last lap.
At Rewire, Jessica Mason Pieklo notes: "And the Court hasn't filled its docket yet, either. It could also take up a transgender rights case. Hell, we may even get more health-care challenges and some birth control benefit cases, too. ...And if that fact doesn't send a chill down your spine, consider the cases working their way up the appellate courts. They include challenges to laws that would practically ban second-trimester abortion outright by outlawing one of the safest and most common methods of later abortion; attempts to enshrine damaging and discriminatory voter ID laws; and cases that could either cement workplace rights for LGBTQ employees or endorse workplace discrimination against those workers." Shiver.

* * *

[CN: Disablist language] Trump Urges Staff to Portray Him as "Crazy Guy". "Plenty of world leaders think the president is crazy — and he seems to view that madman reputation as an asset. The downsides are obvious: The rhetoric can unnerve allies and has the potential to provoke enemies into needless, unintended war. But Trump keeps using the tactic, with varying degrees of success: Just [this weekend], the president undercut his Secretary of State by suggesting diplomacy with 'Little Rocket Man' in North Korea was a waste of time — implying that only military action would resolve the conflict. 'Save your energy Rex,' Trump tweeted, 'we'll do what has to be done!' We've never seen anything like this before. Trump's tweet, undercutting Tillerson's diplomatic efforts, comes a day after Tillerson acknowledged for the first time that the administration was in direct communication with North Korea."


[CN: Nativism] Tina Vasquez at Rewire: ICE Raids Don't Just Grab Criminals. "Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted 'Operation Safe City' [last] week, with nationwide immigration sweeps that led to the apprehension of more than 450 undocumented immigrants, many of whom were not originally targeted by the raids. The enforcement action was intended to target so-called sanctuary cities — a term for jurisdictions that do not always honor detainer requests—according to the federal immigration agency. ...As ICE officials often say, [last] week's operation reportedly prioritized 'criminal aliens' — people 'with criminal convictions, pending criminal charges, and known gang members and affiliates.' But the agency's numbers suggest otherwise."

Michael Weissenstein, Josh Lederman, and Matthew Lee at the AP: Attacks in Havana Hit U.S. Spy Network in Cuba. "To date, the Trump administration largely has described the 21 victims as U.S. embassy personnel or 'members of the diplomatic community.' That description suggested only bona fide diplomats and their family members were struck, with no logical motivation beyond disrupting U.S.-Cuban relations. Behind the scenes, though, investigators immediately started searching for explanations in the darker, rougher world of spycraft and counterespionage, given that so many of the first reported cases involved intelligence workers posted to the U.S. embassy. That revelation, confirmed to the AP by a half-dozen officials, adds yet another element of mystery to a year-long saga that the Trump administration says may not be over."

[CN: Homophobia; transphobia] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Starting Friday, It Will Be Legal Across Mississippi to Discriminate Against LGBTQ People Based on Religious Beliefs. "Pending further challenge, Mississippi's heinous anti-LGBT bill, HB 1523, is set to take effect on Friday after the 5th Circuit denied a rehearing challenging the law. HB 1523 would allow officials and healthcare providers in the state to discriminate freely against LGBTQ individuals due to their own 'moral' or religious objections, such as turning away same-sex couples who seek marriage licenses or declining hormone therapy to transgender patients. ...Lambda Legal has called the law 'one of the most aggressive and sweeping anti-LGBT measures in the nation.'"

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

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State Violence Meets Catalan Referendum in Spain, Following Russian Meddling

[Content Note: Police brutality.]

Sam Jones and Stephen Burgen at the Guardian report:

The Catalan president has called for international help in tackling its independence dispute with Spain, saying Europe cannot continue to ignore the issue after almost 900 people were injured during the police crackdown on the referendum.

"The European commission must encourage international mediation," Carles Puigdemont said on Monday. "It cannot look the other way any longer."

At least 844 people and 33 officers were reported to have been hurt on Sunday after riot police stormed polling stations, dragging out voters and firing rubber bullets into crowds.

The European commission has so far declined to intervene in what it has described as an internal Spanish matter and has urged both sides to "move very swiftly from confrontation to dialogue."
Both sides, even though people just going to the polls were met with police violence.

This conflagration happens against a backdrop of old divisions — as well as new ones, fomented by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who continues to sow chaos in western democracies whenever and however he can, and his flunky Julian Assange.
In recent weeks, Russian state-backed news organizations and automated social network accounts, known as bots, have aggressively promoted digital misinformation and outright fake news about the politically charged vote [on] Sunday, according to an analysis of recent online activity.

The efforts — aimed at discrediting Spanish political and legal authorities that [tried] to clamp down on the Catalan government's attempt to hold the outlawed referendum — follows similar digital misinformation campaigns during Europe's season of elections in 2017.

These online activities are intended to cast doubt over Europe's democratic processes at a time of heightened tensions between the EU and Russia, experts warn.

From the French and German elections to votes...in Spain and the Czech Republic, among others, Russian-backed online networks have routinely championed extremist groups through social media and digital news outlets.

...As part of the recent misinformation campaign, Russian state news outlets including Sputnik have written misleading articles that have highlighted alleged corruption within the Spanish government, as well as quoting officials from North Korea about how to resolve the country's standoff over the Catalan referendum. The agency published more than 200 articles on the upcoming vote over the two weeks through September 27, according to the Atlantic Council's analysis, with both pro- and anti-referendum slants.

These Russian news agencies, as well as Russian users on Twitter, also repeatedly promoted the views of Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, who has taken to social media to call for Spanish authorities to respect the upcoming vote in Catalonia.

"Spain's government acts like a banana monarchy — embarrassing for Europe!" he wrote on Twitter on September 19. ...[H]is pro-referendum stance also has been routinely shared by Sputnik and alleged networks of Russian social network bots.
Emphasis mine.

To be completely blunt, I am not especially knowledgeable about Spanish politics and Catalan independence. But I do know quite a bit about Russian meddling and its increasing imperiling of democracy across Europe and North America.

The flammable tensions long existed ahead of this referendum. Putin just did what he does best: Exploit existing fissures, deepening those cracks until something breaks.

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Trump Dedicates Golf Trophy to Hurricane Victims

[Content Note: Racism; misogyny; food and water insecurity; neglect.]

Late Friday, San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz made a plaintive and angry statement, during which she begged Donald Trump "to make sure somebody is in charge that is up to the task of saving lives" and warning: "If we don't get the food and the water into people's hands, we are going to see something close to a genocide."


Not only did Trump flounce off to play golf as Puerto Rico suffers, he responded to the mayor's pleas with a series of breathtaking tweets, in which he accused Cruz of being "nasty" at the behest of Democrats and scoffed at Puerto Ricans for being lazy, saying they "want everything to be done for them."


Alternating between neglect and attacks on Puerto Rico, Trump continued his golf weekend, during which he had a round or two himself — and then [CN: video may autoplay at link] dedicated a fucking golf trophy to hurricane victims, saying: "On behalf of all of the people of Texas, and...if you look today and you see what's happening, how horrible it is but we have it under really great control, Puerto Rico. And the people of Florida who have really suffered over this last period of time with the hurricanes. I want to just remember them, and we're going to dedicate this trophy to all those people who went through so much, that we love, that are part of our great state, really a part of our great nation."

Sure.

At the New York Times, Frances Robles, Luis Ferré-Sadurní, Richard Fausset, and Ivelisse Rivera have reported on "One Day in the Life of Battered Puerto Rico." Read that, and look at the images, and think of the people whose stories are being told, and remember them every time you hear the deplorable president talk about what a great job he's doing for Puerto Rico and how lazy and needy the Puerto Rican people are.

I take up space in solidarity with the people of Puerto Rico.

If you are able and would like to make a donation to Puerto Rican relief, the Hispanic Federation "has launched the UNIDOS Disaster Relief Fund to help meet hurricane and earthquake-related needs and recovery in Puerto Rico and Mexico."

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50+ Killed and Hundreds Injured in Mass Shooting

[Content Note: Guns; violence; death; injury; terror.]

Last night in Las Vegas, a 64-year-old white man named Stephen Paddock opened fire from the window of his 32nd floor room of the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino, spraying a crowd on the strip attending a country music festival. He killed at least 50 people and injured hundreds more, making it the nation's deadliest modern mass shooting.

When police stormed the room, Paddock was killed. I have read conflicting reports about whether officers killed him or he killed himself. Either way, he is dead. As many as 10 additional weapons, including long guns, were found in his room.

At this time, his motive — beyond the obvious objective of harming as many people as possible and becoming infamous — is unknown. He is being described as unaffiliated with terrorism, despite the fact that he terrorized hundreds of people at whom he was shooting and countless more who will now be frightened to attend public events, and instead is being called a "a sole actor, a lone-wolf-type actor" by Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo.


My condolences to those who lost loved ones in this heinous act of violence. My sympathies to those who were physically injured and/or traumatized. I desperately hope that everyone who needs healthcare of any description has the means to access it. My thoughts are also with the first responders and medical staff who are overwhelmed with caring for so many injured people.

We will be told that this is not the time to discuss gun control. We will be told that this is not the time to discuss health insurance access. We will be told that this is not the time to discuss toxic masculinity. It is. It is the time.

It is well beyond time.

[As always, let's keep this an image-free thread. Thanks.]

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Open Thread

image of a purple sofa

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 grapes.

Recommended Reading:

Gemma Hartley: [Content Note: Emotional labor; patriarchy] Women Aren't Nags — We're Just Fed Up

Sarah Kendzior: Trump's Sparring with North Korea Is a Reminder That Foolishness Really Can Kill

Dan Van Winkle: Julia Louis-Dreyfus Reveals Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Pushes for Universal Health Care

Sabha: Tinder Tourism and the Accidental Date with a Straight Woman

Ryan F. Mandelbaum: 'There Are No Words': Tourists Spot Hundreds of Polar Bears Swarming Whale Carcass in Siberia

Beth Elderkin: David S. Pumpkins Is Getting His Own SNL Animated Special

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

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Here Is Something Nice

Because Jessica Luther is one of the best human beings on the planet, she made sure I saw the heart-exploding adorableness that David Beckham posted on Instagram yesterday. And now I get to make sure that you see it, too.

Becks is everything. ♥

Someone’s ready for her first football lesson ❤️ ⚽️

A post shared by David Beckham (@davidbeckham) on

❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️⚽️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ Oh My

A post shared by David Beckham (@davidbeckham) on


In the first video, retired professional footballer (soccer player) David Beckham leads his 6-year-old daughter Harper Beckham by the hand onto a grassy pitch. She dribbles the ball; they then begin to kick it back and forth, quicker and quicker, still holding hands. She laughs breathlessly. He hugs her.

In the second video, Becks tosses the ball to Harper, who kicks the ball back to him. "Two...three...four...five," he counts. "Two more! Six...perfect! Seven!" They look like they are having so much fun.

(His kids being happy while playing is, by the way, very important to Becks. If it doesn't make them happy, they don't have to play.)

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Discussion Thread: How Are You?

I'm feeling very anxious about the state of things at the moment. I have an uneasy feeling about the way the investigations are going. I don't like the way it appears that Manafort might be a fall guy, especially since indicting Manafort won't to do shit to stop this Nazi takeover. I'm chronically stressed about the lack of urgency among the nation's non-executive leaders to halt this authoritarianism in its tracks and reverse the egregious abuses that are being enacted every day. I feel unsafe.

Aside from politics, I am looking forward to a visit with one of my best friends this weekend.

How are you?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat and Olivia the White Farm Cat lying next to me on the sofa; Olivia is lying right up against Matilda, and Matilda is looking over her shoulder at Olivia like WTF?
"Uh, can I get a little room here, please?"

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 253

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 Continues to Fail Puerto Rico and DOJ Wants Info on "Anti-Administration Activists" and "If You Can't Treat Someone with Dignity and Respect, Then Get Out".

Louis Nelson at Politico: San Juan Mayor Hits Back at Elaine Duke: 'This is not a good news story. This is a people are dying story.'
The mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico, lashed out at acting Secretary of Homeland Security Elaine Duke's comment that the Hurricane Maria relief efforts are a "good news story," saying, that in reality, it's a "people are dying story."

Speaking outside the White House on Thursday, Duke said she is "very satisfied" with efforts to aid Puerto Rico in the wake of Maria, which devastated the island and has created a humanitarian crisis. Duke said, "It is really a good news story," an assessment that prompted San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz's strong rebuttal.

"Well, maybe from where she's standing, it's a good news story. When you're drinking from a creek, it's not a good news story. When you don't have food for a baby, it's not a good news story," Cruz told CNN's "New Day," referring to the plight of Puerto Ricans, many of whom have received little or no aid thus far. "When you have to pull people down from their buildings — I'm sorry, but that really upsets me and frustrates me. You know, I would ask her to come down here and visit the towns, and then make a statement like that, which frankly, it is an irresponsible statement."

"Damn it, this is not a good news story. This is a people are dying story. This is a life-or-death story. This is a 'there's a truckload of stuff that cannot be taken to people story.' This is a story of a devastation that continues to worsen because people are not getting food and water," she continued. "It is not a good news story when people are dying, when they don't have dialysis, when their generators aren't working, and their oxygen isn't providing for them. Where is there good news here? ...I'm really sorry, but you know when you have people out there dying, literally, scraping for food, where is the good news?"

The issue, Cruz said, has not been a lack of supplies but an inability to deal with the logistics of distributing aid on an island that is still largely without power and supplying it to Puerto Rico's more rural areas. The mayor said San Juan had received three pallets of water — slightly more than 4,000 bottles for a population of roughly 350,000 people — as well as four pallets of food and 12 pallets of baby food and supplies.

The situation in other parts of the island are even more dire, Cruz said, relaying her interaction with another Puerto Rican mayor, who said his residents had no food, no medicine, had not yet received any aid and were drinking from the same creek they were using to wash themselves and their clothes. Nursing homes must be a priority, she said, because they "are becoming just human cages for people that are sick and unable to fend for themselves."

Cruz was clear that she remains appreciative of the federal government teams that have arrived on the island to help but that those teams have thus far been insufficient to overcome the logistical hurdles presented by the island.
I know that's a long excerpt, but I hope you read every single word of it and understand the scope of what is happening in Puerto Rico while Trump brags about how great his administration is doing and sends out his flunkies to call it a "good news story."

It's categorically not a good news story. It's not even a typical story by historic standards regarding hurricane response, as detailed by Aaron C. Davis, Dan Lamothe, and Ed O'Keefe at the Washington Post: U.S. Response in Puerto Rico Pales Next to Actions After Haiti Quake. "After an earthquake shattered Haiti's capital on Jan. 12, 2010, the U.S. military mobilized as if it were going to war. Before dawn the next morning, an Army unit was airborne, on its way to seize control of the main airport in Port-au-Prince. Within two days, the Pentagon had 8,000 American troops en route. Within two weeks, 33 U.S. military ships and 22,000 troops had arrived. More than 300 military helicopters buzzed overhead, delivering millions of pounds of food and water."

They note that "no two disasters are alike," but the mobilization to deliver aid to Haiti nonetheless "stands as an example of how quickly relief efforts can be mobilized." When you've got a president who gives a fuck, anyway.

Paul Krugman at the New York Times: Trump's Deadly Narcissism. "The situation is terrible, and time is not on Puerto Rico's side: The longer this goes on, the worse the humanitarian crisis will get. Surely, then, you'd expect bringing in and distributing aid to be the U.S. government's top priority. After all, we're talking about the lives of three and a half million of our fellow citizens — more than the population of Iowa or metro San Diego. ...Trump spent days after Maria's strike tweeting about football players. When he finally got around to saying something about Puerto Rico, it was to blame the territory for its own problems. The impression one gets is of a massively self-centered individual who can't bring himself to focus on other people's needs, even when that's the core of his job."

Which was always going to be the case. That's who Trump is. And it's why he never should have been given the job in the first place.

*screams*

Relatedly: John Whitesides at Reuters: Beyond the Daily Drama and Twitter Battles, Trump Begins to Alter American Life. "Over his first nine months, Trump has used an aggressive series of regulatory rollbacks, executive orders, and changes in enforcement guidelines to rewrite the rules for industries from energy to airlines, and on issues from campus sexual assault to anti-discrimination protections for transgender students. While his administration has been chaotic, and his decision-making impulsive and sometimes whimsical, Trump has made changes that could have far-reaching and lingering consequences for society and the economy."

Trump's gonna whimsy us all right into the fucking grave.

* * *

[Content Note: Racism] Terrell Jermaine Starr at the Root: Russia Has a Long History of Sowing Racial Division in the United States. "All the while, the KGB was working to undermine America's sovereignty at the expense of the same black people they claimed to support. Perhaps the most egregious example was the KGB's attempt to plant fake stories in black newspapers about Martin Luther King Jr. being an 'Uncle Tom,' according to former KGB Officer Vasily Mitrokhin. The KGB also tried exploit King's death by spreading fake news among black nationalists, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Jewish Defense League about his murder in order to start a race war, according to Darien Cavanaugh over at War Is Boring. Simply put: Evoking racial fears among Americans is an old game for Russia."


The link in that tweet goes to a press release announcing that Energy Secretary Rick Perry has "formally proposed that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) take swift action to address threats to U.S. electrical grid resiliency." Great. The only problem is that it makes no mention of investing in measures to prevent sabotage, despite the facts that: 1. Russia has been waging cyberattacks on Ukraine which have included multiple blackouts; 2. Russian diplomats, presumed to be Russian intelligence agents, have been "waging a quiet effort to map the United States' telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to disrupt it"; and 3. Russia has developed "a cyberweapon that has the potential to be the most disruptive yet against electric systems that Americans depend on for daily life."

[CN: Injury] Julian Borger at the Guardian: U.S. Warns Americans to Avoid Cuba and Slashes Embassy Staff After Sonic Attacks. "The US is pulling out more than half its embassy staff from Cuba and warning its citizens not to travel to the island after a wave of mysterious sonic attacks that have harmed 21 American diplomats and family members. The embassy in Havana will lose roughly 60% of its US staff and and only enough officials to carry out 'core consular and diplomatic functions' will remain. Routine issue of visas will be suspended. All family members will also be withdrawn. The official said that that some of the apparent attacks were carried out in hotels, and appear to have affected just the diplomats staying there, and not other guests or hotel workers. There was therefore reason to believe the attacks were targeted, and that it may be unsafe for US citizens to travel to Cuba. 'We don't know the means, the methods and how these attacks are being carried out,' a senior official said. 'There is no way of advising American citizens on mitigating these attacks so we felt we must advise them not to travel to Cuba.'" Weirder and weirder!

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Steve Dorsey and Kylie Atwood at CBS News also report: "The meeting this week between Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Eduardo Rodriguez Parrilla did nothing to help assure the U.S. that Cuban officials are doing enough to protect the safety and welfare of U.S. diplomats in their country. Though Cuba is allowing U.S. investigators into the country, it has not convinced the U.S. that it's taken any real action to prevent the health attacks. In fact, the Cuban readout of the meeting contained a complete denial that the attacks were taking place." Wow.

* * *

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Chris D'Angelo at the Huffington Post: Millionaire Trump Adviser Says Americans Can 'Buy a New Car' with $1,000 Tax Cut. LOL!!! "Hours after falsely claiming that 'the wealthy are not getting a tax cut' under Trump's tax reform plan, [Trump's chief economic adviser — Gary Cohn, the former Goldman Sachs president worth an estimated $266 million] appeared at a White House press briefing and spoke to what middle-class Americans have to look forward to. Based on the administration's assumptions, he said, a typical family that has two children and earns $100,000 per year can expect annual tax savings of approximately $1,000. 'If we allow a family to keep another thousand dollars of their income, what does that mean?' he asked. 'They can renovate their kitchen. They can buy a new car. They can take a family vacation. They can increase their lifestyle.'"

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Alan Pyke at ThinkProgress: 'You Like That?': St. Louis Cops Savagely Beat Handcuffed Filmmaker While Wife Watched, Suit Says. "On St. Louis' most restless night of protests for some time, interim police chief Lawrence O'Toole seemed to embrace a tribal us-and-them attitude toward demonstrators in his city. Hours after reporters watched black-clad riot cops chant 'Whose streets? Our streets!' at dispersing protesters, O'Toole boasted to press cameras that 'police owned the night,' comments which Mayor Lyda Krewson (D) would criticize days later. ...A new lawsuit illustrates the very real abuses that such a domineering mentality from law enforcement can foreshadow. O'Toole's cops allegedly beat, taunted, and repeatedly maced a handcuffed filmmaker that Sunday night, singling the Kansas City man out from a herd of arrestees to punish him physically for recording them."

[CN: War on agency] Christine Grimaldi at Rewire: Republicans to Use 20-Week Abortion Ban Against Vulnerable Senate Democrats. "An unconstitutional 20-week abortion ban scheduled for a vote in the U.S. House of Representatives next week likely won't get far in the U.S. Senate. But a prominent opponent of abortion rights hopes the bill will apply pressure to vulnerable Senate Democrats, strengthening Republicans' majority and ending the legislative firewall between a nationwide prohibition on legal abortion care at 20 weeks. 'There's a lot of reasons to vote on legislation. One is to pass it [and] have the president sign it,' Susan B. Anthony (SBA) List President Marjorie Dannenfelser told Rewire Tuesday in an interview outside the U.S. Capitol. 'Another is to make sure there is a very high-level public conversation,' especially 'while we elect new senators who will add to the winning total.'"

[CN: Water toxicity] Jessica Glenzain at the Guardian: Nestlé Pays $200 a Year to Bottle Water Near Flint — Where Water Is Undrinkable. "Despite having endured lead-laden tap water for years, Flint pays some of the highest water rates in the US. Several residents cited bills upwards of $200 per month for tap water they refuse to touch. But just two hours away, in the tiny town of Evart, creeks lined by wildflowers run with clear water. The town is so small, the fairground, McDonald's, high school, and church are all within a block. But in a town of only 1,503 people, there are a dozen wells pumping water from the underground aquifer. This is where the beverage giant Nestlé pumps almost 100,000 times what an average Michigan resident uses into plastic bottles that are sold all over the midwest for around $1. To use this natural resource, Nestlé pays $200 per year."

[CN: Racism] Sameer Rao at Colorlines: You Have to See Whitesboro's New Official Town Seal, Now Featuring a White Man Wrestling a Native American. "A village in upstate New York addressed criticism of its old official seal—which showed a White man choking a Native American man—by replacing it with another violent image. [T]he village of Whitesboro updated its seal to depict what the article describes as 'village founder Hugh White going head-to-head in a wrestling stance with an Oneida Indian.' The new seal keeps the old one's theme of violence against Indigenous people while introducing three major aesthetic changes: 1) White's hands are no longer on the Oneida man's neck, 2) the Oneida man is not rendered with red skin, and 3) updating sartorial choices." Jesus fucking Jones.

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

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"If You Can't Treat Someone with Dignity and Respect, Then Get Out"

[Content Note: Racism.]

Earlier this week, five Black cadet candidates at the Air Force Academy Preparatory School found racial slurs on the message boards on the doors of their rooms. The incident became public after the mother of one of the cadet candidates posted a photo on Facebook, showing the words "Go home [anti-Black slur]" written on her son's message board. She wrote: "These young people are supposed to bond and protect each other and the country. Who would my son have to watch out for? The enemy or the enemy?"

School officials have launched an investigation into the racist harassment.

Yesterday, the superintendent of the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA), Lt. Gen. Jay B. Silveria, addressed cadets and telling them in no uncertain terms that such behavior was comprehensively unacceptable. At the end of a five-minute speech, he directed them to take out their phones and record him as he said: "If you can't treat someone with dignity and respect, then get out."

Ladies and gentlemen, you may have heard that some people down in the prep school wrote some racial slurs on some message boards. If you haven't heard that, I wanted you to hear it from me. If you're outraged by those words, then you're in the right place. That kind of behavior has no place at the prep school, it has no place at USAFA, and it has no place in the United States Air Force. You should be outraged not only as an airman, but as a human being.

And I'll tell you that the appropriate response for horrible language and horrible ideas — the appropriate response is a better idea. So that's why I'm here. That's why all these people are up here on the staff tower. So let me have everybody who's up here please pull forward to the rails. [gestures to encourage people to move forward, beside him] Also, there are so many people here, they're lining the outsides along the windows. [gestures around the perimeter of the room]

These are members of the faculty, coaching staff, AOCs, AMTs, from the airfield, from my staff, from my headquarters. All aspects of the 10th Air Base Wing; all aspects that make up USAFA and the United State Air Force Academy. Leadership is here: You heard from Brigadier General Goodwin; Brigadier General Armacost is here; Colonel Block from the athletic department is here; Mr. Knowlton is in Washington, D.C. right now. That's why they're here; that's why we're all here. Because we have a better idea.

Some of you may think that that happened down in the prep school and doesn't apply to us. I would be naive, and we would all be naive, to think that everything is perfect here. We would be naive to think that we shouldn't discuss this topic. We would also be tone deaf not to think about the backdrop of what's going on in our country — things like Charlottesville and Ferguson; the protests in the NFL. That's why we have a better idea.

One of those ideas: The dean brought people together to discuss Charlottesville. Because what we should have is a civil discourse and talk about these issues. That's a better idea. We received outstanding feedback from that session on Charlottesville.

But I also have a better idea, and it's about our diversity. And it's the power of the diversity, the power of the 4,000 of you, and all of the people that are on the staff tower and lining the glass, the power of us as a diverse group. The power that we come from all walks of life, that we come from all parts of this county, that we come from all races, we come from all backgrounds, gender, all makeup, all upbringing. The power of that diversity comes together and makes us that much more powerful. That's a much better idea than small thinking and horrible ideas.

We have an opportunity here, the 5,500 people in this room, to think about what we are as an institution. This is our institution, and no one can take away our values. No one can write on a board and question our values. No one can take that away from us.

So just in case you're unclear on where I stand on this topic, I'm gonna leave you with my most important thought today: If you can't treat someone with dignity and respect, then you need to get out. If you can't treat someone from another gender, whether that's a man or a woman, with dignity and respect, then you need to get out. If you demean someone in any way, then you need to get out. And if you can't treat someone from another race, or a different color skin, with dignity and respect, then you need to get out.

Reach for your phones. I'm serious — reach for your phones. [pauses; looks around the room] Okay, you don't have to reach for your phones; I'm gonna give you an opportunity to reach for your phones. Grab your phones — I want you to videotape this so that you have it; so that you can use it. [pauses] So that we all have the moral courage together. All of us on the staff tower, lining the glass, all of us in this room. [pauses]

This is our institution. And if you need it, and you need my words, then you keep these words — and you use them, and you remember them, and you share them, and you talk about them: If you can't treat someone with dignity and respect, then get out.

[turns abruptly and walks away from the microphone]
I don't know if Black cadet candidates feel reassured by these words. I don't know if they'd agree that discussions about Charlottesville are effective. I don't know if they feel like the Air Force is their institution as much as it is their white peers'. And I wouldn't presume to know how they feel, or assume they all feel the same way, or forget that Lt. Gen. Silveria's words might not seem as powerful to them as they seem to many people who are sharing his address.

All I know for sure is that his words — even if they are insufficient; even if they are at best a starting point for urgent institutional change that must happen to ensure marginalized cadets' safety — are infinitely superior to anything the president has said.

Because Donald Trump has not merely failed to say something unequivocal about how white supremacy is incompatible with what the values of our nation and its institutions aspire to be, but has, at every opportunity, empowered bigotry.

And that is also part of the backdrop against which this racist harassment has happened at the Air Force Academy Preparatory School. It is the most important piece of that backdrop — and the one that Lt. Gen. Silveria could not explicitly mention, though its presence was felt in his every word all the same.

The Commander-in-Chief has empowered this divisive, hateful behavior. And I suspect that was at the very front of Lt. Gen. Silveria's mind as he recommended to those who can not muster dignity and respect for others that they get out.

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DOJ Wants Info on "Anti-Administration Activists"

This is absolutely chilling: The Department of Justice has identified three people they call "anti-administration activists," and have served search warrants on Facebook demanding those users' private account information — and thousands of others who interacted with those users. Facebook has not disclosed whether it plans to, or already has, complied with the warrants.

Jessica Schneider at CNN reports:

Trump administration lawyers are demanding the private account information of potentially thousands of Facebook users in three separate search warrants served on the social media giant, according to court documents obtained by CNN.

The warrants specifically target the accounts of three Facebook users who are described by their attorneys as "anti-administration activists who have spoken out at organized events, and who are generally very critical of this administration's policies."

One of those users, Emmelia Talarico, operated the disruptj20 page where Inauguration Day protests were organized and discussed; the page was visited by an estimated 6,000 users whose identities the government would have access to if Facebook hands over the information sought in the search warrants. In court filings, Talarico says if her account information was given to the government, officials would have access to her "personal passwords, security questions and answers, and credit card information," plus "the private lists of invitees and attendees to multiple political events sponsored by the page."

...The American Civil Liberties Union, representing the three Facebook users, filed a motion to quash the warrants Thursday.

"What is particularly chilling about these warrants is that anti-administration political activists are going to have their political associations and views scrutinized by the very administration they are protesting," said ACLU attorney Scott Michelman.
I wish I could be hopeful that the ACLU will prevail, but when the Trump administration sought "to unmask every person who visited an anti-Trump website in what privacy advocates say is an unconstitutional 'fishing expedition' for political dissidents," the court ruled in their favor: "DC Superior Court Judge Robert Morin largely granted prosecutors' request to collect a vast set of records from the company, which will include emails of the users who signed up for an account associated with the website, and membership lists."

That doesn't bode well for fighting this latest attempt by the administration to expose and intimidate their critics.

Needless to say, this is very concerning to me. I am a dissident who is married to an immigrant — each of us belonging to a class the Trump administration has targeted for surveillance, exposure, intimidation, and, presumably, retribution at some point. What is going to happen to my family? What is going to happen to all the families like mine?

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Trump Continues to Fail Puerto Rico


This is something Donald Trump did not say about Texas or Florida, following hurricanes Harvey and Irma. It would have been unthinkable, even for Trump, to suggest that the federal government might simply decide not to rebuild.

But Puerto Rico, he suggests, might not be rebuilt because of "the cost" — even as he peddles a tax plan that could personally save him alone $1 billion.

And let me be perfectly blunt in my cynicism: Donald Trump is a real estate developer who has repeatedly talked about making money by exploiting economic disasters. There is no reason to believe that he doesn't also see opportunity in natural disasters.

If the federal government rebuilt Puerto Rico, particularly its valuable beachfront tourism real estate, that keeps the wealth in the hands of current owners — and provides little opportunity for corporate ghouls to exploit the destruction for their own gain.

Trump never fully divested himself from the Trump Organization. His sons are running the business, and no "firewall" was ever erected between the business and the Oval Office. Trump has a personal interest in creating areas of exploitation in Puerto Rico.

That's a big fucking problem. Most of all for Puerto Ricans, who are suffering an increasingly urgent humanitarian crisis while their president is licking his lips at the possibility of turning their sorrow into his payday.

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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 catvoncat: "What advice or words of encouragement would you give to your younger self?"

"You're enough."

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Donald Trump Is Terrible

[Content Note: Injury; bleeding; neglect.]

I am running out of ways to describe how terrible a human being Donald Trump really is. He is so terrible.

Marlow Stern at the Daily Beast: The Time Donald Trump Turned Away in Disgust While a Man Was Bleeding to Death in Front of Him.

"Like most Trump tales," Stern writes, "what was intended as a story about the bravery and heroism of a handful of Marines instead revealed far more about the man telling it."

Indeed.

I am so ashamed this man is the president of my country.

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