Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Mass shooting; indifference to gun violence.]


I don't even know what to say anymore. Donald Trump being installed as president shattered my heart into a million pieces, because I knew what would follow. Every day, his administration grinds those shards into ever smaller pieces. At some point, my heart will be nothing but a bag of sand.

[H/T to Shaker SKM.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat standing on her back legs, leaning on my knee
Olivia loves to stand on her back legs, leaning on my knee, and it's always so cute.

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 396

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 (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) 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: An Observation and The Latest on Gates.

[Content Note: Guns; video may autoplay at link] Eli Watkins at CNN: Trump Tweet Angers Survivors of Parkland Shooting. "Students who survived the Parkland, Florida, shooting laid into [Donald] Trump after he linked the FBI's failure to follow up on a report about the school shooter and the resources expended on the Russia investigation. ...The President's tweet caused considerable outrage online, including among apparent survivors of the shooting: '17 of my classmates are gone. That's 17 futures, 17 children, and 17 friends stolen. But you're right, it always has to be about you. How silly of me to forget. #neveragain' '17 innocent people were brutally murdered at my school, a place where they should have felt safe. Their lives were gone in an instant. You are the President of the United States and you have the audacity to put this on Russia as an excuse. I guess I should expect that from you.' '...my friends were brutally murdered and you have the nerve to make this about Russia. I can not believe this.'

[CN: Guns] Alice Ollstein at TPM: White House: Trump Supports Gun Background Check Bill.
Early Monday morning, after [Donald] Trump reportedly spent the weekend watching the moving television appearances of the young survivors of last week's deadly school shooting, the White House announced that Trump was encouraging senators to revive a stalled bill to modestly strengthen background checks for gun purchases.

"The President spoke to Senator Cornyn on Friday about the bi-partisan bill he and Sen. Murphy introduced to improve Federal Compliance with Criminal Background check Legislation," White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said. "While discussions are ongoing and revisions are being considered, the President is supportive of efforts to improve the Federal background check system."

The announcement comes after the President has been hit with criticism for not mentioning guns at all in his public responses to the mass shooting, focusing instead on mental health.

The bill drafted by Texas Republican John Cornyn and Delaware Democrat Chris Murphy would require all federal agencies to report infractions to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), and would attempt to get states to do so as well through financial incentives. It does not add any new background check requirements for gun purchases or close any of the current loopholes, and it is supported by the NRA.
So, after being widely and deservedly criticized for his typical inaction and indifference, Trump sends out Huckabee Sanders to say he's vaguely supportive of a weak bill supported by the NRA, and Trump gets his headlines suggesting he's Doing Something, when he really isn't and will probably reverse his support if even this woefully insufficient legislation ever reaches his desk, anyway. Cool.

[CN: Shooting] Meanwhile... Dana Branham at the Dallas News: 6-Year-Old Boy Among 4 People Shot Outside Texas Roadhouse in San Antonio. "A 6-year-old boy was among four people shot Sunday evening in the parking lot of a Texas Roadhouse restaurant in San Antonio. Two adults have life-threatening injuries, the San Antonio Express-News reported. The boy was shot in the leg, and his injury isn't expected to be life-threatening, the paper reported. The group was waiting outside the restaurant to eat when the shooting occurred, police said. 'We do not believe that this shooting was random,' San Antonio police Chief William McManus told the Express-News. 'There's details I'm not gonna give out because it's part of the investigation. But we do not believe it's random.' ...The three adults were in their 20s, and all four victims were related, police told the Express-News."

More shootings, many of them acts of domestic violence or committed by domestic abusers, will continue, causing more injuries and taking more lives, including those of children. And it's just another day in America.

* * *


In case you can't see the two excerpts of the transcript embedded in the tweet, here they are:
Margaret Brennan: You don't get to be the CEO of Exxon Mobile as a Boy Scout.

Rex Tillerson: I did.

Margaret Brennan: You talked a lot about something that you call the Code of the West. What does that mean?

Rex Tillerson: Well, you know the Code of the West, as the West was unfolding there wasn't a lot of law enforcement. And people basically relied upon each other's word. And "My word is my bond." And I've used that throughout my life as well, even at Exxon Mobil. I would sit down with the head of state for that country or the CEO of that company and we'd look each other in the eye. And I'd say, all I need to know is that you're gonna live up to your side of this deal. And I give you my word I'll live up to my side of this deal. And then a lotta the Code of the West was people were very loyal to their organizations. And the phrase, "Riding for the brand" is a phrase that's always stuck with me that—

Margaret Brennan: Riding for the brand?

Rex Tillerson: Riding for the brand. When a cowboy signed on to a ranch or— or to that organization, he was committed to that organization.

Margaret Brennan: And what is the brand for you now?

Rex Tillerson: The State Department of the United States government. The American people are my brand.

[...]

Margaret Brennan: You've said you had a very close relationship with Vladimir Putin. You've done huge deals with him. Photos of you toasting him with champagne. And all that closeness raised eyebrows It even inspired a Saturday Night Live skit. Did you ever see that skit?

Rex Tillerson: I did. My kids pointed me to it.

Margaret Brennan: Did you laugh?

Rex Tillerson: Absolutely. Absolutely. I laughed out loud.

Margaret Brennan: What— it— it made light though of— of this concern that you have— a friendship with Vladimir Putin and that because of that you and the president aren't going to hold him to account.

Rex Tillerson: The relationship that I had with President Putin spans 18 years now It was always about What could I do to be successful on behalf of my shareholders, how Russia could succeed.

Margaret Brennan: How different was it walking into the Kremlin as secretary of state?

Rex Tillerson: It was different— because— and I had to think very, very h— carefully about that, And the only thing I said to him was "Mr. President, same man, different hat."
A lot of the news around Tillerson is framed to make him appear to be a bumbling dum-dum. But he is a profoundly manipulative and sinister character, just like everyone else in the Trump administration, and possibly worse than most.

* * *

Stephanie Kirchgaessner at the Guardian: Trump-Russia Inquiry: Manafort Under Pressure After Reports That Gates Has Flipped. "Experts say any deal with Gates would only be struck if investigators were confident he had valuable testimony to offer on a more senior figure in their ongoing inquiry. The two developments — the alleged additional evidence of wrongdoing and Gates's possible testimony — could give Mueller and his team additional ammunition to force Manafort to cooperate in their inquiry or face a potentially tough prison sentence if he is found guilty of the crimes he has been charged with. If Manafort were to cooperate in the probe it could potentially offer Mueller's team a wealth of new information about the inner workings of the Trump campaign and any possible interactions with Russian officials."

Tara Culp-Ressler at ThinkProgress: Trump Spokesperson Defends Russia, Blames Election Interference on the Mainstream Media. "Responding to a question [on Fox News on Saturday] about the indictment handed down by Special Counsel Robert Mueller on Friday — which accused 13 Russians and three Russian companies of a coordinated social media campaign to bolster Donald Trump and undermine Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election — [Deputy White House Press Secretary Hogan Gidley] brushed aside the allegations against Russia, and quickly pivoted to other scapegoats. 'What the Russians were trying to do, as outlined by Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein, was create chaos in the American election system,' Gidley said. 'And I will just say this: There are two groups that have created chaos more than the Russians, and that's the Democrats and the mainstream media, who continued to push this lie on the American people for more than a year — and quite frankly Americans should be outraged by that.'"

[CN: LGBTQ hatred]


[CN: Nuclear insecurity] Jonathan Swan at Axios: Skirmish in Beijing over the Nuclear Football. Emphasis original:
On Thursday Nov. 9, when [Donald] Trump and his team visited Beijing's Great Hall of the People, Chief of Staff John Kelly and a U.S. Secret Service agent skirmished with Chinese security officials over the nuclear football.

I've spoken to five sources familiar with the events. Here's what happened, as they describe it:

* When the U.S. military aide carrying the nuclear football entered the Great Hall, Chinese security officials blocked his entry. (The official who carries the nuclear football is supposed to stay close to the president at all times, along with a doctor.)

* A U.S. official hurried into the adjoining room and told Kelly what was happening. Kelly rushed over and told the U.S. officials to keep walking — "We're moving in," he said — and the Americans all started moving.

* Then there was a commotion. A Chinese security official grabbed Kelly, and Kelly shoved the man's hand off of his body. Then a U.S. Secret Service agent grabbed the Chinese security official and tackled him to the ground.

The whole scuffle was over in a flash, and the U.S. officials told about the incident were asked to keep quiet about it.
Everything is fine. (Everything is not fine. Fucking hell. FUCKING HELL.)

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

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Film Corner: Black Panther

image of part of the movie poster for the film Black Panther, showing a number of cast members

The much-anticipated Black Panther had an amazing opening weekend, pulling in $192 million (!!!) at the box office, giving it "the fifth-biggest opening weekend ever, not accounting for inflation. The only films with a higher grossing opening weekend are Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Star Wars: The Last Jedi, Jurassic World, and The Avengers. It's also the highest-grossing February opening weekend. ...Ryan Coogler's film, which cost about $200m to make, is the most big-budget, largely black ensemble film in years and among the few to be centered on a black superhero. The strong opening suggests Black Panther will easily set a box-office record for films directed by a black filmmaker."

WOOT! I am a major fan of Ryan Coogler, having absolutely adored 2015's Creed and been incredibly moved by his 2013 film about the police killing of Oscar Grant, Fruitvale Station, both of which also starred the terrific Michael B. Jordan, who played Killmonger in Black Panther. So thrilled for Coogler's much-deserved success!

Black Panther is really, really great. The story is solid superhero stuff; the cast is totally outstanding (HELLO, STERLING K. BROWN ILY); the acting is A+; the special effects are brilliant; it has the best car chase for my money since Matrix: Revolutions (fight me!); the score is wonderful; and there's just so much clever stuff in the film, which is also paced really well, so it's compelling in every way.

And that, of course, doesn't even begin to touch what makes Black Panther so profoundly special for its Black audience. (And to its non-Black audiences, though we can't appreciate it in the same way.)

I strongly recommend, especially if you are a non-Black person, searching out the voices of Black people talking about what Black Panther means to them, and of the Black people who worked to create the film. A few recommendations:

* On Twitter, #WhatBlackPantherMeansToMe is deeply moving.

* At the New York Times: Carvell Wallace writes "Why Black Panther Is a Defining Moment for Black America."

* At the Root: Clarkisha Kent writes "Wakanda Forever: On the Importance of Black Panther."

* At Rolling Stone, Chadwick Boseman and Ryan Coogler speak to Josh Eells about the 'Black Panther' Revolution.

* At Mother Jones, screenwriter Joe Robert Cole speaks to Brandon E. Patterson.

*At Elle, costume designer Ruth Carter speaks to Kendra James.

* At NPR, Gene Demby speaks to Lulu Garcia-Navarro.

I will never be able to fully understand what Black Panther means to a Black person who loves this film, but I can relate in some way as a fat woman who has longed for representation and loved rare examples of seeing people who look like me imbued with their full humanity on the screen.

To be known in such a thrilling way is intoxicating. I understand that.

Finally: Let us talk about the women of Black Panther, who are goddamned thrilling! As heroic as T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) is, he isn't the same Black Panther without:

1. His mother Ramonda (Angela Bassett), who always has his fucking back.

2. His sister Shuri (Letitia Wright), who is not only his bestie, but also a kickass scientist that creates all the impressive technologies on which he and his allies rely.

3. His general Okoye (Danai Gurira), who leads the security force of wicked cool women warriors that guard the king.

4. His confidant and love Nakia (Lupita Nyong'o), who is in every way his equal, his sage advisor, and a keen conspirator in the heroics.

AND ALL OF THESE WOMEN LOVE AND RESPECT AND SUPPORT EACH OTHER, TOO.

It is vanishingly rare that I watch a male superhero film where I don't actively loathe how the female character (singular used advisedly) is treated by the filmmakers. In Black Panther, there were four complex female characters and I loved all of them!!!

Thank you for this movie, Ryan Coogler! ♥

Open Wide...

The Latest on Gates

On Friday, I noted that Rick Gates, former Trump campaign aide and longtime Paul Manafort associate, was reportedly close to finalizing a plea deal with Special Counsel Bob Mueller.

Over the weekend, the LA Times and CBS News reported some additional speculative details:

Rick Gates, the deputy of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, will plead guilty to "fraud-related charges," the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.

The Times cited interviews with unnamed people familiar with the case. One person with "direct knowledge of the new developments" said Gates' revised plea would be presented in court "within the next few days": "Rick Gates is going to change his plea to guilty," the source said.

CBS News later reported later Sunday that, according to unnamed sources familiar with the negotiations, Gates was expected to plead guilty.

The network added, referring to Gates' attorneys' move to withdraw from the case: "The fact that three experienced trial attorneys wanted off the case suggested at the time that Gates may be pursuing a plea deal. The attorneys remain under a gag order by the court."
So, essentially just confirmation of CNN's reporting last week — but the additional reports, combined with the Friday announcement of Mueller's indictment of 13 Russian nationals and 3 Russian entities, has sent Donald Trump into a tailspin, prompting coverage with embarassing headlines like this one at the Washington Post: "Trump Lashes out over Russia Probe in Angry and Error-Laden Tweetstorm."
In a defiant and error-laden tweetstorm that was remarkable even by his own combative standards, Trump stewed aloud about the latest indictments brought by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III against Russians for their elaborate campaign to denigrate the Democratic presidential nominee, Hillary Clinton, and push voters toward Trump.

...In a string of 10 Twitter messages — which began after 11 p.m. Saturday and ended around noon Sunday, and which included profanity and misspellings — Trump opened a window into his state of mind, even as Trump's representatives at a global security conference in Germany advised jittery allies to generally ignore the president's tweets.

Trump's latest attacks built on remarks last week in which he misrepresented the evidence revealed by Mueller. He tweeted falsely, "I never said Russia did not meddle in the election." He blamed President Barack Obama's administration for doing "nothing" to stop the intrusion. Trump rebuked national security adviser H.R. McMaster for publicly saying the evidence of Russian interference was "incontrovertible."

And he held the FBI responsible for last week's devastating shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school that left 17 dead. Trump tweeted that the bureau was committing so many resources to the Russia probe that it missed "all of the many signals" about the shooter.
This last bit prompted former FBI Assistant Director for Counterintelligence Frank Figliuzzi to say during an appearance on Joy Reid's show that Trump has "read the 32-page indictment Mueller issued on Friday and he knows there's electronic intercepts of Russian officials. He's scared out of his mind and playing with the parents of America."

Trump is thrashing. Which is very unnerving. His unchecked power is what demands intervention, and it is also what makes intervention so perilous.

Back in October, when Gates was arrested and charged alongside Manafort, I tweeted: "Cornering Trump is dangerous. I am not feeling giddy about what's coming. I am hoping we all get through it safely."

And once again, I want to emphasize that: Although I am positively desperate for accountability for the collection of disloyal scoundrels in the White House, my primary hope right now is that we get through this safely.

There is a reckless megalomaniac sitting in the Oval Office, who is capable of breathtaking cruelty, especially in service to his self-interest. I am very worried what he will do if he is not disempowered — and I am very worried about what he will do if the necessary steps are taken to ensure that he is.

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An Observation

[Content Note: Guns.]


I will never, ever, stop being angry about Republicans' intransigent refusal to take meaningful steps to end gun violence. Unless and until their deadly, shitty priorities change, of course. Unfortunately, I don't see any indication that is likely in the near future.

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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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Friday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by soccer.

Recommended Reading:

Russell Brandom at the Verge: Russia's Troll Identities Were More Sophisticated Than Anyone Thought

Kayleigh Donaldson at Pajiba: [Content Note: Sexual harassment] Young Adult Authors Jay Asher and James Dashner Accused of Sexual Harassment

Erin Carlson at Dame: How to Fix the Romantic Comedy

Jenn Fang at Reappropriate: [CN: Racism] New York Times Editor Thinks American-Born Mirai Nagasu Is an Immigrant

Monica Roberts at TransGriot: Meet the First Black Player Ever on the U.S. Olympic Hockey Team

Kaila Hale-Stern at the Mary Sue: Netflix's Queer Eye Reboot Keeps Making Me Cry

Corey at Celebitchy: Ulta Sued for Repackaging and Reselling Used, Returned Makeup

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

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#365feministselfie: Week 7

I am again participating in the #365feministselfie project, now entering its fifth year, and promised a thread for others to share selfies and/or talk about the project, visibility generally, self-apprecation, and related topics. So here is a thread for Week 7!

A few of my selfies over the last two weeks, since I forgot to do a thread last Friday:

image of me from the shoulders up, wearing a grey t-shirt, a burgundy moto jacket, blue-framed specs, and a necklace featuring a crane
Put a bird on it!

image of my face just peeking into the screen, wearing pink-framed specs, lying next to Dudley the Greyhound, who is taking up most of the frame
Me and a big stinky dog.

image of me sitting at my desk, in profile, wearing a NASA t-shirt, a brown cardigan, and brown-framed specs
Working.

image of my face in close-up wearing blue-framed specs; I'm sitting beside a glass door, through which is visible a big bush
Sitting by the back door, waiting for Dudley to finish rubbing
his face on a bush, because he has a brain the size of a walnut.

image of me from the waist up wearing a purple t-shirt with text from Merriam-Webster declaring 'feminism' the Word of the Year
Word.

Please feel welcome and encouraged to share your own selfies in comments, or share your thoughts on the project, or solicit encouragement or advice, or do whatever else feels best for you to participate, if you are inclined to do so!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat lying on the floor curled up with a plushy bunny

Don't even THINK about trying to take Sophie's plushy bunny away from her! (It's Dudley's bunny.) (She will literally do nothing if you take away her bunny except mew pitifully.) (Don't tell her I told you that.) (Don't take away her bunny.)

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 393

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 (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) 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 Compromised and Rick Gates Reportedly Close to Deal with Mueller.

Well, let's start today with the big news that just broke:


There is a lot in those indictments, but the two biggest things I want to highlight are that the Russians tried to rig the GOP primary for Trump, too (almost certainly because they had kompromat on him, which would be useful to control him if he were to become president) and this: "Specialists were instructed to post content that focused on 'politics in the USA' and to 'use any opportunity to criticize Hillary and the rest (except Sanders and Trump — we support them).'"

Of course.

* * *

[Content Note: Mass shooting]


1. This is a big deal. It's a big deal that it happened, and it's a big deal that FBI Christopher Wray is making this public admission of a major failure so quickly. I feel like that's an indication he knows he's on his way out and that his successor will not share his interest in transparency. (Because whoever it is will be chosen for that very reason.)

2. I fear that this is a harbinger of many failures just like it. That's the sort of breakdown that becomes commonplace when the people running the government want to break the government.

* * *

[CN: Nativism; Islamophobia; white supremacy; domestic terrorism] Tina Vasquez at Rewire: Trump Administration Is Conflating Immigration with Terrorism at the Expense of Domestic Threats. "Trump's near-obsessive focus on the supposed criminality and violence of immigrants is coming at a cost, according to researchers, scholars, and even a former DHS analyst. It is jeopardizing public safety and national security by overshadowing the very real threats on U.S. soil: Mass shootings, and the continued rise of right-wing extremism and white supremacist movements. ...'Experts seem to understand that when it comes to threats to the United States, domestic terrorism and white supremacy are much greater risk to us right now, but that expertise isn't making it into the White House,' said Heidi Beirich, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center's (SPLC) Intelligence Project, which monitors the radical right. 'Meanwhile, the administration is funneling a lot of time and resources into painting immigrants and Muslims as criminals and terrorists.'"

[CN: Disablism]


Eli Lake at Bloomberg: Don't Be Fooled: Russia Attacked U.S. Troops in Syria.
If you've been listening just to the Kremlin and the Pentagon, you probably didn't know that Russia attacked American forces and their allies in Syria last week, suffering heavy casualties.

Yes, all sides admit that there was an incident at a U.S. base in Deir Ezzor. And that elements of the Syrian regime and Shiite militias participated in the assault. The Pentagon and Kremlin both acknowledge that Russian "mercenaries" participated, too. But the line for now is that those contractors had gone rogue, and Moscow didn't know anything about it.

When reporters asked U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis about the incident, he called the whole thing perplexing. "I have no idea why they would attack there, the forces were known to be there, obviously the Russians knew," he said. "We have always known that there are elements in this very complex battle space that the Russians did not have, I would call it, control of."

Now, it should be said that Mattis, a retired four-star Marine Corps general, is a very smart man. His perplexity in this case is probably what Plato called a "noble lie," a falsehood spoken by a leader to achieve a greater social good. If Mattis acknowledges the obvious — that the Kremlin authorized a direct assault on a U.S.-sponsored base by non-uniformed personnel — he risks an escalation spiral in Syria. Better to express bewilderment and give Russian President Vladimir Putin a chance to back down and deny culpability, which he ended up doing despite the heavy casualties suffered by his mercenaries.

But make no mistake: There is overwhelming evidence that those Russian contractors were working at the behest of the Kremlin. What's more, the Russians knew U.S. military personnel were in Deir Ezzor, which has been part of successive agreements to separate, or "deconflict," forces fighting in Syria.

...There is a downside, though, to this kind of noble lying. Considering that mercenaries like Wagner are a key part of Russia's broader strategy and tactics, it's also important for the U.S. to deny Moscow its plausible deniability. Russia needs to be told, going forward, that an attack by its mercenaries will be treated as an attack by its armed forces.
So, Russian mercenaries, who are "a key part of Russia's broader strategy and tactics" in Syria, attacked U.S. troops, and U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis decided to give Putin space for plausible deniability. Oh.

Julian Borger at the Guardian: Nuclear Risk at Its Highest Since Cuban Missile Crisis, Says Former Energy Secretary. "Former U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, a nuclear physicist who played a central role in securing a landmark non-proliferation agreement with Iran in 2015, said the margin for error in avoiding disaster was getting thinner because of the introduction of new, smaller weapons, the broadening of circumstances in which their use is being contemplated, and a lack of high-level communications between major nuclear weapons powers. ...Moniz, who is now CEO and co-chairman of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, pointed to a recent false alarm by Hawaii's public alert system as the sort of technological glitch that could lead to fatal miscalculation. ...'We know we've had those warnings many times in history and we've managed so far to dodge the bullet,' he said. 'But dodging the bullets is more difficult when there's not significant communications going on and a lot of tensions between the countries.'"


Jonathan Swan at Axios: Commerce Recommends Major Tariffs on Steel and Aluminum. "The Department of Commerce will recommend tariffs on steel and aluminum that, if applied, would be the first shots in a global trade war, according to two sources briefed on the report. ...A former senior government trade official said that without major exemptions, these recommendations would represent: '[T]he opening shot in a trade war...a declaration of war against the world on aluminum and steel... These are some of our closest treaty allies... These are some serious numbers.' Quote from a trade expert: 'This would be beyond a trade war. You're talking about blowing up the WTO.'"

Cameron Joseph and Tierney Sneed at TPM: Kushner Quietly Made More Fixes to His Financial Disclosures, May Have More to Come. "Jared Kushner, [Donald] Trump's son-in-law and a top adviser, wrote a letter to White House Deputy Council Stefan Passantino dated Jan. 3, 2018 adding a number of additional business interests that had not previously been on his personal financial disclosure form. That letter, which has not been previously reported, corrects and adds new corporate positions and details of his companies' structures that he legally was required to disclose, in a seeming attempt to square his filing with spouse Ivanka Trump's as well as clean up some previously overlooked items."

Aaron Blake at the Washington Post: More Than 40 Percent of Trump's First Cabinet-Level Picks Have Faced Ethical or Other Controversies. "Trump came to Washington promising to 'drain the swamp.' But after less than 13 months, more than 40 percent of the people he originally picked for Cabinet-level jobs have faced ethical or other controversies. The list has grown quickly in recent weeks. ...In total now, nine out of the 22 people Trump initially picked for Cabinet-level posts have found themselves facing scrutiny over their actions."

[CN: Food insecurity; class warfare]


[CN: Police brutality; white supremacy; misogynoir; disablism] Kenrya Rankin at Colorlines: NYPD Officer Acquitted After Killing Deborah Danner. "On October 18, 2016, New York Police Department sergeant Hugh Barry fatally shot Deborah Danner [who had schizophrenia, and whose sister called for assistance in taking her to the hospital]. Today (February 15), Judge Robert Neary found Barry not guilty on charges of second-degree murder, first- and second-degree manslaughter, and criminally negligent homicide. ...At the time of the shooting, Police Commissioner James O'Neill told press that Barry's actions did not match up with his training, and that he did not follow proper procedure for interacting with people with mental illnesses. That declaration did not seem to impact the judge, who said that the prosecution did not meet the required burden of proof for a guilty verdict."

[CN: Homophobia; HIV stigma] Michael Fitzgerald at Towleroad: New York to Investigate Reports of Gay Men Denied Insurance for Taking PrEP. "Financial regulators in New York have announced plans to investigate reports that gay men have been denied insurance policies because they were taking PrEP. Maria T. Vullo, the state's superintendent of financial services, said such denials would amount to illegal discrimination based on sexual orientation. ...Vullo has encouraged New York State residents who believe they have been denied coverage because of PrEP to contact her agency."

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

Open Wide...

Rick Gates Reportedly Close to Deal with Mueller

In January, I noted a report by Katelyn Polantz at CNN that former Trump campaign aide Rick Gates, who was arrested and charged with his longtime associate Paul Manafort in October, was thought to be negotiating a deal with Special Counsel Bob Mueller's team.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Last night, Polantz and her colleague Sara Murray broke the news that, according to sources close to the investigation, Gates is now close to finalizing a plea deal.

Gates has already spoken to Mueller's team about his case and has been in plea negotiations for about a month. He's had what criminal lawyers call a "Queen for a Day" interview, in which a defendant answers any questions from the prosecutors' team, including about his own case and other potential criminal activity he witnessed.

Gates' cooperation could be another building block for Mueller in a possible case against [Donald] Trump or key members of his team.

Once a plea deal is in place, Gates would become the third known cooperator in Mueller's sprawling probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. It would also increase the pressure to cooperate on Gates' co-defendant Paul Manafort, Trump's former campaign chairman, who has pleaded not guilty to Mueller's indictment and is preparing for a trial on alleged financial crimes unrelated to the campaign.
That's the horror scenario for Team Trump. If Gates rolls on Manafort, Manafort's case gets a hell of a lot tougher, which makes rolling on Trump a hell of a lot more appealing.

And if there's one thing we all know about Paul Manafort, it's that he ain't loyal to anyone but himself.

Open Wide...

Trump Is Compromised

It's not news, of course, that Donald Trump, the sitting president of the United States, is compromised by his own lechery. But a long profile by Ronan Farrow at the New Yorker, published today, details the breadth of how compromised he is, just by a single media outfit — American Media, Inc., the publisher of the National Enquirer — which has repeatedly purchased exclusive rights to stories about Trump, only to not publish them, because AMI's CEO and chair, David Pecker, considers Trump a personal friend.

At the moment. As you may have noticed, despite his fondness for loyalty pledges, Trump's friends tend to come and go.

Buried deep in the article is this passage, in which Karen McDougal, the former Playmate with whom Trump reportedly had an affair while married to Melania and who sold her story to AMI only for it to be buried, addresses the seriousness of the president having so many secrets:

Without commenting on Trump specifically, McDougal conceded that she had a growing awareness of the broader implications of the President's situation. "Someone in a high position that controls our country, if they can influence him," she said, "it's a big deal."
Indeed it is.

Farrow reported that, in a statement, AMI rebuffed the notion of having any leverage over Trump: "The suggestion that AMI holds any influence over the President of the United States, while flattering, is laughable."

Except that it clearly does have leverage, even if it's not willing to use it.

Presumably, it also has detailed records of the various contracts it's struck with people like McDougal, who have unflattering stories to tell about Trump. Records which could easily be hacked.

AMI is probably not the only publisher that has purchased stories on Trump, which almost certainly include far worse stuff than a consensual affair. Any publisher who has thus has the capacity to influence Trump, by threatening to deploy whatever content they're holding.

Trump is prickly, vain, and image-conscious — which makes him highly susceptible to threats to his (perceived) reputation.

The Republican Party doesn't seem to believe this is a serious issue worthy of their concern, but they are dead fucking wrong. As usual.

It's infuriating, though hardly surprising, that the Party of Moral Values and Real Americans don't care about Trump's lack of personal ethics nor about the threat he poses to our national sovereignty.


Let's at least get these disloyal gremlins on record.

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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 Sue Kerr: "What is the very first book (or other material) you remember reading?"

Walt Disney's Story Land. The 1962 edition.

images of the front and back covers of Story Land

That's not my copy, which I think was passed down to my nephew; I just grabbed those pictures from an Etsy listing. But that's the exact edition I had, and it was in pretty similar condition.

That's my earliest reading memory. That, and a children's Bible, and a collection of Little Golden Books. It was always the greatest day everrrrrr when I'd get to pick out a new Little Golden Book at the grocery store.

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Fat Fashion

This is your semi-regular thread in which fat women can share pix, make recommendations for clothes they love, ask questions of other fat women about where to locate certain plus-size items, share info about sales, talk about what jeans cut at what retailer best fits their body shapes, discuss how to accessorize neutral colored suits, share stories of going bare-armed for the first time, brag about a cool fashion moment, whatever.

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Here I am showing off a recent ensemble in the crooked full-length mirror in my guest bedroom, which I will totally hang up someday:

image of me, a fat middle-aged white woman, standing in a mirror wearing black trousers and a black-and-white patterned short sleeve top

The black-and-white patterned top is something I bought years ago, and I can't remember where. I think it might have been Avenue. The trousers are Chloe Coated Skinny Jeans from Simply Be, which are currently on sale. They are very comfy and the fit is great, so I recommend them, but with the caveat that they do make some noise (especially when you first put them on), so if you are a person who would feel super self-conscious about audible pants, take a pass on these.

Anyway! As always, all subjects related to fat fashion are on topic, but if you want a topic for discussion: Are there any items in your closet that you are either inclined or disinclined to wear because they elicit attention?

Have at it in comments! Please remember to make fat women of all sizes, especially women who find themselves regularly sizing out of standard plus-size lines, welcome in this conversation, and pass no judgment on fat women who want to and/or feel obliged, for any reason, to conform to beauty standards. And please make sure if you're soliciting advice, you make it clear you're seeking suggestions—and please be considerate not to offer unsolicited advice. Sometimes people just need to complain and want solidarity, not solutions.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat and Sophie the Torbie Cat sitting under my desk, looking up at me
Two good kitty girls, keeping me company while I work.

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 392

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 (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) 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.

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Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: On the Parkland School Shooting and Missing Security Clearances; Major Security Threats.

[Content Note: Nativism; Islamophobia] I'll start today with a little glimmer of good news, care of Lawrence Hurley at Reuters: U.S. Court Says Trump Travel Ban Unlawfully Discriminates Against Muslims. "Donald Trump's travel ban targeting people from six Muslim-majority countries violates the U.S. Constitution by discriminating on the basis of religion, a federal appeals court ruled on Thursday in another legal setback for the policy. ...'Examining official statements from [Donald] Trump and other executive branch officials, along with the proclamation itself, we conclude that the proclamation is unconstitutionally tainted with animus toward Islam,' 4th Circuit Chief Judge Roger Gregory wrote in the ruling."

It's good news that the 4th Circuit Court ruled that the ban is unconstitutional and did so on the grounds that it's nakedly hostile toward Muslims. The continuing bad news, of course, is that the Supreme Court allowed the ban to go into effect while it's being challenged in the lower courts, and that the Trump administration is stacking the lower courts with horrendous unqualified conservatives as quickly as possible.

[CN: Nativism. Covers entire section.]

Alice Ollstein at TPM: Trump Administration Moves to Preemptively Kill DACA's Last Best Chance. "On Wednesday night, a group of Republican and Democratic senators nailed down a difficult compromise on immigration that has been weeks in the making — a bill that provides a 12-year path to citizenship for young immigrants known as Dreamers, allocates the full $25 billion [Donald] Trump has demanded for the U.S.-Mexico border, bans the parents of DACA recipients from ever receiving legal status or citizenship, and bars legal permanent residents from sponsoring their adult, unmarried children. But before the bill could even come to the floor for an expected vote Thursday, the Trump administration was working to undermine it. ...As Senate supporters of the compromise were working to whip up the 60 votes necessary to pass it Wednesday night, White House officials told the Washington Post they were doing the opposite — calling lawmakers and asking them to oppose it."

What a shitty, cruel "compromise" it was, anyway, and still the best that Democrats could get. Imagine being the kind of heartless scum who would agree to allow DREAMers to stay in the country, but only with the stipulation that their parents can never achieve legal status. Unconscionable. Fuckers.

Meanwhile, the Department of Homeland Security is getting in on the act, trying to derail any legislation even slightly favorable to undocumented immigrants and refugees.


I've never before read a press release from a federal agency that was written with this level of unprofessionalism. This is the opening line, and they're not even trying to disguise that it's sheer propaganda written by Nazi clowns: "Border security includes the ability to remove illegal aliens that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) apprehends, otherwise we are stuck with a system that sanctions catch and release."

We are verging ever closer to this administration issuing straight-up eliminationist dictates on undocumented immigrants. I am very angry, and I am very scared.

[Additional CN for this item: War on agency] Tina Vasquez at Rewire: Trump Wants ICE Agents to Determine Who Gets Abortion Care. "Tucked away in the appendix of the Trump administration's proposed 2019 budget are new restrictions for undocumented people in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody who may want to access abortion care. ...[Currently, if] a person in detention simply wants to exercise their right to abortion care, they can fund their own procedure. What may change under Trump is that undocumented immigrants in ICE custody could be prohibited from accessing abortion entirely." Seethe.

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[CN: Domestic violence] Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Trump Finally Spoke out About Domestic Abuse and His Answer Was Not Great. "The remarks were in response to an ongoing controversy over recently departed Staff Secretary Rob Porter, who has been accused by two ex-wives of verbal, emotional, and physical abuse. 'I am totally opposed to domestic violence, and everybody here knows that,' he told reporters. 'I am totally opposed to domestic violence of any kind. Everyone knows that. It almost wouldn't even have to be said. So, now you hear it, but you all know it.'" Fuck you.

[CN: Racism; silencing; Nazism] Ashley Feinberg at the Huffington Post: Leaked Chat Transcripts: New York Times Employees Are Pissed About Bari Weiss. "On Monday night, the fury over Bennet's op-ed page and its contempt for readers coalesced around something Weiss tweeted (and later deleted). Criticism flew in from all points of the compass — including from within the Times itself, where staffers were unusually frank in expressing their anger at both Weiss and the newspaper, according to an internal chatroom transcript obtained by HuffPost. ...'i will no longer remain silent about our hostile work environment just so that it will be pleasant for others'." Note that all of that conversation happened before the Times decided to hire (and fire) Quinn Norton. Sounds like the NYT is a fun place to work as it's going full Nazi.

Zachary Basu at Axios: Adviser to Melania Trump Received $26 Million from Inaugural Committee. "Wis Media Partners, an event-planning company founded in December 2016 by a longtime friend and current senior adviser to Melania Trump, was paid $26 million by [Donald] Trump's inaugural committee, according to tax filings." Fucking grifters. From literally Day One.

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

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Missing Security Clearances; Major Security Threats

Like Rob Porter, the erstwhile White House Staff Secretary whose history of domestic abuse was overlooked by the Trump administration, an alarming number of top White House staffers still lack permanent security clearances.

As I previously wrote: Dozens of members of this administration still don't have security clearance after more than a year, and they aren't honest enough to get that clearance, but the White House has nonetheless decided to trust them with the highest levels of classified information, even when they are under investigation for foreign collusion, as is the president himself.

At NBC News, Carol E. Lee, Mike Memoli, Kristen Welker, and Rich Gardella report on the abundance of top-level staffers without clearance, and the numbers are truly staggering:

More than 130 political appointees working in the Executive Office of the President did not have permanent security clearances as of November 2017, including the president's daughter, son-in-law, and his top legal counsel, according to internal White House documents obtained by NBC News.

Of those appointees working with interim clearances, 47 of them are in positions that report directly to [Donald] Trump. About a quarter of all political appointees in the executive office are working with some form of interim security clearance.

...The documents also show that 10 months into Trump's administration, at least 85 political appointees in the White House, vice president's office, and National Security Council were working without permanent security clearances. About 50 appointees were operating with interim security clearances while serving in offices closely linked to the West Wing, such as the National Economic Council, the Office of Management and Budget, the U.S. Trade Representative, and the White House executive residence.

White House officials who are listed as not having permanent security clearances as recently as this past November include Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter and senior adviser; Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior adviser; Dan Scavino, the president's director of social media; and Christopher Liddell, assistant to the president for strategic initiatives, according to the documents.
This is very troubling, particularly given Donald Trump's morbid indiscretion. That there are people working even in the White House residence for the most observably indiscreet president the United States has ever known constitutes an enormous security risk.

And while one might understandably argue that it hardly seems worth worrying about when the president himself seems to be a wholly owned subsidiary of a foreign adversary, the problem is that Trump's indifference to protecting state secrets (which underwrites his indifference to security protocols) combined with the breathtaking 34% turnover rate at the White House creates a scenario in which a whole host of unsavory specimens has had — and continues to have — access to highly sensitive information that might be interesting to multiple governments, mercenaries, hostile political organizations, and other sinister actors.

Since its earliest days, the Trump White House has been mired in visible chaos, unprofessionalism, and incompetence — thus advertising to anyone hoping to exploit any weakness in the United States federal government that all comers are welcome, as long as you swear fealty to Trump. It's a low bar for access, combined with high opportunity for treason.

And, as Sarah Kendzior observes in her latest piece, the revolving door of employment in the Trump White House has included "many ethically questionable former staffers" whose own behavior makes them susceptible to blackmail, and thus "leaves U.S. national security in chronic jeopardy."
While departures of incompetent or immoral staffers have often inspired public relief, they are actually cause for alarm. That revolving door leads into a bustling marketplace of state secrets, one whose temptations should not be shrugged off given that basic standards of loyalty to country have been put into question by this administration's actions.

Among the departed White House staffers are former national security advisor Michael Flynn, who has admitted guilt in the Kremlin interference probe; white nationalist (and fellow domestic abuser) Steve Bannon, who has vowed to destroy the United States; and extremist Seb Gorka, who has ties to neo-Nazi organizations and is being investigated by police in Hungary. (Gorka, like Porter, worked as a Trump advisor despite being denied clearance as a result of his 2016 arrest in the U.S. for bringing a weapon through an airport.)

Men who have already colluded with a foreign power, committed acts of violence, or threatened to destroy the U.S. now know some of the country's secrets, and it's easy to imagine the damage they could do in the era of WikiLeaks and illicit foreign deals.

...We do not know what the departed Trump staffers have been doing since they left office, but we know that several behaved as if they were above the law—even, in some cases, working to subvert American democracy. Armed with classified information, these men are now walking national security threats, and it's reasonable to assume that Trump–loose-lipped, disloyal, and primarily interested in making money and dodging prosecution—may someday be too. Much as it has shattered norms inside the White House, expect the Trump administration to shatter them outside as well.
The fact is that Trump has as much respect for national security protocol as he does for the rule of law. That is to say: None.

Which means that the security clearance concern in his White House will never be fixed. It reflects and indulges his own indiscretion, and he has no desire to adhere to established norms, which would require him to restrain his own impulses. An insecure braggart is never going to release, and is probably temperamentally incapable of yielding, his chokehold on sharing important information access to which proves his importance, itself only demonstrable if he spills that information.

That's the fundamental problem: Trump wants to talk. And he does. He talks and talks — and sometimes he discloses things publicly, and sometimes he's bragging to the Russians, and sometimes it's just that he's surrounding himself with nefarious characters who have a taste for authoritarianism and occupationally-impressed sycophants who aren't trustworthy enough to enjoy access to national secrets by any conceivable measure, but have that access nonetheless because Trump needs to feel like a big man, since even being President of the United States of America isn't enough to fill the expansive void of self-worth permanently lodged in his gut.

The only solution to this problem, as ever, is removing Trump from office, as swiftly as possible.

Unfortunately, the only people with the power to do that obviously necessary thing remain manifestly unwilling to do it.

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