Don Jr: The Liar Doesn't Fall Far from the Tree


Don Jr. also said he can't recall whether he discussed the Russia probe with his father.

LOL okay.

Rosalind S. Helderman and Karoun Demirjian have more at the Washington Post: Thousands of Pages of Congressional Testimony Shed Light on 2016 Trump Tower Meeting.

I wonder if any of this will ever matter.

I sure hope so!

That'd be great.

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Who Could've Guessed Kim Jong Un Would Be Erratic and Unreliable?

Remember when everyone (not everyone) was congratulating Donald Trump for ending hostilities between North Korea and South Korea, and everyone (not everyone) was pretending that it suddenly didn't matter that the Trump administration had decimated the State Department and were wholly unprepared for the sensitive diplomatic mission that meeting with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un would be, because everyone (not everyone) was inexplicably also pretending that Trump and Kim are reasonable people who keep their word?

Yeah. Well. First this happened:


Which should have been entirely expected by anyone who's been paying the slightest bit of attention to how Kim operates.

Naturally, it was only a matter of time before the other shoe dropped.

Anna Fifield at the Washington Post: North Korea Expands Threat to Cancel Trump-Kim Summit, Saying It Won't Be Pushed to Abandon Its Nukes.
North Korea is rapidly moving the goal posts for next month's summit between leader Kim Jong Un and [Donald] Trump, saying the United States must stop insisting it "unilaterally" abandon its nuclear program and stop talking about a Libya-style solution to the standoff.

The latest warning, delivered by former North Korean nuclear negotiator Kim Gye Gwan on Wednesday, fits Pyongyang's well-established pattern of raising the stakes in negotiations by threatening to walk out if it doesn't get its way.

...If the Trump administration approaches the summit "with sincerity" for improved relations, "it will receive a deserved response from us," Kim Gye Gwan, now vice foreign minister, said in a statement carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency on Wednesday.

"However, if the U.S. is trying to drive us into a corner to force our unilateral nuclear abandonment, we will no longer be interested in such dialogue and cannot but reconsider our proceeding to the DPRK-U.S. summit," he said, using the abbreviation for North Korea's official name. He also questioned the sequencing of denuclearization first, compensation second.

...Trump and his top aides, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and national security adviser John Bolton, have repeatedly said that the United States wants the "complete verifiable irreversible denuclearization of North Korea" — a high standard that Pyongyang has previously balked at.

Bolton, known for his sharply hawkish views, has said that North Korea must commit to a disarmament similar to "Libya 2004." He was undersecretary of state for arms control in 2004, when Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi agreed to give up its nuclear program in return for sanctions relief.

But this is not a tempting model for North Korea. Seven years after surrendering his nuclear program, Gaddafi was overthrown, then brutally killed by opponents of his regime.
There is much more at the link.

This is indeed "not a tempting model for North Korea," especially when Trump has just reneged on the Iran deal, signaling that the United States' word is garbage.

But neither party in this summit are actually interested in the ostensible goal of the summit, anyway. Kim wants legitimacy — an objective to which he's gotten closer care of Trump even agreeing to the summit, irrespective of whether it now happens. Trump and Bolton want an excuse to launch a preemptive strike on North Korea — as does Mike Pence.

Kim wants Trump to keep demanding denuclearization, so he can have an excuse to walk away from the summit. Trump wants Kim to walk away from the summit, so he can have an excuse for war.

That isn't diplomacy. It's amateur gamesmanship from two of the most erratic, unreliable, egomaniacal, dangerous leaders on the planet.

How embarrassing for anyone covering this mess who indulged the absurd pretense that it could ever be anything else.

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What Do You Hear?

The audio version of the black-and-blue-or-gold-and-white dress is tearing apart the internets! Depending on whether you're old or young, on what speakers you're listening to it, and at what pitch you hear it, you will either hear "Yanny" or "Laurel" when you listen to this recording:


Last night, listening to the same recording on the same speakers, I was 100% Team Yanny. Now all I can hear is Laurel! The only difference is the time of day — which suggests that maybe how "tired" your ears are can make a difference, too.

That said, I also alternatingly saw blue-and-black and gold-and-white on The Dress. I can't account for it. Maybe it's because I'm ambidextrous? I can also "change" the direction of the Spinning Dancer at will, depending on where I look at it.

This shoe, however, always looks turquoise and grey to me. And it always looks pink and white to Iain!

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Open Thread

image of a red couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Yankee Transferred: "Ever have an ear worm for more than a day or so? (My answer to this is nothing short of amazing, I believe.)"

Well, I can't wait to hear it!

Anytime I get an ear worm, it lasts for at least a couple of days. I made a joke via text to Deeky referencing the Frasier theme song like two weeks ago, and it's been stuck in my head ever since.

The thing is, I don't really know the lyrics, so I texted Deeky something like: "Bedilly-bop be-doop tossed salad and scrambled eggs!" And that's basically what's stuck in my head now, lol.

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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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I know we're overdue for a makeup thread — and I promise I'll do one soon! — but I wanted to do a Fat Fashion thread today in order to let y'all know that Simply Be is having a sitewide Buy 2 Get 2 Free sale. That's a pretty darn good deal!

In other news, Iain took me to Morimoto for my birthday, and I felt very stylish in my white jeans from Woman Within, and my Mixed Stripe Fluid Blouse from Loft (whose new plus collection is terrific). I was also carrying a salmon-colored bag, of which you can just see a peek on my shoulder and behind my right hand.

image of me in above described outfit standing outside Morimoto
Photo by Iain.

Was really happy to find these pieces, the blouse in particular, as I don't want anything with a bell sleeve, a ruffled yoke, or a "cold shoulder" (which I was rocking three years ago, thank you).

I have nothing against bell sleeves; my arms are just too short for them to work most of the time. I have nothing against ruffled yokes, either; my shoulders are just quite wide already and I don't love the look of accentuating them.

Between these current trends and the abundance of long tunics, which turn into dresses on my 5'2" frame, it's a good day when I can find a blouse that works this well for me, billowy sleeves and all.

Also, I'm wild for stripes right now, so that was a bonus!

Anyway! As always, all subjects related to fat fashion are on topic, but if you want a topic for discussion: Are there any trends you're fervently avoiding or enthusiastically embracing at the moment?

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.

[Note: I am not receiving anything in return for my recommendations here, nor am I affiliated in any way with any of the companies mentioned herein. Any endorsements made are on products I purchased myself, just because I like them!]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt, sitting at my feet, looking thoughtful
Loyal hound.

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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Anti-LGBT Group Changes Tune on Role of Judiciary

[Content Note: Homophobia.]

Founded in 2007, the National Organization for Marriage (NOM) has backed multiple initiatives throughout the United States opposing same-sex marriage, beginning with Proposition 8 in California.

Since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, I have continued reading the organization's blog, primarily to see what direction the organization would go in light of the nationwide legalization of same-sex marriage.

For one, the official line on Obergefell is that the decision was "illegitimate." Consider, for instance, a recent post in which NOM president Brian Brown reminisces about Proposition 8, which he suggests is still valid:

It's hard to believe that the Proposition 8 campaign unfolded ten years ago. NOM played a pivotal role in the success of Prop. 8, helping to organize the signature gathering drive that put it on the ballot. I moved my family to California so I could work fulltime on the campaign. And our national Political Director, Frank Schubert, was the campaign manager for the successful effort. It was a great victory, which makes it all the more important that we reverse the injustice done to the people of California, and all the other states that voted for marriage, to have had that victory illegitimately stolen by the US Supreme Court.
NOM and Brown have long argued that it is uniquely unfair for the judiciary to provide a check on unconstitutional laws, at least insofar as the judiciary strikes down laws written and passed by anti-LGBT citizens. For instance, at a 2015 conservative conference at the Kremlin, Brown was purported to have said, via RightWing Watch:
When the people have been able to have their say, they've stood up for the truth! The problem is that we are now in a position when judges, unelected judges are coming and simply throwing away the votes of all of these millions of Americans! We have to stand up for civil rights, our civil right to have our vote counted!
Secondly, nearly all of the organization's blogposts of late include a plea for donations, perhaps reflecting a political and financial reality in which much of the "grassroots" energy around opposing same-sex marriage has, at least for now, dissipated with fewer and fewer people experiencing the legalization of same-sex marriage as a culture war "loss."

The Obergefell decision was almost three years ago, and it's likely that many straight people have realized that same-sex marriage has had little to no impact on their lives. The public's attitude regarding same-sex marriage has also changed considerably since NOM's founding. In 2007, only 37% of US adults favored same-sex marriage, but by 2016, that number had risen to 62%. A year ago today, that number was at 64%.

Now, with public opinion having turned against them, the organization seems to be banking on "winning" the same-sex marriage fight through... wait for it... the Supreme Court via the very "unelected judges" they've railed against for years. Here's Brian Brown again, in the above-referenced blogpost:
We are just one vote shy of having a pro-marriage majority on the US Supreme Court. If Anthony Kennedy decides to retire this year as many expect, we will have a realistic chance to promote a pro-marriage nominee from President Trump in the mold of Antonin Scalia and Neil Gorsuch.
Yes, this is hypocrisy. In seeking to overturn established law and the will of the people, NOM has become what they have claimed to despise. But, despite some recent attempts to redeem conservatives who might appear less deplorable than Donald Trump, don't we already know that a golden rule of U.S. conservatism is to win by any means?

And yet, I sense a general "it can't happen here" complacency with respect to marriage equality, similar to that prior to the 2016 election.

I say that acknowledging that I will probably never fully be able to let my guard down on this issue. My lived experience with U.S. democracy has been immeasurably influenced by the 2000 election, wherein the loser of the popular vote subsequently got to frame our government's response to 9/11 and appointed two conservatives to the U.S. Supreme Court.

I started blogging in 2007, as political blogging and contention around same-sex marriage were on the rise. I have to remind myself that the Obama years were very good for many (although certainly not all) LGBT rights and that today's 18-year-olds were just being born at the start of George W. Bush's presidency.

Being a queer woman during the Bush II years added layers of horribleness that I can never forget: Watching him use LGBT rights as political footballs for his own gain, his administration paying Maggie Gallagher to promote Bush's marriage agenda, years of being nice and patient with indecent people so they might one day support equality, and a general, constant feeling that the government that purported to represent me was against me in a very fundamental way.

At a certain point during the Obama years, it seemed like some of the things that felt so broken during the Bush II years might be capable of becoming unbroken. Some of them, like marriage equality, actually were.

But now? I'm not sure what else to say here other than that "it" can absolutely happen here. And, what has been most unnerving about our post-2016-election reality is that it seems like "it" can be almost anything terrible we can imagine at all because the man currently leading our nation acts like a sadist who enjoys inspiring mass terror.

The state of our democracy should not feel as though it hinges so tenuously on the health and continued service of one octogenerian within the judiciary branch and yet here we are. If the historically-unpopular man who lost the 2016 popular vote were to appoint a conservative to the U.S. Supreme Court to help overturn a precedent that most Americans support it would be one more dark day for U.S. democracy to add to the ongoing tally.

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We Resist: Day 481

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: Five Things to Read on the 70th Anniversary of Nakba and "Something's wrong in America." and This Seems Important.

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

So, in case you're unaware, Axios is a news outlet known for its great access to the White HOuse and BIG SCOOPS from anonymous leakers who are definitely Donald Trump. Bear that in mind as we hit this first item.

Jonathan Swan and Mike Allen at Axios: Scoop: Inside Trump's 2020 Startup.
As [Donald] Trump's campaign aides quietly launch his reelection campaign, they're eyeing two states as possible pickups for 2020: Minnesota, where Trump came close in 2016 without even trying; and Colorado, where his hands-off approach to marijuana enforcement is a possible selling point.

What's happening: The addition of those states is part of a plan that's coming together in a basement suite at the Republican National Committee, where the Trump campaign has moved from Trump Tower. The campaign, now fewer than 10 people, eventually will number hundreds.

The reelection campaign will mostly work under the radar until after midterms, providing Trump assets (volunteers, fundraising, rallies) to other campaigns.

But we got a first look at campaign manager Brad Parscale's plans to build what amounts to a massive marketing machine, selling the world's most prominent product.

Why it matters: In 2016, Trump Tower campaign staffers were proud of their pirate-ship ambush of the Republican establishment, then of the U.S.S. Clinton. But this time they won't have the advantage of surprise.

So the Trump team has to build a longer range, more systematic plan, without suffocating Trump's improvisational essence.

Parscale, who considers past presidential campaigns archaic, is emphasizing digital innovation, technological streamlining, and corporate efficiency.

Parscale told us: "We're crushing it in prospecting."
There is no way to NOT read this planted item at Axios as a communication with Russia about where and how to direct their resources on behalf of Trump. "Colorado. Weed. Get on it, Vlad."

Further, the entire piece — which also includes this helpful piece of info: "Parscale had no history in politics before the 2016 campaign, and doesn't plan to work in politics beyond the 2020 campaign." — is setting up the narrative that will be used to explain Trump's 2020 victory, despite being a wildly unpopular president.

It won't be that the Russians intervened again to assist him, but that his "unconventional" campaign manager with his "innovative" ideas figured out a way to again "ambush" the establishment.

The collusion (and the narrative-creation to obfuscate it) is happening right out in the open.

* * *


I mean, in theory, yes, Trump does have to decide that. But, in reality, I'm guessing Trump will just let the deadline pass without filing anything at all, or file it but full of lies, because who's gonna hold him accountable?

* * *

Robert Maguire at McClatchy: $1 Million Mystery Gift to inauguration Traced to Conservative Legal Activists. "One of the largest contributions to [Donald] Trump's inaugural committee in 2016 appears to have been orchestrated by a set of powerful conservative legal activists who have since been put in the driver's seat of the administration's push to select and nominate federal judges. ...While the source of the money used to make the gift was masked from the public, a trail of clues puts the contribution at the doorstep of some of the same actors — most notably Leonard Leo, an executive vice president at the conservative Federalist Society — who have helped promote Trump's mission, and that of his White House counsel, Don McGahn, to fill judicial vacancies as quickly as he can with staunchly conservative, preferably young jurists." And that of his Vice President Mike Pence.

Ed Pilkington at the Guardian: How Rightwing Groups Wield Secret 'Toolkit' to Plot Against U.S. Unions. "Documents obtained by the Guardian reveal that a network of radical conservative thinktanks spanning all 50 states is planning direct marketing campaigns targeted personally at union members to encourage them to quit. The secret push, the group hopes, could cost unions up to a fifth of their 7 million members, lead to the loss of millions of dollars in income, and undermine a cornerstone of U.S. progressive politics. ...The anti-union marketing drive is the brainchild of the State Policy Network, a coast-to-coast alliance of 66 rightwing thinktanks that has an $80m war chest to promote Donald Trump-friendly regressive policies such as low taxes and small government."


[Content Note: Police brutality; death; racism] Breanna Edwards at the Root: A Black Man Died During an Arrest in Louisiana; a Local Coroner Has Ruled the Death as Homicide by 'Asphyxia'.
On Thursday, 22-year-old Keeven Robinson died shortly after a chase and "brief struggle" with narcotics detectives from the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office in Louisiana.

At first, authorities hinted that his death may have been related to his medical history of asthma, the Washington Post reports, noting that an air-quality alert had warned residents of unhealthy ozone levels that day.

However, when a young black man dies at the hands of police, tensions and suspicions run high. Robinson's family was not convinced.

On Monday, a Jefferson Parish coroner vindicated some of those suspicions, confirming that an autopsy had concluded that Robinson's death was a homicide.

To be precise, the cause of death was ruled as "compressional asphyxia" with an autopsy Saturday showing "significant traumatic injuries to the neck, the soft tissue of the neck," the coroner, Gerald Cvitanovich, announced in a news conference.
And meanwhile...


[CN: Nativism] Relatedly:


And finally: [CN: War on agency] Brie Shea at Rewire.News: The Weekly Roundup of State-Based Anti-Choice and Anti-LGBTQ Legislation. With an overview of the bills Rewire.News is watching at the moment in Louisiana, South Carolina, Delaware, Minnesota, Missouri, and Utah.

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

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This Seems Important


Once upon a time not so long ago, if a president obviously allowed a foreign country to bribe him, that would have been a scandal which commandeered every second of political news airtime and every headline in every paper across the land.

But after less than two years of Donald Trump's presidency, his stenographers in the political press have, with some notable exceptions, evidently decided that this is just normal now.

Zany Trump! Always changing his mind for reasons no one can understand!

Here, for example, is a significant CBS piece on the bailout, which doesn't even mention the Chinese investment in the Indonesian project.
"I've never seen a president step in and reverse an agency decision like this. It's not clear, of course, if he's planning to really reverse it or think of a solution in a larger context. But it is something that's just out of the norm," said Amanda DeBusk, the chair of the international trade and government regulations practice at the firm Dechert.
Just another day in Trump's America.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Remember when Hillary Clinton, the woman who ran against Donald Trump whose voice was icky and who got pneumonia once, was reflexively presumed that she would be corrupted by political donations from chemical companies and speaking fees from Wall Street, despite the fact that there was zero evidence she had ever been influenced in any way by Monsanto or Goldman Sachs or any other corporation? It was wall-to-wall criticism.

Now Trump is the actual president who has actually engaged in a public quid pro quo with a foreign government, who actually accepted a personal bribe in plain sight and then actually ordered a policy delivering on that bribe, and there is actually very little noise being made about it.

Cool.

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"Something's wrong in America."

So declared Rev. William Barber, co-chair with Liz Theoharis of The Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, at an event outside the Capitol in Washington, D.C. yesterday, to mark Day One of 40 days of nonviolent action and advocacy in pursuit of meaningful and lasting solutions to poverty.

The crowd parted and Barber and Theoharis led a procession of activists trained in civil disobedience toward the street, where they were prepared to be arrested. Two-by-two the demonstrators walked, representing nearly three-dozen states and Native American reservations.

The group sang hymns and chanted their demands as they marched toward the police, who had formed a blockade. Barber, in his purple robe, was the first to breach the line and was arrested. Dozens more followed as hundreds more cheered them on from the steps of the Library of Congress. Theoharis was the last to be arrested.

Similar scenes were replicated across the country in North Carolina, Missouri and California. In total, the Poor People's Campaign said 1,000 activists were arrested nationwide.

The group hopes their action will draw attention to what they say is an urgent need to alleviate poverty and improve living conditions for millions of Americans. In 2016, nearly 41 million Americans lived in poverty, according to the U.S. Census. But the organizers point to research by the Institute for Policy Studies that found nearly 140 million people are either poor or low-income when other factors are considered, including expenses on food and housing.

The campaign's list of demands are long and aspirational. It includes federal and state minimum wage laws "commensurate for the 21st century economy," relief from student-loan debt, a repeal of the 2017 GOP tax cuts legislation, restoration of the Voting Rights Act, an end to mass incarceration, a fracking ban, protection of public lands, a cessation of U.S. military involvement, and universal healthcare.

...The protesters will return each Monday for the next 40 days. Every week will focus on a different group of marginalized people. This week the protests and activities will focus on child poverty, women, and people with disabilities. Other themes include racism, veterans, war, and the environment.

At the end of the 40 days of protest, on 23 June, the activists from around the country will gather in Washington for a mass demonstration at the U.S. Capitol. Organizers say the 40-days of action are just the beginning of what they hope will be a multi-year campaign that will include voter mobilization and other efforts.
This is an amazing piece of resistance — and a critically important one. Because something is indeed wrong in America.

There's something wrong with one of the wealthiest countries in the world failing to provide basic necessities for all of its people, especially when we are creating new billionaires and throwing away tons of food every day. There is more than enough to go around, and yet instead of redistributing excess to people who need it, the power-brokers hoard or dispose of resources.

Nothing could more perfectly, terribly exemplify what's wrong in America than the fact that we would rather throw perfectly good food in the garbage than "give handouts" to hungry children.

And, yes, there are logistical barriers to getting excess resources to the people who need them, but the bigger barrier is will.

On May 8, in protest of Republicans once again seeking to defund food stamps, I tweeted:


If there is any question about what the real barrier to ending scarcity in the United States is, take a look at the responses to those two tweets.

Nature doesn't believe any living being is 'entitled' to live. Survival is always earned or a gift.

So does someone else OWE them the food in question? Did they earn it? Who is handing out the daily rations in the end? Wheres my free stuff?

Poor people are fat. Think about that.

You're entitled to work the hours required producing the food and bottling the water that they need, but you're too busy not putting your money where your big fat mouth is.

How about this. We republicans keep the poor and the democrats move the hell out of the USA? We can take care of all the poor and work to get them jobs or start a buisness or farm. You democrat pukes are the ones we can't afford. GET OUT!

Let's be clear about THIS: Nothing that must be provided by someone else is, or ever could be, a right. That's called slavery.

Et cetera. My suggestion that we should provide food and water to our fellow countrypeople who don't have access to it was met with aggressive contempt, resentment, selfishness, ignorance, and bigotry. With profound misunderstandings of what the role of government is even supposed to be. With literal arguments about how Jesus Christ didn't give handouts.

Something's wrong in America all right.

The lack of basic kindness was extraordinarily depressing, though entirely unsurprising. That very vacuum lies at the center of modern conservatism.

I honestly don't know how we change that, or if it can be changed.

But I take up space in solidarity with William Barber, Liz Theoharis, and the Poor People's Campaign. I hope they find a way.

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Five Things to Read on the 70th Anniversary of Nakba

[Content Note: Displacement; death; injury; images of violence.]

1. Manuel Hassassian at the Guardian: Today Is Nakba Day — I Hope I Never See Another Like This One.

Today is Nakba day. Nakba is an Arabic word that can be translated as "catastrophe." It is used by Palestinians to describe the events of 1948 that led to their ethnic cleansing. This year will mark the 70th anniversary of the forced displacement of the Palestinians caused by the violent creation of Israel, when 750,000 Palestinians became refugees virtually overnight. Their descendants number 7 million today. They owned 93% of the land in 1948 and lost 78% of it, over 4m acres. About 400 villages were destroyed.

Today is also the day after the US moved its embassy to Jerusalem, and the day after Israeli troops fired live bullets on unarmed demonstrators, slaughtering more than 50 people at the Gaza border. The surreal celebratory spectacle in Jerusalem — with the messianic evangelical pastor Robert Jeffress blessing proceedings that had been boycotted by local Christian and Muslim leaders — was an alternative universe to the scenes at the Gaza border, where Palestinians were declaring that they exist as a people and have a right to return to their land as enshrined in UN resolutions. They spoke, as all subalterns do, with their bodies and their blood. This is what Donald Trump's "deal of the century" has come to.
2. Kate Bubacz at BuzzFeed: These Photos Show the Stark Divide Between Shooting Deaths in Gaza and the Celebrations in Jerusalem. "The shootings took place about 60 miles from the embassy dedication, which was filled with pomp and circumstance, a video address from Trump, and calls for peace. It was a stark juxtaposition."

3. Alastair Jamieson at NBC News: Gaza Protests Replaced by Funerals as Palestinians Mark Nakba. "The death toll rose to 60 overnight, including eight-month-old Laila al-Ghandour, who inhaled tear gas at a tented protest encampment. Monday's violence also left 2,771 Palestinians wounded, including more than 300 women and children. ...A total of 109 people have been killed and around 12,300 others wounded since the protests began on March 30, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. On Monday, Israeli troops opened fire on protesters approaching the fence. ...Marie-Elisabeth Ingres, [Doctors Without Borders]'s representative in the Palestinian territories, said: "It is unbearable to witness such a massive number of unarmed people being shot in such a short time."

4. Ahmed Abu Ratima at the New York Times: I Helped Start the Gaza Protests. I Don't Regret It. "What has happened since we started the Great Return March is both what I hoped and expected — and not. It was not a surprise that Israel responded to our march with deadly violence. But I had not expected this level of cruelty. ...We are not going back to our subhuman existence. We will keep knocking at the doors of international organizations and our Israeli jailers until we see concrete steps to end the blockade of Gaza."

5. Michelle Goldberg at the New York Times: A Grotesque Spectacle in Jerusalem.
The juxtaposition of images of dead and wounded Palestinians and Ivanka Trump smiling in Jerusalem like a Zionist Marie Antoinette tell us a lot about America's relationship to Israel right now. It has never been closer, but within that closeness there are seeds of potential estrangement.

Defenders of Israel's actions in Gaza will argue no country would allow a mob to charge its border. They will say that even if Hamas didn't call the protests, it has thrown its support behind them. "The responsibility for these tragic deaths rests squarely with Hamas," a White House spokesman, Raj Shah, said on Monday.

But even if you completely dismiss the Palestinian right of return — which I find harder to do now that Israel's leadership has all but abandoned the possibility of a Palestinian state — it hardly excuses the Israeli military's disproportionate violence. "What we're seeing is that Israel has used, yet again, excessive and lethal force against protesters who do not pose an imminent threat," Magdalena Mughrabi, Amnesty International's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa, told me by phone from Jerusalem.

Much of the world condemned the killings in Gaza. Yet the United States, Israel's most important patron, has given it a free hand to do with the Palestinians what it will. Indeed, by moving the embassy to Jerusalem in the first place, Trump sent the implicit message that the American government has given up any pretense of neutrality.

...Trump has empowered what's worst in Israel, and as long as he is president, it may be that Israel can kill Palestinians, demolish their homes and appropriate their land with impunity. But some day, Trump will be gone. With hope for a two-state solution nearly dead, current trends suggest that a Jewish minority will come to rule over a largely disenfranchised Muslim majority in all the land under Israel's control. A rising generation of Americans may see an apartheid state with a Trump Square in its capital and wonder why it's supposed to be our friend.
Or why we're supposed to be theirs.

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Open Thread


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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker catvoncat: "What is something that hasn't changed about you over the years?"

My expressions, lol. I'm pretty sure I was born making this face:

image of me as a tiny little kid, clad in pink footie pajamas and sitting with my legs crossed in a child's chair, making a contemptuous expression

Or maybe this one.

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Monday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by candles.

Recommended Reading:

Yasmin Tayag at Inverse: [Content Note: Volcanic eruption] Hawaii's Still-Erupting Kilauea Volcano Is Literally Screaming

Tom McKay at Gizmodo: [CN: Volcanic eruption; displacement] Authorities Warn Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano Could Explosively Erupt, with 17 Fissures Now Reported

Maddie Stone at Earther: [CN: Cyclone] Florida May Get a Tropical Cyclone This Week

Aurielle Lucier at TLC: [CN: Trans hatred; sexual violence; carcerality] TLC Condemns Trump Bureau of Prisons Move Exposing Trans People to Violence

Simon Calder at the Independent/Business Insider: [CN: Murder; self-harm] MH370 Investigators Say Captain Deliberately Crashed the Plane in Murder-Suicide

Gene Demby at NPR: [CN: Police violence; injury and death; guns; harassment; racism] I'm From Philly; 30 Years Later, I'm Still Trying to Make Sense of the MOVE Bombing

Ina Barrameda at BuzzFeed: [CN: Colonialism; bullying] Confessions of an Inglisera

Lori Lakin Hutcherson at Good Black News: Grandmother Theresa Styles, 68, and Granddaughter Zuri Styles, 22, Graduate Tennessee State University Together

Princess Weekes at the Mary Sue: [CN: Moving GIF at link] Let's Remember All the Times Jake x Amy Have Been Adorable

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

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I've Never...

This is like the drinking game, except without the drinking part, lol.

What is a food you've always wanted to try, but never have?

I'll start.

I've never tried durian, which is very much a love it or hate it type food. I'd like to see whether I love it or hate it! But I've never traveled to a place where durian is native, so I've never had the opportunity. Yet!

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Bush Nostalgia: Give Me a F#@king Break

So, Jennifer Rubin's latest for the Washington Post is: "George W. Bush Reminds Us How Decent Leaders Sound."

As you might imagine, I had a few thoughts on that: "George W. Bush Was Not a Decent Leader."

Once again, I am left contemplating how fundamentally unprepared, willingly, the political press is for this moment. If you're greeting Donald Trump's aggressive authoritarianism by waxing nostalgic about George W. Bush, you've got nothing of value to contribute.

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RIP Margot Kidder

image of Margot Kidder as Lois Lane, sitting on a desk next to her character's nameplate, reading a newspaper

Margot Kidder, an actor best known for her portrayal of Lois Lane to Christopher Reeve's Superman, has died at age 69.


I once wrote that, as a kid, I was certain Kidder's Lois Lane "was the coolest woman with the most amazing voice who had ever lived." I still think she's a solid contender.

I appreciated Kidder for her work, and also for speaking out about her mental illness. Though I disagreed with her campaign against pharmaceutical therapies, I deeply valued the words she often spoke about close we all were to mental illness, whether in our own lives or the lives of people we knew or people we passed on the street — and how cruel it was to pretend it was a distant problem that happened to other people.
"We are all, each and every one of you in this place, are a breath away from mental illness, homelessness, all of these things we tend to so look down on. Give that woman a couple of bucks...and say something to her. We are all one human family and we really have to take care of each other."
Indeed so.

My condolences to her family, friends, colleagues, and fans.

[Note: If there are less flattering things to be said about Kidder, they have been excluded because I am unaware of them, not as the result of any deliberate intent to whitewash her life. Please feel welcome to comment on the entirety of her work and life in this thread.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

Yesterday, Dudley and Sophie were resting next to each other on the sofa, and it was very adorable.

image of Dudley the Greyhound stretched out on the sofa, with Sophie the Torbie Cat curled up next to him on a pillow

Throughout the afternoon, his head kept getting closer to her, which meant her tail kept getting closer to his face.

image of Dudley's head with Sophie's tail curled up against his nose

Inevitably, the swishing began. Which didn't bother him at all for quite some time.

image of Sophie's tail swishing across Dudley's snout

But then it did. And Dudley quickly found a solution, lol.

image of Dudley's head resting on top of Sophie's tail

Fin.

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 480

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: U.S. Embassy Opens in Jerusalem; Dozens of Protesting Palestinians Killed and "I don't have enough for a lawsuit, but I do have enough for a broken heart/spirit."

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

Anne Flaherty and Catherine Lucey at TPM: Trump Aides Praise Jerusalem Embassy Opening Amid Deadly Gaza Clashes. "Trump's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner, along with Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, led the U.S. delegation with a single message: Only Trump had the courage to act on what America has wanted for a long time. 'While presidents before him have backed down from their pledge to move the American Embassy once they were in office, this president delivered. Because when [Donald] Trump makes a promise, he keeps it,' Kushner said. ...'The president is making difficult decisions because they are what he believes are the right long term decisions and not just kicking the can down the road,' Mnuchin said. Mnuchin also said 'it's not coincidental' that the embassy move coincided with Trump's announcement that he planned to abandon the Iran nuclear deal." No shit.

[Content Note: Death; injury] Matt Bradley at NBC News: Scores Dead in Gaza Fence Protest as U.S. Moves Embassy to Jerusalem. "At least 52 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces and almost 1,960 others were wounded Monday after thousands of protesters converged on the razor-wire fence between the Gaza Strip and Israel as the U.S. Embassy opened in Jerusalem. ...The Gaza protest started on March 30. Monday's march was meant to express anger over the U.S. Embassy's inauguration, while Tuesday will mark 'Nakba,' or Catastrophe Day, so named for the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were expelled after Israel's founding in 1948."

And here is Donald Trump's new National Security Advisor... Adrienne Mahsa Varkiani at ThinkProgress: John Bolton Praises U.S. Embassy Move to Jerusalem as Increasing 'the Chances for Peace'. It's honestly tough to believe that Bolton could say such a thing, unless he believes that the only way to lasting "peace" is straight through an ethnic cleansing in Gaza. Which is no kind of peace.

* * *

Tim Mak at NPR: Documents Reveal How Russian Official Courted Conservatives in U.S. Since 2009.
Kremlin-linked Russian politician Alexander Torshin traveled frequently between Moscow and various destinations in the United States to build relationships with figures on the American right starting as early as 2009, beyond his previously known contacts with the National Rifle Association.

Documents newly obtained by NPR show how he traveled throughout the United States to cultivate ties in ways well beyond his formal role as a member of the Russian legislature and later as a top official at the Russian central bank. These are steps a former top CIA official believes Torshin took in order to advance Moscow's long-term objectives in the United States, in part by establishing common political interests with American conservatives.

"[Vladimir] Putin and probably the Russian intelligence services saw [Torshin's connections] as something that they could leverage in the United States," said Steve Hall, a retired CIA chief of Russian operations. "They reach out to a guy like Torshin and say, 'Hey, can you make contact with the NRA and some other conservatives ... so that we can have connectivity from Moscow into those conservative parts of American politics should we need them?' And that's basically just wiring the United States for sound, if you will, in preparation for whatever they might need down the road."

Torshin's trips took him to Alaska, where he requested a visit with former Gov. Sarah Palin; to the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C.; to Nashville, where he was an election observer for the 2012 presidential race; and to every NRA convention, in various American cities, between 2012 and 2016.

..."I really do think the Russians are looking at being able to reach out to the right...to say, 'Hey, you know Russians actually share a lot of the same values,'" said Hall, whose 30-year career in the CIA concluded in 2015.

Hall said their message was: "You know, we don't like LGBT causes any more than you conservatives on the right in the United States do; we are interested in engaging the NRA...the church plays an important role in Russia just as it should in the United States."
And both big fans of authoritarianism, too.


Evan Osnos at the New Yorker: Trump vs. the "Deep State". "Typically, an incoming President seeks to charm, co-opt, and, when necessary, coerce the federal workforce into executing his vision. But Trump got to Washington by promising to unmake the political ecosystem, eradicating the existing species and populating it anew. ...Nancy McEldowney, who retired last July after thirty years in the Foreign Service, told me, 'In the anatomy of a hostile takeover and occupation, there are textbook elements — you decapitate the leadership, you compartmentalize the power centers, you engender fear and suspicion. They did all those things.' This idea, more than any other, has defined the Administration, which has greeted the federal government not as a machine that could implement its vision but as a vanquished foe."

Olivia Nuzzi at NYMag: Donald Trump and Sean Hannity Like to Talk Before Bedtime. "Unlike on Fox & Friends, where Trump learns new (frequently incorrect) information, Hannity acts to transform Trump's pervasive ambivalence into resolve by convincing him what he's already decided he believes and what he's decided to do is correct. ...More than any other figure of the right-wing infosphere, Hannity has behaved as if he were an extension of the Trump communications department, his daily stream of assertions serving to prop up Trump and, in real time, define what Trumpism is supposed to be."

* * *


And corruption just meets more corruption:


[CN: Nativism; carcerality] Tina Vasquez at Rewire.News: Questions Swirl Around ICE's 'Inhumane' Treatment of Pregnant People. "Numerous reports suggest detaining pregnant immigrants in prison-like facilities poses dangerous health risks. In September 2017, immigrant and human rights groups filed an administrative complaint with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties and the DHS Office of Inspector General, documenting the harmful and dangerous conditions pregnant people face while in ICE custody. Those reports included women who suffered miscarriages in detention, experienced verbal and physical abuse, and endured serious delays in emergency care and prenatal treatment. ...Advocates are pushing for more information from ICE as new allegations of medical neglect surface."

[CN: White supremacy] Alice Ollstein at TPM: Trump Admin Poised to Give Rural Whites a Carve-Out on Medicaid Work Rules.
As the Trump administration moves aggressively to allow more states to impose mandatory work requirements on their Medicaid programs, several states have come under fire for crafting policies that would in practice shield many rural, white residents from the impact of the new rules.

In the GOP-controlled states of Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio, waiver proposals would subject hundreds of thousands of Medicaid enrollees to work requirements, threatening to cut off their health insurance if they can’t meet an hours-per-week threshold.

Those waivers include exemptions for the counties with the highest unemployment, which tend to be majority-white, GOP-leaning, and rural. But many low-income people of color who live in high-unemployment urban centers would not qualify, because the wealthier suburbs surrounding those cities pull the overall county unemployment rate below the threshold.

"This is sort of a version of racial redlining where they're identifying communities where the work requirements will be in full effect and others where they will be left out," George Washington University health law professor Sara Rosenbaum told TPM. "When that starts to result in racially identifiable areas, that's where the concern increases."
This is not merely unethical and aggressively indecent; it may also be an illegal violation of the Civil Rights Act.

But even as Republican legislatures and the Trump administration continue to cater to white people in the most egregious ways, their white base complains about how they are [PDF] "disrespected": "Trump voters complain that there is no respect for [Donald] Trump or for people like them who voted for him."

And yet: "A healthy diet of Fox News is feeding the white working class men fending off the challenges of Trump's opponents, including those within their own families. They have taken a lot of heat from the millennials and children in their own families, but feel vindicated that a businessman like Trump has produced a strong macro-economy and kept his promises on immigration. They continue to appreciate how he speaks his mind, unlike a typical politician."

This is a toxic combination: They feel "disrespected" by people who refuse to abide and abet authoritarian bigotry, and feel "vindicated" by Trump's brand of white supremacist, nativist, chauvinist bravado. Shiver.

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

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