Daily Dose of Cute

Something about Zelda that you may have noticed is that she looks like a very different dog from the side than she does from the front — though she is equally adorable and has the silliest ears from every direction!

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt from the side
In side profile, she is very angular and foxy!

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt from the front
From the front, she is very stout and boxy!

She is (basically) half husky, 1/4 blue heeler, and 1/4 shar pei. And from the side, she's all husky and blue heeler, but from the front, she's all shar pei. LOL. 100% adorable mutt!

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 497

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: Mitt Romney: Still the Woooooorst and All of This Is Very Troubling and Trump Launches Trade War with Canada, Mexico, EU.

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

[Content Note: Gun violence]


"Fun." This fucking guy.

* * *

First Lady Melania Trump still hasn't been seen in public. It's been three weeks. But this tweet appeared on her account yesterday:


Well, that definitely sounds like her (no it doesn't), so obviously there's nothing to worry about (yes there is), because it totally makes sense (not) that someone who is "feeling great" and "working hard" wouldn't just step in front of a camera to assuage concerns about her.

I ask again: Where's Melania?

* * *

There was a flurry of news about presidential pardons, and potential pardons, today:


In other news...


Betsy Woodruff at the Daily Beast reports that the "Senate intelligence committee has asked to interview Roger Stone, Donald Trump's longtime political adviser and self-described dirty trickster." Sure. Stone, meanwhile, said: "I will be targeted in an effort to trump-up charges against me to get me to turn on Donald Trump. Not happening… It is now abundantly clear that [Mueller] intends to frame me on some conjured-up, concocted offense in an effort to leverage my testimony against the president of the United States. I will never roll on him!" Cool.


[CN: War on agency] Ally Boguhn at Rewire.News: Trump's HHS Installs Fake Clinic Leader to Oversee Family Planning Funds. "Diane Foley, who ran a Christian organization operating two Colorado anti-choice 'crisis pregnancy centers,' or fake clinics, was quietly installed on Tuesday as deputy assistant secretary for population affairs, where she will lead the office responsible for the Title X federal family planning program." Of course.

Michael Weissenstein at the AP: Puerto Rico Grid 'Teetering' Despite $3.8 Billion Repair Job. (Shitty headline, AP. Fuck.) "After an eight-month, $3.8 billion federal effort to try to end the longest blackout in United States history, officials say Puerto Rico's public electrical authority, the nation's largest, is almost certain to collapse again when the next hurricane hits this island of 3.3 million people. 'It's a highly fragile and vulnerable system that really could suffer worse damage than it suffered with Maria in the face of another natural catastrophe,' Puerto Rican Gov. Ricardo Rossello said." Awful. I'm so worried about Puerto Rico as another hurricane season looms.

And finally: [CN: Misogyny] David Bauder at AP/TPM: Samantha Bee Under Fire for Calling Ivanka Trump a 'Feckless C—'. "Bee called Ivanka Trump a 'feckless c—' toward the end of a segment about [Donald] Trump's immigration policies on her show, Full Frontal, on Wednesday. She used the slur in urging Ivanka Trump to speak to her father about policies that separate children from their parents. Bee said, 'Put on something tight and low-cut and tell your father to f—ing stop it.' There was no immediate comment from TBS on Thursday." This is not how feminism works. For fuck's sake.

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

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Trump Launches Trade War with Canada, Mexico, EU


According to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, an animated corpse whose hobbies include laundering Russian oligarchs' money, the "trade penalties" take effect at midnight.

Along with the EU, Mexico immediately announced its intention to retaliate with tariffs against American products. Mexico specifically announced tariffs on pork, apples, grapes, cranberries, and cheese, among other products — so, once again, U.S. farmers are going to be hurt by Trump's trade warring.

In related news, Donald Trump reportedly told French President Emmanuel Macron last month that he has a plan "to impose a total ban on the imports of German luxury cars. ...Trump reportedly told Macron that he would maintain the ban until no Mercedes-Benz cars are seen on Fifth Avenue in New York."

The last line of that story reads: "A number of German automakers have plants in the U.S., including Mercedes-Benz in Alabama and BMW in South Carolina."

So, in sum: The President of the United States, who is under investigation for collusion with a foreign adversary during a campaign in which he promised to "Make America Great Again" by striking the best deals and putting "America First," has launched a multi-prong trade war with our closest allies, while bailing out a Chinese telecom company in exchange for a Trump-branded golf course loan and trademark approvals for Ivanka.

It was always obvious that Trump would use the presidency to fuck over average Americans and enrich himself and his despicable family. And here we are.

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All of This Is Very Troubling

So, last night, the New York Times published a report about Obama adviser Ben Rhodes' upcoming memoir, centering on the 2016 election, and there was a lot of stuff there I found troubling.

The whole article is on-topic for this thread, but here are a few thoughts I shared on Twitter last night:


My pal Dan Solomon, quote-tweeting me, further noted: "Additionally, the idea that the US would tolerate cyberattacks for fear of an even bigger one is a pretty terrible thing to contemplate."

Which is exactly right. And also something about which I wrote in this piece, last year:
This passage in particular is haunting me: "To some, Obama's determination to avoid politicizing the Russia issue had the opposite effect: It meant that he allowed politics to shape his administration's response to what some believed should have been treated purely as a national security threat."

It haunts me for two reasons:

1. Although I had criticisms of Obama's presidency, I never felt — never — like I could not implicitly trust him on national security. I always felt confident that we could trust him to protect us. So to find out that we couldn't, and that the reason we couldn't is because he was afraid of accusations of partisanship, is really shaking me.

2. As longtime readers will no doubt recall, my biggest hesitation about Obama during the 2008 election was that I feared he did not take seriously enough the intransigence of Congressional Republicans. I had strong reservations about his emphasis on bipartisanship and worried that the Republicans would use it against him. It's really fucking something that my greatest fear about Obama may turn out to be the very thing that got us into the mess in which we now find ourselves.
In the New York Times piece, Obama was reportedly consoled by his aides after the election by reassuring him "that he still would have won had he been able to run for another term and that the next generation had more in common with him than with Mr. Trump." (In other words: It was Hillary's fault alone.) Obama reportedly responded by musing: "Sometimes I wonder whether I was 10 or 20 years too early."

Meaning, of course, that he was too early because America is a racist hellscape and that his presidency resulted in a backlash. I don't think he was too early for that reason, and I hate that he feels that way.

He may have, however, not been the right president for that moment, because he was temperamentally never going to be a fierce partisan who was prepared to treat the Republican Party like the collection of authoritarian nightmare bigots that it had become.

Obama wasn't willing to name the villain. And now the villain is running the country.

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Mitt Romney: Still the Woooooorst


Ann Romney has never held public office. She is manifestly unqualified to be President of the United States. And yet Mitt Romney thinks it's fuckin' hilarious (or whatever) to say that he cast his vote for her in the most consequential election in his lifetime, at least.

Just the worst, this guy.

Always has been and always will be. Mitt's the worst like the sun rises and sets.

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Open Thread

image of a yellow couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker DesertRose: "If you could have just one magical/supernatural power, what would you choose and why?"

My answer to this question seems to change every time I encounter it. I guess it depends on my mood. Today, my answer is: The ability to fly!

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by bubbles.

Recommended Reading:

Ali Velez at BuzzFeed: This Husband Brought His Wife the *Wrong* Highlighter and It Will Make You Laugh

Meiko Takechi Arquillos with Wendy Steiner at Refinery29: [Content Note: Racism; internment] How Japanese Women at Internment Camp Made Their Clothes Their Own

Lynsey Chutel at Quartz: [CN: Cultural appropriation] A Black Panther Lawsuit Is Testing the Cultural Exchange Between Africans and African-Americans

Sarah Sloat at Inverse: Michelle Wolf Spits Comedy with a Side of Biochemistry in Vogue Interview

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Genderqueer Student Brilliantly Trolls Betsy DeVos with Transgender Pride Cape

Laurel Dickman at Ravishly: [CN: Discussion of fat hatred; diet talk] 7 Plus-Size Asian Bloggers Talk About Representation

Yasmin Nouh at the Root: [CN: Video may autoplay at link] Brown Girl Surf Wants to Change Surf Culture

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

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I Hate Donald Trump

"Yeah, we KNOW." — You, probably.

And yeah. On the one hand, saying I hate Donald Trump is about as obvious as it gets. On the other hand, which definitely hates Donald Trump as much as that first hand, sometimes I need to just say it. (Or write it, as the case may be.) I need to express clearly that I detest him and every single fucking thing for which he stands.

I spend so much time dissecting policy and synthesizing the news and curating it into digestible bites and connecting the dots to broader narratives where the political press fails to do that necessary work and writing explanation of why this matters and what that really means that sometimes I spend my entire day immersed in information so profoundly upsetting that it requires enormous amounts of psychological energy just to keep myself steady and focused enough to string together the words that convey everything that is happening and its grotesque context.

I have to disallow myself from actively feeling that hatred in order to do this work.

But it creeps up on me. Over and over. I bury it beneath the calm I need to process the shitshow that is the Trump administration and navigate the abuse that piles up in my inbox and fills my Twitter mentions and spills into comments, both from conservatives who hate me for being so radical and progressives who hate me for being so incrementalist. Plus everyone who hates me just for being a woman. Or fat. Or a dyke. Or married to an immigrant. Or whatever.

All of whom — yes, even the progressive men who clamor over each other in tumbling desperation to be the next one to tell me that Bernie woulda won and I'm the reason everything is terrible — are empowered by Trump and the ugliness and bigotry he purveys like the slimeball salesman of toxic wares that he is and has always been.

Everything I feel in this grim upside-down every day simmers beneath whatever semblance of cool professionalism I can muster. And then it boils over.

And when it boils over, I cry and I seethe and I snarl. And I spit with venom: I hate Donald Trump.

For every post I write about his gross agenda, there is a post I want to write about why I hate him. For every sentence I write about his deplorable party, there is a post I want to write about why I hate all of them. For every word I write about his corrupt family of shameless grifters, there is a post I want to write about why I hate them, too.

I hate who he is. And I hate what he's doing. I hate every goddamned second of this.

Almost exactly a year ago, I wrote: "I ache at the sadistic impulses of this administration. I hate every minute of it. Their malice grinds at me, but also beckons my resolve to be a sentinel for my values. If there comes a day when all I am left able to write with each sunrise is 'I hate Donald Trump,' I will be here, doing it."

I'm not there yet. I can still write other things. But I need to write this, too: I hate Donald Trump.

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Fun Community Threads

In the comments of last week's #365feministselfie post, I wrote:

I know there's a whole lot of important shit going on today, and I also know that people may disagree with my position, but: I feel more than ever like I want to center our collective humanity in this space. I want us to be visible to each other. I want to talk about happiness, and pain, and every piece of life that we are living, even as the world is changing very dramatically.

I want you to know that I am posting pictures of myself here, and inviting you to post pictures of yourselves, if you are so inclined, because our lives matter to me. And there is, quite understandably, a whole lot of feeling like nothing matters going around.

Please know that I don't post anything here frivolously. This thread means something. Visibility of our individual humanity means something. Evidence of joy in a time of resistance means something. Acknowledging hurt in a time of turmoil means something.

You mean something, and so do I.
As you may have noticed, I try to break up the middle of the day, immediately following the We Resist thread, with the Daily Dose of Cute followed by one of our more light-hearted discussion threads. I like to have at least two daily these days, because the news is so rough, and it's so important to be able to hold onto who we are, to hang on to goodness and light, and to stay connected to community, in grim times.

At the moment, I tend to rotate between a number of fun community threads: The aforementioned #365feministselfie, the Makeup Thread, Fat Fashion, OMG SHOEZ, Shaker Gourmet, Shaker Gardens, Shaker Thumbs, Good Things, The Check-In, Self-Care, Your Best Photograph, the Swimming Thread, Film Corner, TV Corner, What I'm Listening To, Throwback Thursdays, I've Never, and Top Five.

Some, of course, are more regular than others. But that's the basic list.

My question to you is: Are there any fun features that you would like to see added into the rotation? A thread on crafting? A "What I'm Reading Right Now" thread? A thread for DIY projects? Gaming? Collecting? Favorite accessories?

Let me know in comments. I can't promise that I will institute every suggestion, but I will accommodate as much variety as I can!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat sitting at the dining room table in a chair, looking at me
"Good morning. I am ready for my breakfast."

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 496

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 Fannie: Roseanne, Silverman, and the Trump-Supporter Anthropology Series. And by me: Trump Asked Sessions to Un-Recuse Himself from Russia Investigation and Even Trey Gowdy Isn't Buying "Spygate".

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

[Content Note: Disablism] What the actual fuck is this.


I loathe him so fiercely and vastly, y'all.

* * *

WHOA! Andrew Roth at the Guardian: Ukraine Reveals It Staged 'Murder' of Russian Journalist Arkady Babchenko as Part of Investigation into Death Threats.
On Tuesday, Ukrainian police had said Arkady Babchenko, a Kremlin critic and veteran Russian war correspondent, was shot three times in the back as he left his apartment in Kiev to buy bread. A government official told the media that Babchenko, 41, had died in the ambulance to the hospital.

But on Wednesday, officials said Babchenko staged his death in coordination with Ukrainian police as part of an investigation into threats made against his life. The plan had been in place for more than a month.

Police said they had made one arrest in connection with the operation.

Speaking to journalists, Babchenko apologised, saying: "I have been forced to bury my friends and colleagues many times and I know the sickening feeling. ...Special apologies to my wife, Olechka, there was no other option," Babchenko said to a room of visibly stunned journalists. "The operation was under preparation for two months."

It was not immediately clear how Babchenko faking his death led to the apprehension of the suspect.

According to Gritsak, Russian authorities had recruited a former fighter in east Ukraine by offering him $30,000 for the killing.

Wearing a black hoodie and shuffling slightly as he spoke, Babchenko concluded: "I've done my work. I'm still alive for the moment."

Babchenko fled Russia in 2017 after receiving threats over a post he made on social media. A number of journalists and other dissidents have been killed in recent years in Kiev in murders that remain unsolved.
Unbelievable. I don't think this will, unfortunately, halt the killings, but at least Babchenko is safe for now. And if it manages to slow the assassinations even for awhile, that would be something.

Courtney Kube, Ken Dilanian, and Carol E. Lee at NBC News: CIA Report Says North Korea Won't Denuclearize. "A new U.S. intelligence assessment has concluded that North Korea does not intend to give up its nuclear weapons any time soon, three U.S. officials told NBC News — a finding that conflicts with recent statements by [Donald] Trump that Pyongyang intends to do so in the future. Trump is continuing to pursue a nuclear summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un even though the CIA analysis, which is consistent with other expert opinion, casts doubt on the viability of Trump's stated goal for the negotiations, the elimination of North Korea's nuclear weapons stockpile. 'Everybody knows they are not going to denuclearize,' said one intelligence official who read the report."


Philip Bump and Mark Berman at the Washington Post: Federal Prosecutors Poised to Get More Than 1 Million Files Seized from Michael Cohen's Phones.
Federal prosecutors investigating [Donald] Trump's personal lawyer Michael Cohen are poised to receive on Wednesday 1 million files from three of his cellphones seized last month, according to a filing submitted to the court Tuesday night by special master Barbara Jones.

In her update to the court, Jones said investigators from the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York have already been given access to nearly 300,000 pieces of potential evidence seized from Cohen's office and residences in an April raid.

...In their initial request for a special master, Cohen's attorneys said thousands of the seized documents might be covered by attorney-client privilege.

But in her update Tuesday to the court, Jones noted that so far only 252 items have been flagged by Cohen's or Trump's attorneys as privileged. She is set to make a recommendation to the court about that material by June 4.

An additional 292,006 items that were not designated by Cohen or Trump as privileged or highly personal were turned over to prosecutors on May 23.

Jones is set to release 1,025,063 more items from three of Cohen's phones on Wednesday, pending her final verification, according to the filing. Material released to Jones this month from two other phones has not yet been scheduled for release.
Good grief!

* * *

In case anyone has managed to forget for two fucking seconds that Donald Trump's administration is full of white supremacists tasked with implementing a white supremacist, nativist, Christian Supremacist agenda, here are some vile reminders...

[CN: Islamophobia] Kate Riga at TPM: Bolton's New NSC Chief of Staff Served as VP of Gaffney's Anti-Muslim Hate Group. "National Security Adviser John Bolton's new pick to be the National Security Council chief of staff has served for the last five years as the Senior Vice President for Policy and Programs at the Frank Gaffney-founded Center for Security Policy, a Southern Poverty Law Center-designated hate group that espouses anti-Muslim conspiracy theories. ...The Center for Security Policy's website features a congratulatory post published Tuesday, confirming Fred Fleitz's tenure. 'Center for Security Policy alumnus Fred Fleitz has been named Executive Secretary and Chief of Staff of the National Security Council under John Bolton,' it reads. 'Fleitz served as the Center's Senior Vice President for Policy and Programs from 2013-2018.' ...Fleitz is also a former CIA analyst and frequent guest on Fox News."

[CN: Anti-Semitism] Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Mike Pompeo to Huddle with Anti-Semite's Envoy. "Viktor Orban won reelection as Hungary's prime minister last month through a blood-and-soil campaign that married anti-Semitism with Islamophobia. Donald Trump's secretary of state is about to reverse years of U.S. policy and receive Orban's chief diplomat at Foggy Bottom. Current and former State Department officials expressed alarm that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is giving facetime to an envoy for the demagogic and authoritarian Orban, who also happens to be Vladimir Putin's best European friend. 'I'm fucking disgusted,' said a State Department official speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press. The official considered Pompeo 'cozying up to individuals like Orban' part of a broader pattern of the Trump administration ignoring human-rights abuses and democratic backsliding."

[CN: Nativism; child abuse] Nick Miroff at the Washington Post: Trump's 'Zero Tolerance' at the Border Is Causing Child Shelters to Fill Up Fast.
The number of migrant children held in U.S. government custody without their parents has surged 21 percent in the past month, according to the latest figures, an increase driven by the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" crackdown on families who cross the border illegally.

Although the government has not disclosed how many children have been separated from their parents as a result of the new measures, the Department of Health and Human Services said Tuesday that it had 10,773 migrant children in its custody, up from 8,886 on April 29.

Under the "zero tolerance" approach rolled out last month by Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, anyone who crosses into the United States illegally will face criminal prosecution. In most cases, that means parents who arrive with children stay in federal jails while their children are sent to HHS shelters.

Those shelters are at 95 percent capacity, an HHS official said Tuesday, and the agency is preparing to add potentially thousands of new bed spaces in the coming weeks. HHS also is exploring the possibility of housing children on military bases but views the measure as a "last option," according to the HHS official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the agency's preparations.
A "last option" that the HHS is already pursuing: "According to an email notification sent to Pentagon staffers, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will make site visits at four military installations in Texas and Arkansas during the next two weeks to evaluate their suitability to shelter children."

[CN: Nativism; transphobia; torture; sexual violence; death] Adolfo Flores at BuzzFeed: A Transgender Woman Who Was Part of the Migrant Caravan Has Died in ICE Custody. "Roxsana Hernandez, 33, died in the custody of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at a hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico. She had been taken to another hospital in New Mexico more than a week earlier with symptoms of pneumonia, dehydration, and complications associated with HIV. Hernandez asked for asylum at the San Ysidro port of entry on May 9, according to Pueblo Sin Fronteras, which organized the caravan. The group said she was first detained by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in holding cells known as 'iceboxes' because of how cold they are. In addition to being cold, Pueblo Sin Fronteras said, Hernandez lacked adequate food and medical care and was held in a cell where the lights were turned on 24 hours a day." Hernandez died on May 25.

[CN: Neglect; death]


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

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Even Trey Gowdy Isn't Buying "Spygate"

Speaking of Trey Gowdy and also speaking of Donald Trump being an authoritarian nightmare cyclone...

Even Gowdy — the same Trey Gowdy who recently announced that he would not seek reelection after an inglorious Congressional tenure that included overseeing the Benghazi witch hunt, during which Hillary Clinton was grilled for 11 hours and which cost taxpayers nearly $8 million — refuses to indulge Trump's absurd "spygate" spin on the FBI working with informant Stefan Halper during the campaign, as part of an investigation into potential Russian collusion.

Samantha Schmidt at the Washington Post reports:

Outgoing Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), the House Oversight Committee chairman and a Trump supporter, said in an interview on Fox that the FBI was justified in using a secret informant to assist in the Russia investigation. Gowdy, a member of the House Intelligence Committee, attended a classified Justice Department briefing last week over the FBI's use of the confidential source, identified as Stefan A. Halper.

"[Donald] Trump himself in the Comey memos said if anyone connected with my campaign was working with Russia, I want you to investigate it, and it sounds to me like that is exactly what the FBI did," Gowdy told host Martha MacCallum. "I think when the president finds out what happened, he is going to be not just fine, he is going to be glad that we have an FBI that took seriously what they heard."

"I am even more convinced that the FBI did exactly what my fellow citizens would want them to do when they got the information they got, and that it has nothing to do with Donald Trump," Gowdy said. Asked about the president's tweets on the subject, he added that such statements could be subject to questioning by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.

"If I were his lawyer, and I never will be, I would tell him to rely on his lawyers and his (communications) folks," he said.
I see what Trey Gowdy is trying to do there, appearing on Trump's favorite teevee channel to try to convince him to stop being an obvious despicable dipshit and instead at least try to pretend like he would be angry if the Russians infiltrated his campaign, rather than looking guilty AF by trying to impede an investigation that he claims would exonerate him.

Good luck with all that, Gowdy!


Gowdy was, incredibly, backed up by Andrew Napolitano:
Asked to respond to Gowdy's remarks, a Fox News commentator known for defending the president also cast doubt on Trump's claims. Fox News legal analyst Andrew Napolitano (better known and often quoted by Trump as Judge Napolitano) said claims that the FBI placed an undercover spy on Trump's campaign "seem to be baseless."

"There is no evidence for that whatsoever," Napolitano said. The fact that the FBI source spoke with "people on the periphery of the campaign," he said, "is standard operating procedure in intelligence gathering and in criminal investigations."
Writes Schmidt: "Napolitano's reluctance to back Trump's claims was surprising in part because of Napolitano's previous tendency to peddle conspiracy theories with no evidence." LOL! Accurate. Hilarious, depressing, and accurate.

Gowdy and Napolitano are, of course, not the only Trump loyalists who think he's going too far, now that he's started to leave a bad taste even in mouths that have palated all the rest of his fetid authoritarian gruel. The problem is that they enabled and abetted him way the fuck past the point of too far a long time ago.

It's going to be tough to rein him in now.

But they know that. They're not trying to save us; they're just trying to save their own tattered reputations.

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Trump Asked Sessions to Un-Recuse Himself from Russia Investigation

Attorney General Jeff Sessions had to recuse himself from the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, after he failed to disclose, and lied under oath about, having met multiple times with Russian Envoy Sergey Kislyak. Donald Trump has been enraged about Sessions' decision ever since.

A year ago, there was so much friction between the two that Sessions reportedly offered to resign. Sessions remained on the job — where he remains to this day — but Trump began bitterly complaining, in public, about Sessions' decision to recuse himself.

In July of last year, during an interview with the New York Times, Trump complained:

Well, Sessions should have never recused himself, and if he was going to recuse himself, he should have told me before he took the job, and I would have picked somebody else. ...So Jeff Sessions takes the job, gets into the job, recuses himself. I then have — which, frankly, I think is very unfair to the president. How do you take a job and then recuse yourself? If he would have recused himself before the job, I would have said, "Thanks, Jeff, but I can't, you know, I'm not going to take you." It's extremely unfair, and that's a mild word, to the president.

Yeah, what Jeff Sessions did was he recused himself right after, right after he became attorney general. And I said, "Why didn't you tell me this before?" I would have — then I said, "Who's your deputy?" So his deputy he hardly knew, and that's Rosenstein, Rod Rosenstein, who is from Baltimore. There are very few Republicans in Baltimore, if any. So, he's from Baltimore.
Trump also complained about Sessions on Twitter, as reports emerged about his privately berating Sessions for his recusal decision, and then Trump aired his grievances once again during a Rose Garden press conference:
I am disappointed in the Attorney General. He should not have recused himself [from the Russia probe] almost immediately after he took office. And if he was going to recuse himself, he should have told me prior to taking office, and I would have, quite simply, picked somebody else. So I think that's a bad thing not for the president, but for the presidency. I think it's unfair to the presidency. And that's the way I feel.
Now, according to a report by Michael S. Schmidt and Julie Hirschfeld Davis at the New York Times, we find out that all of the above was preceded by Trump giving Sessions the silent treatment and refusing to take his calls, forcing Sessions to fly down to Mar-a-Lago (on the taxpayers' dime), where Trump "objected to his decision to recuse himself from the Russia investigation. Mr. Trump, who had told aides that he needed a loyalist overseeing the inquiry, berated Mr. Sessions and told him he should reverse his decision, an unusual and potentially inappropriate request."

Sessions refused. But Special Counsel Bob Mueller somehow found out about the exchange, and is now investigating.
The confrontation, which has not been previously reported, is being investigated by the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, as are the president's public and private attacks on Mr. Sessions and efforts to get him to resign. Mr. Trump dwelled on the recusal for months, according to confidants and current and former administration officials who described his behavior toward the attorney general.

The special counsel's interest demonstrates Mr. Sessions's overlooked role as a key witness in the investigation into whether Mr. Trump tried to obstruct the inquiry itself. It also suggests that the obstruction investigation is broader than it is widely understood to be — encompassing not only the president's interactions with and firing of the former F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, but also his relationship with Mr. Sessions.

Investigators have pressed current and former White House officials about Mr. Trump's treatment of Mr. Sessions and whether they believe the president was trying to impede the Russia investigation by pressuring him. The attorney general was also interviewed at length by Mr. Mueller's investigators in January. And of the four dozen or so questions Mr. Mueller wants to ask Mr. Trump, eight relate to Mr. Sessions. Among them: What efforts did you make to try to get him to reverse his recusal?
To be clear: Trump's campaign to bully Sessions into un-recusing himself from the Russia investigation is being (quite rightly) regarded by investigators as another possible attempt to obstruct justice.

Trump, naturally, is doubling-down.

This morning, Rep. Trey Gowdy appeared on CBS This Morning, where he attempted to justify Trump's badgering of Sessions as "expressing frustration that Attorney General Sessions should have shared these reasons for recusal before he took the job, not afterward." He added that "there are lots of really good lawyers in the country," and Trump "could have picked somebody else."

Which prompted Trump to tweet:


Trump wishes he had chosen someone else as his Attorney General — because Jeff Sessions, who has been one of the loyalist of all the loyal lapdogs in Trump's kennel, still hasn't been loyal enough, owing to his decision to demonstrate an infinitesimal trace of ethics and show a modicum of respect for the rule of law.

Even that was far too much for the lawless authoritarian Trump.

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Roseanne, Sarah Silverman, and the Trump-Supporter Anthropology Series

[Content note: Racism, homophobia.]

The 2018 version of Roseanne was the reboot that was supposed to, in the star's words, "portray a realistic portrait of the American people — working class people" and "the people who elected Trump." 

Like the cottage industry of beltway media figures who "play anthropologist" as they "interpret" Trump supporters to (I guess) everyone who isn't one, the assumption seems to be that we ordinary TV watchers and newspaper readers on the political left don't actually know any working class white Trump supporters and that we desperately need the media to help us understand them.

This assumption is flawed on at least two counts. First, many of us actually do have lived experiences with working class white Trump supporters because they are members of our families, friends and acquaintances, residents of towns in which we grew up or currently live, people we have to interact with at work, people we engage with on the Internet, and/or are people we otherwise encounter as we navigate our daily lives.

Secondly, the people "interpreting" the "white working class Trump supporter" to us often seem to be people quite removed from this population themselves, such as pundits and Hollywood personalities who live in socioeconomic and political bubbles, such that the portrayals end up being superficial engagements in which the parties model "getting along with each other" for we the disagreeable masses.

The pilot episode of comedian Sarah Silverman's I Love You, America is a good example of what I'm referring to here. In it, Silverman visits a Trump-supporting, white working class family in Louisiana. As she has dinner at their house, things are ... mostly fine on the surface. The conservatives are relatively polite to the liberal and vice versa. When Silverman asks them why they voted for Trump, they say things like, "I did it for change," "He made things sound pretty good," and "He can't do no worse than what the other ones did."

One family member eventually expresses doubt that President Obama was born in the USA, to which Silverman unsuccessfully tried to correct that he was actually born in Hawaii, and then the matter was dropped. Another one says that gays shouldn't be able to raise kids and he defends his view saying, "Everybody got their own opinion, you know," to which Silverman responds, "That's true, you're right" and then she companionably touches his knee.

She then ends the segment saying, "Did we change each other's minds? Fuck no. But we did learn that we don't have to be divided to disagree. We can have fun and even love each other." A member of the family said that it felt "great" to talk to someone with different views without being judged.

So, the exchanges in this clip capture at least one thing quite well. That is, some of our media "anthropologists" seem really invested in a narrative wherein if interactions appear civil on the surface, and beliefs and differences aren't delved into too deeply, we can and probably should all just get along. True love means never "judging" somebody else's bigotries or racist, inaccurate views.

In discussing the Roseanne reboot back in January, Sara Gilbert (who plays one of Roseanne's daughters on the show) expressed a similar sentiment:

This is a time where the country is very divided, and we did have a wonderful opportunity to talk about this in the context of a family. And I think part of what’s going on is people feel like they can’t disagree and still love each other or still talk to each other. It was a great opportunity to have a family that can be divided by politics but still love.
Let's be clear. Yes, the nation is politically divided. But, I feel like some people, including a number of those on the liberal/left side of the political spectrum, are forgetting that many of the current political divides exist because of historical and ongoing injustice experienced by marginalized populations? As a result, people buy into these mainstream notions of civility in which bigotry is defined as someone's innocuous opinion that they're entitled to continue holding without ever having it labeled as bigotry.

The dynamic that the Silverman clip fails to capture, like many pieces within this Trump-voter-in-their-natural-habitat genre, are the unscripted, unobserved-by-outsiders ways that white people often perpetuate racism.

Remember, to Silverman, a person they knew was a famous liberal comedian who brought her cameras along for the dinner date, the family gave reasons like wanting "change" for voting for Trump and they didn't say the n-word in front of her? Now, all of that may indeed have been authentic for this particular family.

What I also want to note, however, is that the way many white people talk when a camera is in their face documenting their words for a piece on helping people "understand" Trump supporters can be very different than the way they talk with trusted, like-minded white people in private. The inherent condescension of these pieces is that members of the working class aren't savvy enough to put on a performance for the audience.

So, back to Roseanne.

Roseanne-the-character and Roseanne-the-person are both Trump supporters. That the character serves as a sanitized facade of the actual is a pretty good encapsulation of how bigotry often functions within the mainstream narratives. The typical narrative is that someone is either a full-on Nazi, which many people can agree is bad, while everyone else just has simple differences of opinion that we shouldn't judge. Thus, the Roseanne character who exists on the show to teach liberal audiences that Trump supporters aren't really that bad wouldn't have likened a Black woman to an "ape" in her performance.

But, Roseanne the actual Trump-supporting person got online and did exactly that.

So, as the beltway media remains fixated on humanizing, sugar-coating, and asking us to have sympathy for Trump supporters, we might continue to ask why it's so rarely the reverse.

Does the media think there's simply too much goodwill in the world already toward Black people and feminists and queers and trans people? Is the media overreacting to Hillary Clinton's much-maligned "deplorables" comment and showing an intractable, ever-present need to "prove" that Hillary is a bitch who was wrong. Is it a need to keep white people, and their purported good intentions, centered in political conversation? Is it that too many white people are still "more devoted to 'order' than to justice"?

Or, is the assumption that white working class Trump fans are simply incapable of sympathy for other groups, in which case that would be quite an admission that even members of the pundit class aren't buying the very narrative they're trying so desperately to sell.

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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 bellist: "What question that you know can't possibly be answered do you continue to ponder?"

Why does anyone vote for Republicans? Of course that question can be answered, but it can't possibly be answered to my satisfaction.

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Your Best Photograph

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

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

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

* * *

Here's a picture I took at sunset while stopped at a traffic light recently. I just love the colors here, including the green of the light for cross-traffic.

image of a very pink sky at sunset, over an intersection beside a golf course

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Do Us a Favor!

[Content Note: Bigotry.]

So, after Roseanne tweeted yet another disgusting disgorgement of racist bile, ABC decided to cancel her show, undoubtedly because advertisers were ringing the phone off the hook and threatening to pull sponsorship from the network altogether. No cookies for ABC, who are merely rectifying their unfathomable decision to revive her show in the first place, given that she's been a rank bigot in public for many years now.

Naturally, conservatives are up in arms, huffing and puffing about censorship and how intolerant "the Left" is for getting Roseanne taken off the air by pointing to her tweet.

They've decided they're totes gonna get us back.


Nobody tell them. Shh.

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Film Corner: Solo

promotional poster for the film 'Solo: A Star Wars Story' featuring many of the primary cast members

Did anyone else see Solo this weekend? Iain and I saw it with friends yesterday, and I really enjoyed it! I don't know why it's getting so much bad or lackluster press, aside from the fact that this just seems to be one of those films that lots of people decided to dislike before they even see it, for reasons having to do with feelings about the franchise more broadly.

I thought the story was good fun; it was predictable but rollicking. There were some great homages (which I won't spoil on the main page) to the original Star Wars trilogy, and even to a classic Indiana Jones scene. I loved Han's and Chewie's first meeting, as well as their introduction to Lando. L3 was everything!

To be honest, the only thing I didn't really like was the casting of Han. I didn't find Alden Ehrenreich to have any of the charisma or gruff cheekiness that defines Harrison Ford's Han. And he doesn't look enough like him to warrant the casting without any of that je ne sais quoi.

But that's ultimately a positive commentary on how good the film actually is, that I didn't particularly care for Han and still enjoyed the movie!

One of the things I liked most about it was that it fills a very particular gap in the Star Wars narrative universe: If the primary films are all about biological family — having one or not having one; how your DNA shapes or doesn't shape you — then Solo is all about our families of choice.

That theme, which was very resonant for me, was perfectly encapsulated in the scene where Han and Chewie are sitting around the fire with their newfound thieving compatriots Beckett (Woody Harrelson) and Val (Thandie Newton): Han is translating Wookie and says he isn't sure whether the word Chewie used translates to "family" or "tribe."

"Is there a difference?" Beckett asks.

Only in the sense that not all of us can have a family, but all of us can have a tribe.

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