We Resist: Day 452

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.

* * *

Earlier today by me: F#@k James Comey, Part Two and On Trump's Syria Strike and An Observation.

Here are some more things in the news today...

[Content Note: Anti-Blackness; white supremacy] Damien Gayle at the Guardian: Arrest of Two Black Men at Starbucks for 'Trespassing' Sparks Protests.
About two dozen chanting protesters have entered a Philadelphia Starbucks where two black men were arrested after store employees called 911 to say the men were trespassing [despite the fact that the men were just waiting to meet a friend there, like countless people do in Starbucks franchises all over the world every damn day—Liss].

The protesters moved to the front counter shortly after 7 am on Monday and chanted "Starbucks coffee is anti-black" and "We are gonna shut you down."

...The arrests on Thursday were captured on video and circulated widely on social media. The footage shows police officers confronting two men seated at a table, before handcuffing and arresting them. Their friend, who is white, arrives just as the pair are being led outside.

Melissa DePino captured the incident on video and posted it on Twitter. She wrote: "The police were called because these men hadn't ordered anything. They were waiting for a friend to show up, who did as they were taken out in handcuffs for doing nothing. All the other white ppl are wondering why it's never happened to us when we do the same thing."

The police commissioner, Richard Ross, said officers went to the coffee shop after Starbucks employee reported the men were trespassing. Officers were told the men had entered and asked to use the toilet, but were refused because they had not bought anything. They then refused to leave. Ross, who is black, insisted that his officers "did absolutely nothing wrong."

Police have not released the names of the men. A spokesman for the district attorney's office said the two were released "because of lack of evidence" that a crime had been committed, but declined to comment further, citing a police investigation.

I have seen an awful lot of people arguing in defense of both the police and the Starbucks employee who called them, because the men were asked to leave, so neither the police nor the employee had any choice once they refused. That is bullshit. And it is bullshit that ignores the men probably never would have been asked to leave in the first place if they'd been white, and bullshit that ignores there was still no reason to call the police when they wouldn't leave as long as they weren't hurting anyone, and bullshit that ignores the police were there to protect property not people, including and especially the people they were arresting, which is not the job the police insist to us they do (despite all evidence to the contrary).

And one of the things that businesses like Starbucks need to be drilling into their employees' heads is that Black people — and brown people, and disabled people — are disproportionately likely to have fatal interactions with police, so the police should be called only if people, and especially people of color and/or disabled people, are causing some sort of serious problem. And "taking up a table for awhile without buying anything" isn't actually a serious problem.

For fuck's sake.

* * *

Devlin Barrett at the Washington Post: Trump Wants to Review Material Seized from Personal Lawyer Before Federal Investigators. "[Donald] Trump asked a federal judge Sunday night to allow him to review documents that FBI agents seized from the office of his longtime lawyer before criminal investigators have a chance to see the material. The request underscores the high stakes in an ongoing legal fight in federal court in New York, where Michael Cohen, Trump's lawyer, is also fighting to get a chance to review material seized as part of a criminal investigation of his business dealings." Authoritarianism watch, part wev in an endless series.

Anita Kumar at McClatchy: Trump Businesses Made Millions off Republican Groups and Federal Agencies, Report Says. "[Donald] Trump's U.S. businesses have received at least $15.1 million in revenue from political groups and federal agencies since 2015, according to a new report to be released Monday. The money went to Trump's airplanes, hotels, golf courses, even a bottled water company during the presidential campaign and the first 15 months of his presidency, according to a compilation of known records of the spending by Public Citizen obtained by McClatchy. ...The total amount is likely to be much more. There is no single place to find out how much the administration is spending at Trump businesses, though federal agencies have started to disclose some records in response to public record requests. ...By comparison, in 2013 and 2014, political spending at his properties was less than $20,000." Fucking grifter.

Damian Paletta at the Washington Post: Trump Contradicts His Treasury Department, Accuses China and Russia of Currency Cheating. "Trump on Monday accused China and Russia of improperly manipulating their currencies in a way that gives them unfair trade advantages. 'Russia and China are playing the Currency Devaluation game as the U.S. keeps raising interest rates. Not acceptable!' the president wrote on Twitter. The accusation, delivered without any evidence or corroboration, directly contradicts a report issued Friday by Trump's Treasury Department, which did not accuse either country of artificially lowering the value of its currency. Instead, the report found that China's currency had recently moved in a direction that should benefit U.S. exporters." JFC.

screen cap of a tweet authored by @nycsouthpaw responding to a tweet published by Sarah Huckabee Sanders, showing a photo of the Situation Room and claiming to be on the night of the Syrian strike decision; nycsouthpaw has responded: 'This photo wasn’t taken last night. Pence was in Peru.'

Jon Swaine at the Guardian: Trump's Press Secretary Issues Clarification After Posting Misleading Photo. "Donald Trump's press secretary issued a begrudging clarification on Sunday after being accused of posting a misleading photograph of the president online. Sarah Sanders was criticised for a tweet on Saturday that appeared to show Trump busily directing missile strikes against Syria from the White House situation room, with Vice-President Mike Pence at his right hand. 'Last night the President put our adversaries on notice: when he draws a red line he enforces it,' Sanders wrote as a caption. ...Sanders on Sunday responded with a new installment from the Trump administration's series of prickly statements in which an inaccurate remark is simultaneously defended and amended. It said: 'As I said, the President put our adversaries on notice that he enforces red lines with the strike on Syria Friday night. The photo was taken Thursday in the Situation Room during Syria briefing.'" Sure.

* * *

[CN: White supremacy] Alice Ollstein at TPM: Interior Officials Have History of Hostility to Native Concerns. "A scathing Inspector General's report released last week is raising new questions about last summer's mass reassignment of Interior Department (DOI) employees that disproportionately affected Native Americans. Now, current and former members of Congress and former department officials tell TPM that two top Trump political appointees at the department — at least one of whom played a key role in the reassignments — have long been hostile to Native concerns. Both officials, Deputy Secretary David Bernhardt, the department's second in command, and Associate Deputy Secretary Jim Cason, served in top DOI posts during the George W. Bush administration, at a time of intense conflict between the agency and Native American tribes."

[CN: Authoritarianism; white supremacy] Natasha Geiling at ThinkProgress: These States Want to Make Planning a Pipeline Protest a Crime.
As pipeline protests continue to delay and, sometimes, stop energy projects in their tracks, the fossil fuel industry and Republican lawmakers are looking for new ways to clamp down on environmental protest.

In the last few years, state lawmakers across the country have proposed bills that would impose harsh penalties on environmental protest, particularly protests aimed at delaying pipeline construction or shutting down existing pipeline infrastructure. In energy-rich states like Oklahoma and North Dakota, lawmakers have successfully passed bills prohibiting certain kinds of protest, from protests that block highways or traffic to protests that trespass onto property containing energy infrastructure.

But a new crop of bills proposed in Louisiana, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota — all states with controversial pipeline projects currently under consideration — take the criminalization of protest one step further.

If passed, the bills would make it illegal to conspire to protest in certain instances, like when a protest would require trespass or some other kind of civil disobedience. This means the act of simply planning a protest that includes a civil disobedience component, like trespass — regardless of whether or not you actually protest — would become illegal.
This is just authoritarianism run amok, and further evidence of what I say all the time: Donald Trump is not an anomaly of Republican politics, but its endgame.

[CN: White supremacy] Dan Balz and Scott Clement at the Washington Post: Poll: Democrats' Advantage in Midterm Election Support Is Shrinking. "Democrats hold an advantage ahead of the midterm elections, but a Washington Post-ABC News poll shows that edge has narrowed since January, a signal to party leaders and strategists that they could be premature in anticipating a huge wave of victories in November." And why? WHITE PEOPLE VOTING TO PROTECT WHITE PRIVILEGE.


And finally...

[CN: Climate change; video may autoplay at link] Allan Adamson at Tech Times: Atlantic Ocean Current Slowing Down Due to Global Warming: Here's What Could Happen. "Findings of two new studies have revealed that the Atlantic ocean current has significantly slowed down and is currently at its slowest pace in 1,600 years. The researchers attribute the slowing down of the current known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation to global warming. ...The so-called 'conveyor belt of the ocean' plays an important role in regulating global temperatures and the phenomenon is feared to have serious consequences. AMOC transports heat around the globe and if this movement stops, the heat would not be distributed."

That could lead to: More severe African droughts; more extreme winters and summers in Europe and North America; more severe storms in Europe; a faster rise in sea levels of the U.S. East Coast; fisheries devastated by warming waters, impacting jobs and creating food scarcity; and the ocean becoming "less effective at absorbing carbon dioxide [which] can lead to higher quantities of the greenhouse gas in the atmosphere worsening global warming." Fuck.

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

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An Observation

Something just occurred to me, and I haven't seen it discussed anywhere else, so I'm just going to put it here: One of the things about Cambridge Analytica and other bad actors having access to all U.S. users' Facebook data means a treasure trove of information on people's vulnerabilities that can be exploited to extort and turn them.

Anyone who's ever used Facebook messenger to have an affair. Anyone who's got a secret Facebook page to flirt. Anyone who gossips with work colleagues about the boss. Anyone who disclosed anything on Facebook, to what they thought was a closed audience, that could be used against them with their employer, including sexuality, beliefs, illnesses. Anyone who uses Facebook to catfish, or has been embarrassingly catfished, or who has used messenger to talk to a dealer, or arrange any kind of nefarious or criminal activity.

Personal shameful (or stigmatized) behavior has always been used to cultivate or turn assets, and now the record of many people's personal shameful (or stigmatized) behavior is in the hands of any bad actor who pays for it.

Most people won't have to worry, because they aren't prominent enough to matter to bad actors. But anyone with a visible platform, or anyone who works for the government, or a federal subcontractor, or in protected research, or in an industry where corporate espionage is endemic, etc. could be targeted.

This translates into the biggest dataset of asset-turning material in history. Countless Americans who could be convinced to engage in disloyal acts to protect themselves.

And our government doesn't seem to care about this massive vulnerability to national security. Fuck.

[Commenting Note: Please take care not to engage in victim-blaming in this thread. Certainly, different people had different expectations about what they could expect in terms of privacy on social media, but no one "deserves" what has happened to them, simply because they trusted what was private would be kept private. And remember that Facebook has started secret profiles on people who didn't even join the platform, and other people were exposed based on what their friends did, so one's individual personal behavior ultimately had a lot to do with their exposure.]

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On Trump's Syria Strike

Late Friday, Donald Trump ordered airstrikes in Syria, in retaliation for another suspected chemical attack a week earlier, to the site of which investigators from the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons have been denied access.

On Saturday, Trump declared "Mission Accomplished!" in a tweet — and then subsequently defending using that phrase in another tweet a day later.


Sure. All very presidential, as usual.

But, despite Trump's victory lap, it's not at all clear that the mission was accomplished. (Unless, of course, the mission was to have no effect whatsoever and thus continue to be Putin's lapdog while pretending to be "getting tough" on Russia for their continued support of Assad.)

At the Washington Post, Ishaan Tharoor details "The Many Things Trump Didn't Accomplish in the Latest Syria Strike."
There's still uncertainty over what exactly was destroyed during this "pinprick" strike, with some reports indicating that Assad's ability to use chemical weaponry remains intact. Meanwhile, Assad's supporters partied in the streets of Damascus on Saturday, waving Syrian flags and holding up pictures of their leader.

The attack, my colleague Liz Sly wrote, was "interpreted in Syria as a win for Assad because the limited scope of the strikes suggested that Western powers do not intend to challenge his rule."

On Sunday, the Syrian military declared that it had taken full control over Eastern Ghouta. The area outside Damascus was besieged for years by the Assad regime and subject to alleged chemical-weapons attacks, including the assault this month that killed dozens of civilians and triggered U.S. action. That incident, according to reports, prompted the remaining rebels to surrender and agree to be evacuated out of the area. Regime officials crowed on Sunday that Eastern Ghouta was "completely clear of terrorism."

...The fleeting effects of the strike — and Trump's lack of a real strategy for Syria — also exposed how thin his posturing may be, especially if Assad manages to launch a new attack using nerve gas or other illicit weapons.

"The president's dilemma is that strength and resolve do not necessarily equal a well-thought-out Syria strategy," my colleague Greg Jaffe explained. "If Assad ignores Friday's relatively modest military strike and uses chemical weapons, Trump faces a difficult choice. He can escalate, pulling the U.S. military and his administration into a messy conflict that he recently said he wanted to abandon. Or he can do nothing and risk appearing weak."
And let us be blunt about this: If Donald Trump actually gave a fuck about Syrians who have been displaced, injured, and/or killed by the millions during this seven-year-long civil war, he would immediately reverse his reprehensible refugee policy, which has meant the United States has accepted only 11 Syrian refugees so far this year.

If you are like me, and you feel very distressed by the ongoing war in Syria and Trump's lack of a coherent strategy, and you want to do something, here are a couple of ideas:

1. If you have the funds to make a donation, donate to Nu Day Syria.


2. Read this thread by my senator, Bob Casey, and then contact your senators and ask them to hold Trump accountable for failing to get Congressional authorization for military action in Syria.

3. Contact your senators and representative and ask them to hold Trump accountable for his cruel refugee policy which has restricted asylum for Syrian refugees, who desperately need it.

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F#@k James Comey, Part Two

[Part One.]

Last night, ABC aired George Stephanopoulos' interview with James Comey. [Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Here is the complete transcript. I didn't watch it, but I did read the transcript, and hoo boy.

I could spent the next six hours deconstructing all of Comey's bullshit, but, honestly, I don't think I will convince anyone who believes he's a hero that he isn't one, and I believe anyone who reads the transcript or watches the interview with the intent to hear what he's actually saying, as opposed to what we may want to hear, will come away with a pretty clear picture of who James Comey really is, irrespective of whether what he says about Donald Trump occasionally intersects with one's own opinions.

Comey comes across in the interview as every bit the self-interested, ass-covering, sanctimonious prig I have always found him to be. He clearly has problems with women in positions of leadership. His privilege is as unexamined as it is undiluted. And no one who is himself rigorously honest talks so goddamn much about "the truth" and what a liar everyone else is.

He's positioning himself as the arbiter of "truth," and I don't trust his method, since the "truth" according to James Comey always, always, finds him in the right, with nary a decision for which he should be held accountable.

Even and especially affecting the outcome of an election.

Anyway. Discuss.

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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 chocolate.

Recommended Reading:

Monica Roberts at TransGriot: TransGriot Wins GLAAD Media Award Outstanding Blog! Congratulations, Moni!

Maiysha Kai at the Glow Up: [Content Note: Sexual violence; infidelity; emotional abuse] Survivor's Remorse: On Junot Díaz and the Collateral Damage of Trauma

Vivian Kane at the Mary Sue: Sen. Tammy Duckworth Made History Giving Birth While in Office, But the Senate Rules Are Predictably Awful for New Mothers

Yessenia Funes at Earther: A Texas River Is Now Endangered Because of Trump's Stupid Wall

Kylie Cheung at Ms.: Costa Rica Just Elected the First Black Woman Vice President in Latin America's History

Ian Bogost at the Atlantic: The Dot-Coms Were Better Than Facebook

Stephen A. Crockett Jr. at the Root: [CN: Racism; domestic violence] The Seattle Seahawks Pass on Colin Kaepernick to Sign a Quarterback Who Has Never Played in an NFL Game

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

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Dreadful. As In: Full of Dread.

I don't even know what to write at the moment. I feel like I'm in a holding pattern, waiting for a very terrible thing to happen, and I don't know if that's going to be Donald Trump firing Rod Rosenstein or dropping bombs on Syria or something else altogether horrible or some combination thereof.

I'm guessing I'm not the only person who's feeling overwhelmed with dread at the moment, so, if you need a space to talk about that, here you go.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound standing on our back patio, squinting into the sunshine and grinning
A happy greyhound boy enjoying the spring 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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Trump Rumored to Be Firing Rosenstein Today

There are rumors that Donald Trump will be firing Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein sometime this afternoon. I hope those rumors are wrong, although anyone who is paying even a little attention to what is happening has surely suspected that Trump's firing of the man with the power to stymie Special Counsel Bob Mueller is imminent.

Even Rosenstein himself is resigned to his fate, telling friends he is prepared to be fired.

A Friday the 13th seems as likely as any day and more likely than most, knowing Trump's flair for the dramatic, so here is a thread in case he does what we all fear he will do.

UPDATE:


(By the way, if that news is making you wonder, "Does that mean that Comey might have leaked his own book to get ahead of the IG report?" the answer is yes, yes it does.)

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We Resist: Day 449

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.

* * *

Earlier today by me: F#@k James Comey and Trump to Pardon Scooter Libby.


Here are some more things in the news today...


Nicole Lafond at TPM: Trump Responds to 'Pee Tape' Claims: 'It Was My Great Honor to Fire James Comey!' "Donald Trump responded to former FBI director James Comey's 'pee tape' claims with a rage-filled round of tweets Friday morning, calling Comey a 'LEAKER,' a 'LIAR,' and an 'untruthful slime ball' and saying it was 'my great honor to fire' him. 'James Comey is a proven LEAKER & LIAR. Virtually everyone in Washington thought he should be fired for the terrible job he did-until he was, in fact, fired. He leaked CLASSIFIED information, for which he should be prosecuted. He lied to Congress under OATH. He is a weak and...untruthful slime ball who was, as time has proven, a terrible Director of the FBI. His handling of the Crooked Hillary Clinton case, and the events surrounding it, will go down as one of the worst 'botch jobs' of history. It was my great honor to fire James Comey!'" Wow. WOW.

Carol E. Lee, Julia Ainsley, Kristen Welker, and Hallie Jackson at NBC News: Trump, Mueller Teams Prepare to Move Forward without Presidential Interview.
Special counsel Robert Mueller's office and [Donald] Trump's legal team are now proceeding with strategies that presume a presidential interview will likely not take place as part of the Russia investigation, after months of talks between the two sides collapsed earlier this week, according to multiple people familiar with the matter.

...Prior to Monday's raid, Mueller's team had been aiming to finalize a report on its findings on whether the president has tried to obstruct justice in the Russia investigation in the coming months, as early as May or as late as July, three sources said. That timeline hinged in part on reaching a decision on a presidential interview, these people said. One person familiar with the investigation described a decision on an interview as one of the last steps Mueller was seeking to take before closing his investigation into obstruction.

Now, according to two sources, Mueller's team may be able to close the obstruction probe more quickly as they will not need to prepare for the interview or follow up on what the president says.
Hmm.

Steve Dent at Engadget: Trump Follows Amazon Jabs by Ordering U.S. Postal Service Review. "Trump has said that the USPS loses $1.50 for every Amazon package it delivers. However, experts have countered that the while the service does lose money delivering first class mail, e-commerce package deliveries are profitable. In 2017 they brought in $19.5 billion, up 11.4 percent over the year prior. Trump ordered the task force to look at how the USPS does package deliveries with companies like Amazon, and also at declines in mail volume. 'A number of factors, including the steep decline in first-class mail volume, coupled with legal mandates that compel the USPS to incur substantial and inflexible costs, have resulted in a structural deficit,' the order states. 'The USPS is on an unsustainable financial path and must be restructured to prevent a taxpayer-funded bailout.'" Ridiculous.

Gregory Korte at USA Today/Journal Sentinel: White House Sees Continued Exodus of National Security Officials as Rick Waddell Departs. "[Donald] Trump's deputy national security adviser will step down from his position at the White House, continuing the exodus of national security officials as Trump turns to a more hawkish team. Army Maj. Gen. Rick Waddell was a key lieutenant to former national security adviser H.R. McMaster, who departed the White House last week. The White House said Thursday that Waddell would soon step down from that post, although the exact date is not set. ...Waddell is the fourth high-ranking National Security Council official to announce his departure in the past week."


Kate Riga at TPM: Former AMI Editor Says CEO Routinely Killed Negative Trump Stories. "A former senior editor at American Media Inc. told CNN that Chairman and CEO David Pecker has a long history of killing negative stories about President Donald Trump to curry his favor. Per CNN, the editor, Jerry George, worked for AMI, publisher of The National Enquirer, for 28 years before being laid off in 2013. He said that while he has no personal knowledge of the recently reported episode where AMI allegedly bought and killed former Trump Tower doorman Dino Sajudin's story about Trump's illegitimate child, it fits the broader trend at the company. George reportedly said that Pecker, a longtime friend of Trump's, would routinely quash any story that cast the then-businessman and reality television host in an unflattering light."

[Content Note: Class warfare] Erin Shields and Lucia Martinez at Colorlines: Broadcasting Hate: How Trump Used the FCC to Punish the Poor.
In early February 2017, as chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Ajit Pai, without warning or provocation, issued an order that made it harder for people with low incomes to access the internet. The order ripped at the heart of the Lifeline program — an initiative designed to provide a federal subsidy to help the poor afford internet access.

Since its inception in 1985, Lifeline is one of those rare federal government programs that has received bipartisan support. Created during the Reagan administration to support landline phone access, the program was codified by the Gingrich/Dole Congress in 1996, then expanded under President George W. Bush to include wireless service, and then modernized during the Obama administration to explicitly allow broadband options. Now, after decades of work, the Lifeline program will be all but destroyed by the Trump administration.

Limiting participation in the Lifeline program was just the first shot fired in this unjust theater of battle where the wounds and causalities run deep among single mothers, seniors, people with disabilities, people of color, and children. Since then, this racist, elitist, and classist administration has used the FCC to invigorate a culture of economic exploitation to wage war against the poor.
If you are wondering whether the juxtaposition of the previous two items was intentional, yes — yes it most certainly was.

[CN: Nativism]


[CN: White supremacy; racist violence; guns] Fox 2 Michigan: Black Teen Misses Bus, Gets Shot at After Asking for Directions in Rochester Hills.
A 14-year-old missed his bus and it nearly cost him his life.

Things took a dangerous turn when Brennan Walker went looking for help at a Rochester Hills home Thursday morning and was confronted by a man with a gun. Walker was trying to walk the bus route to Rochester High School after he woke up late and missed his bus. His mom had taken his phone away, so he didn't have that with him to get directions. So he knocked on a stranger’s door for help — and almost paid for it with his life.

"I got to the house, and I knocked on the lady's door. Then she started yelling at me and she was like, 'Why are you trying to break into my house?' I was trying to explain to her that I was trying to get directions to Rochester High. And she kept yelling at me. Then the guy came downstairs, and he grabbed the gun, I saw it and started to run. And that's when I heard the gunshot," he says.

Thankfully, the man missed. Brennan kept running, hid, then cried.

"My mom says that, black boys get shot because sometimes they don't look their age, and I don't look my age. I'm 14; but I don't look 14. I'm kind of happy that, like, I didn't become a statistic," he says in retrospect.
I hate all the reporting on this, and this is about the best of the bunch, so much of which implies that Walker's mother is somehow more to blame than the white assholes who responded to a child knocking on their door looking for help by shooting at him. GODDAMMIT. I am so glad that Walker was not physically harmed.

[CN: Environmental racism]


[CN: White supremacy; terrorism] Kelly Weill at the Daily Beast: Suspected White Supremacist Died Building ISIS-Style Bombs. "Benjamin Morrow was found dead with white supremacist literature and the ingredients for a notorious bomb known as the 'Mother of Satan.' Morrow, 28, died in an explosion in the kitchen of his Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, apartment on March 5. His home was filled with bomb-making substances so volatile that firefighters chose to destroy the 16-unit apartment block in a controlled blaze, rather than let Morrow's neighbors continue to live in the building. A search warrant unsealed last week revealed that Morrow kept white supremacist literature in his home. Investigators' application for a second warrant suggests that Morrow had plans, announcing that he was clearing out a rented storage locker just hours before his death." Fucking hell.

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Let's end with some GOOD RESISTANCE NEWS today!

Esther Yu Hsi Lee at ThinkProgress: Federal Judge Rules Against DOJ Policy That Rewards Police for Cooperating with ICE. "A federal judge in Los Angeles ruled this week that the U.S. Department of Justice cannot withhold public safety, policing grants in so-called 'sanctuary cities' where local law enforcement officials can choose not to turn over suspected undocumented immigrants in custody over to federal immigration authorities. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real issued a 'permanent, nationwide ban against a Justice Department policy that gave an edge to obliging police departments applying for a community policing grant program,' the Los Angeles Times reported." Yay!

Allegra Kirkland and Alice Ollstein at TPM: Voters Take the Wheel on Fixing Gerrymandering. "Days after the November 2016 election, a coordinator at a recycling non-profit wrote a Facebook post asking if her fellow Michigan residents were interested in coming together to 'take on gerrymandering.' Katie Fahey's casual social media request ended up morphing into a statewide, all-volunteer movement to draft a ballot proposal to overhaul how the Great Lake State's congressional and state legislative district lines are drawn. The push by that group, which came to be known as Voters Not Politicians, ended up gathering over 100,000 more signatures than the 316,000 needed to get the measure on Michigan's November 2018 ballot. Across the country, voters are engaging in similar mobilizations at the state level to take the wheel on the seemingly unsexy issue of redistricting reform." Yay!


Yay!

Nicole Knight at Rewire: Judge Blocks Montana Law Prohibiting Nurses From Performing Abortions. "Two nurses challenging the constitutionality of a Montana abortion law were handed a temporary win in court last week. A Montana district court judge temporarily blocked a state law barring highly skilled nurses from providing abortion services under threat of criminal prosecution. The preliminary injunction allows plaintiffs Helen Weems, an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN), and an unidentified certified nurse midwife, to complete their training to provide abortion services in the state, according to a statement by their attorneys." Yay!

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Maryland Elementary School to Be Named for Gay Civil Rights Icon Bayard Rustin. "Bayard Rustin Elementary will be the name of Montgomery County, Maryland’s first school named for an openly gay individual after the Board of Education voted 6-2 to name the school after the civil rights icon who advised Martin Luther King Jr. and was a lead organizer of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963." Yay!

And finally, this is just awesome women being awesome, and who couldn't use some of that in their lives?


HEART EYES FOREVER.

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

Open Wide...

Mad About You Latest Show to Get a Reboot

promotional image for Mad About You from the '90s showing Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt posing together

Will & Grace, The Gilmore Girls, Dynasty, Roseanne, Murphy Brown, and Charmed are all being rebooted with all or mostly original cast members in their original roles (which makes them distinct from remakes like One Day at a Time and Sabrina the Teenage Witch), and now Mad About You is going to get the reboot treatment, too:
Mad About You just took a major step toward being revived with its original series stars.

Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt have just closed deals with Sony Pictures Television to reprise their Mad About You roles, EW has learned exclusively. Co-creator Danny Jacobson is also on board to return. The deals follow months of negotiations to try to bring back the 1990s series, which aired on NBC from 1992 to 1999.

...Last year, when asked about a reboot, Reiser worried the comedy two-part finale's time jump already answered the question of what the couple would be doing today. "One of the things we did deliberately in the finale was that we jumped ahead in the future. We saw where they went," Reiser told Variety. "Part of why we did that was to avoid the temptation of going back… When you watch a reunion (show), all you do is say 'Wow do they look older.'"

But Will & Grace and Roseanne opted to ignore their respective original series finales, and their fans didn't seem to mind (in the case of Roseanne, the series even pretended the death of John Goodman's character never happened).

Ever since rumors broke that Mad About You might be in the works for returning, the stars have been regularly asked about their participation and have merely said they're hopeful it might work out.

"The dream is to get to do it," Hunt told People in last week's issue. "I've been watching Will & Grace and laughing so hard out loud. They're just crushing it. I have remained very, very close friends with Paul. Reboot or no reboot, we have lunch once a month. We really enjoy and care for each other. It was a very loving piece of work. We loved it. It would be fun to work on something that's really about love."
My biggest question is whether Lisa Kudrow will return as Ursula Buffay!

I liked the show when it aired, even though I thought it wore out its welcome a bit, like most American sitcoms, which tend to go on far too long. I'm not sure if I'd feel the same about it now, if I rewatched the show or tuned into the new episodes.

Also: It's weird to me that we refer to these shows as "reboots," when it's really more like a revival, or even just a new season of the same show. It's not uncommon in Britain, for example, for a show that's been off the air for years to have a new season of episodes or a Christmas special. We're really just adopting an established practice from other parts of the world, not inventing a "reboot" phenomenon.

Anyway! Would you watch new episodes of Mad About You? Are you watching any of the other shows with new episodes? You know I'm not watching Roseanne, but feel free to share your thoughts about it if you are!

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Trump to Pardon Scooter Libby

[Movie Trailer Voice] In a world ... where nothing matters ... a wreck of a human being who became President of the United States ... decided to blow up EVERYONE'S BRAINS ... by pardoning the only man ... who had ever faced consequences ... for the outing of a spy ... by another president and his band of sadistic minions ...


Additionally, Trump is telegraphing to participating witnesses in Special Counsel Bob Mueller's investigation that they will get pardoned if they fall on their swords to protect him.

As you may recall, just last month the New York Times published a report that one of Trump's lawyers had discussed the possibility of Trump pardoning Michael Flynn and Paul Manafort with their lawyers, which, because it could be construed as an attempt to persuade them to behave in a certain way to earn that pardon, could constitute an attempt to obstruct justice.

This, too, is another attempt at obstruction — but unless there's a record of Trump declaring his intent to pardon Libby in the hope of influencing Mueller's witnesses, there will probably never be any consequences for it.

It's utterly galling that Trump is unwinding the one historical mark of accountability for the wantonly indecent, unethical, and outright criminal Bush administration. What a perfect gift, from one president with aggressive contempt for the law to another.

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F#@k James Comey

Former FBI Director James Comey, whose decision to make a public statement about reopening the investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails 11 days before the election, because it was something he thought voters needed to know, but didn't make any public statement about the suspicion of Donald Trump's possible collusion with Russia, because apparently that wasn't something he thought voters needed to know, has written a memoir and is now doing a round of press about it.

And it's as exactly lacking in self-awareness, personal responsibility, and regret as you'd expect from this guy.

Buried deep in Michiko Kakutani's New York Times review of Comey's irritatingly titled A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership, is this passage:

As for his controversial disclosure on Oct. 28, 2016, 11 days before the election, that the F.B.I. was reviewing more Clinton emails that might be pertinent to its earlier investigation, Comey notes here that he had assumed from media polling that Clinton was going to win. He has repeatedly asked himself, he writes, whether he was influenced by that assumption: "It is entirely possible that, because I was making decisions in an environment where Hillary Clinton was sure to be the next president, my concern about making her an illegitimate president by concealing the restarted investigation bore greater weight than it would have if the election appeared closer or if Donald Trump were ahead in all polls. But I don't know."

He adds that he hopes "very much that what we did — what I did — wasn't a deciding factor in the election." In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 3, 2017, Comey stated that the very idea that his decisions might have had an impact on the outcome of the presidential race left him feeling "mildly nauseous" — or, as one of his grammatically minded daughters corrected him, "nauseated."
Well, he should be barfing nonstop for the foreseeable future, then, because what he did almost certainly was "a deciding factor in the election," and it was an action he took, he now says, because he was sure that Clinton would win, which is unforgivable arrogance from a person tasked with leading the primary federal law enforcement agency in a democracy.

Further, I'm not convinced that Comey is being fully honest when he asserts that he disclosed the "restarted investigation" because he wanted to protect her from being "an illegitimate president." To the contrary, I believe he did indeed assume she'd win and wanted to send her into her presidency hobbled by the continuing specter of wrongdoing — handing his fellow Republicans something into which to sink their teeth, right out of the gate.

But even taking Comey at his word, this was a spectacularly arrogant miscalculation, and one that cannot easily explain why he did not think it was important to disclose information about investigations of Trump. Even if he imagined Trump was set to lose, did he not think that the American people should know that the Republican Party standard-bearer was under suspicion of possible collusion with a foreign adversary? That isn't just an important piece of information about individual person Donald Trump, but about the party who nominated him and the party leadership who trusted him.

Comey chose to conceal that information, for reasons he has not adequately explained. He claims to have disclosed damaging information about Clinton to protect her. And he does not seem remotely inclined to hold himself accountable for the breathtaking arrogance underlying these fateful decisions.


And let me just say this, again, about James Comey: People routinely mistake as "integrity" what is, upon closer scrutiny, actually strategy. It's always been enticingly easy to ignore the possibility that Comey is primarily motivated by payback, not patriotism — and to think it doesn't matter, because his actions on their face seem to align with the general objective of holding Trump accountable.

But it does matter. It has always mattered. Comey was strategizing, by his own admission, on Oct. 28, 2016. And we know where that got us.

Comey is no hero. And he could do real damage on this tour, because his primary interest is and has always been himself.


Perhaps the hardest truth for many people to accept in the entire Comey saga is the possibility (likelihood) that Donald Trump and James Comey are both terrible. That there might not be a hero in this particular story.

Or that there was, and Comey made not a but the deciding factor in the election that would otherwise have made her our president.

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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 Killemalla: "What book did you love in high school that still holds up today? Conversely, what book does not?"

Holds up: The Grounding of Group 6, by Julian F. Thompson.

Doesn't: Probably anything by Christopher Pike, lol. I loved the fuck outta those books, though!

To be totally honest, I haven't read any of the Pike books since, so maybe they do hold up better than I expect they would. But I doubt it, since so many of them relied on super problematic revenge tropes. BUT I LOVED THEM.

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Discussion Thread: Good Things

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

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

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

News items worth celebrating are also welcome.

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

* * *

Iain and I went out to dinner with a group of friends last night, whom we hadn't seen in a minute because everyone's been busy, and it was very fun and we talked and laughed a lot, and there was yummy food and many hugs, that was a very good thing indeed.

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The Superior People, So They Claim

[Content Note: White/male/Christian supremacy; nativism; privilege.]


The Trump administration is truly, truly, privilege in action. (And the ultimate example of what "identity politics" really looks like.) It's just aggressive mediocrity, empowered exclusively by unearned privilege.

And I'm fucking sick of looking at it.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting in front of me, looking up at me with big eyes
Who's such a good girl? Zelly! That's who!

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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Trump Jokes About His "Despotic Tendencies"

Donald Trump called the White House Press Corps to the Rose Garden, to oblige them to listen to him lie, ramble, brag, and disgorge the usual amount of disgusting bile. In the middle of that shitshow, this happened:

—in a year and a quarter than any administration, whether it's four years, eight years, or, in one case, sixteen years. [Ed. Note: NOPE.] Should we go back to sixteen years? Should we do that? Congressman, can we have that extended? [laughter and applause] You know, the last time I jokingly said that, the papers started saying, "He's got despotic tendencies!" [laughter] Nah, I'm not looking to do it. [laughter; he gestures at the Congressman] Unless you wanna do it. That's okay. [laughter]
Cool. What a funny joke for us all to laugh about together.

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